Posts Tagged Educator
Passions For Teaching
The passion of teaching is encapsulated in one man: Gustavo. It is believed that he is one of the most fervent lecturers on campus. Therefore, I have taken this opportunity to find out more about his passion. As I enter the doorway to his office, I immediately recognize his small baseball cap resting on his head. A broad smile, which is suggestive of the pleasure of seeing his student, appears on his face. He extends his right hand, gives a warm handshake, and greets me brightly in Spanish: “Hola amigo”. His office consists of twelve waiting chairs, a wide collection of books, a computer, a desk full of papers, a football, a writing board and lots of language CD’s and cassettes.
Gustavo must be one of the most dedicated lecturers at the University. He left his homeland, Colombia, on August 24, 2004 to become a lecturer. His reason is: “teaching is my major calling in life. I would go anywhere to teach.” This has been his only profession for twenty four years and he does not intend to change it. His motto is to “make every student feel the value of life and learning”.
Tags: Application, Baseball, Books, Career, Education, Education System, Educator, English, Family, Learning, School, Student, Students, Teach, Teacher, Teaching, Universities, University, University Of, WritingRelated posts
Non-boundary Governance of Entrepreneurship Education within Higher Education
Introduction
The focus of entrepreneurship and innovation education and research at institutions of higher education ipso facto implies a wish to enhance the quality of graduate and post-graduate business venturing prospects as well as business know-how in the normally pre-entrepreneurial stage. This should happen within a sense-making framework that integrates the research and education agenda for graduate entrepreneurship. Further, an entrepreneurship and innovation education and research approach should be followed that guide the content of the competitive landscape in which the prospective entrepreneur will function and not lag behind and thereby looses its relevance.
Of particular importance to entrepreneurial education lies the ability of institutions of higher education to shift and circulate information and technologies across faculties despite different academic disciplines, professional codes, and academic language that act as academic venture boundaries. These boundaries frustrate the need to integrate entrepreneurship education throughout a higher education institution, thus inhibiting the smooth functioning of entrepreneurial education. Thus, a need exists to overcome these barriers by amalgamating the various faculties socially across faculties whereby entrepreneurial educators could play “bridging roles” by acting as “boundary spanners” between faculties and forming close cohesive networks through the whole institution. This will enable educators in entrepreneurial higher education to link otherwise unconnected faculties to facilitate the development of unique knowledge and access to special knowledge and opportunities. This create an advantage over the traditional structural design where educators were only part of a specific faculty cohesive group.
Tags: And Education, Business, Curriculum, D Education, Education, Education And, Educational, Educator, Entrepreneur, Entrepreneurial, Entrepreneurial Education, Entrepreneurial Opportunities, Entrepreneurs, Entrepreneurship, Entrepreneurship Education, Faculty, Graduate, Higher Education, Higher Education Institutions, Import, Information, Innovation Education, Leadership, Management, New Entrepreneur, Normal, Quality, Research, Seminars, Social, Special, Student, Students, Study, Universities, UniversityRelated posts
Understanding Learning: How Recent Research Supports Natural Affinities
Fielding questions from parents about the best way to “teach” young children, I often revert to research that supports integrated and emergent education models. However, parents influenced by marketing trends and imprudent education mandates are often skeptical by what they view as hackneyed analysis. How thrilling to come across leading edge research, such as David A. Sousa’s, “How the Brain Learns”, which presents evidence of brain development in the first five years of life and the potential this has in the area of early childhood education and beyond.
An exciting revelation of brain research is that educators get to rethink the long-standing “tabula rasa” theory. This refers to the thesis that individuals are born with no innate or built-in mental content, and that their entire resource of knowledge is built up gradually. Researchers now know that children are ready and motivated to learn, not by being fed knowledge, but by discovering the world around them. It’s up to the teachers, parents and caregivers in their lives to provide the inspiration and facilitation. And instead of a mandated curriculum, it’s creativity and individuation that will best ensure a student’s lifelong success.
Tags: Childhood Education, Children, Children Learning, Curriculum, D Education, Disabled, E Learning, Early Childhood Education, Education, Education And, Educational, Educator, Import, Information, Learning, Learning Disabled, Marketing, Parenting, Parents, Program, Programs, Psychology, Reading, Research, School, Student, Students, Teach, Teacher, Teachers, Teaching, Teaching And Learning, Theory, Training, WritingRelated posts







