Slovak Journal for Educational Sciences / Slovenský časopis pre pedagogické vedy
Časopis Pedagogika.sk

Category — (1) Studies – abstracts

Lifelong Learning – A Challenge for the Education Theory (László Trencsényi)

This paper discusses whether the concept of „lifelong learning” would be a synonym for the concept of „lifelong education”. Whether the fact that even if education ends quite early, one learns all life long, indicated any changes in the theoretical discourse on education? Is the separation of students’ and learners’ roles true, relevant, defensible, explainable? Or the above described phenomena only rephrase the basic concepts, and we need new paradigms of education that offer a coherent answer to this question.

PEDAGOGIKA.SK, 2011, Vol. 2. (No. 1: 28-35)

Key words: educational theory, paradigm, lifelong learning, lifelong education, formal education, non-formal education, informal education

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13 januára, 2011   Komentáre vypnuté na Lifelong Learning – A Challenge for the Education Theory (László Trencsényi)

Cooperative Instruction: Its Influence on Class Climate in Grade 5 (Jana Trabalíková)

The paper analyzes the relationship between class climate and cooperative teaching. It focuses on effects of social models implemented into teaching and observes the changes in pupils´ perception in five dimensions of My Class Inventory questionnaire (Satisfaction, Friction, Competitiveness, Difficulty, Cohesiveness) after 40 hours of cooperative instruction in Science. No statistically significant findings were determined between pretest and posttest measurements, which suggest that cooperative teaching only in a single school subject will not bring desirable effects in classroom climate. In addition to cooperation of pupils, cooperation of teachers in the school is needed in implementing changes in modes of instruction.

PEDAGOGIKA.SK, 2011, Vol. 2. (No. 1: 36-52)

Key words: class climate, cooperative teaching, cooperation

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13 januára, 2011   Komentáre vypnuté na Cooperative Instruction: Its Influence on Class Climate in Grade 5 (Jana Trabalíková)

Stanislav Bendl, Hana Voňková: Relationship Between Teacher (Non)Manipulative and Victimizing Behaviours and some Teacher Characteristics

The article deals with manipulation in Czech schools. It is an output of international project „Teacher in post-socialistic countries as a manipulator and a victim in the context of education policy and pedagogical activity“. Manipulation is here defined as a special type of influence exerted intentionally on a person, which is motivated by goals of the manipulator and which objectifies the person being under the influence of the manipulator. The core of the article is the analysis of the relationship between some characteristics of primary and secondary school teachers (gender, years of practice, type of school …) and their (non)manipulative behaviour. A set of school-related statements and hypothetical situations were presented to teachers. The degree of (dis)agreement with the statements and the solutions of the hypothetical situations show different approaches of teachers to education and their different behaviour to pupils, colleagues and headmasters. The ordered probit model was used to analyze the relationship between (non)manipulative and victimizing behaviour of respondents and their personal characteristics.

PEDAGOGIKA.SK, 2010, Vol. 1. (No. 4: 294-318)

Key words: education, manipulation, objectification, intentionality, victimization, gender, years of practice, type of (optional) education, type of school, ordered probit model, marginal effect of variables

5 novembra, 2010   Komentáre vypnuté na Stanislav Bendl, Hana Voňková: Relationship Between Teacher (Non)Manipulative and Victimizing Behaviours and some Teacher Characteristics

Ladislav Macháček: Formal and Informal Education of Secondary School Students in Slovakia about Democratic Citizenship

Citizenship education has undergone transforma-tion since 1989 when democratic changes in Slovakia began. Our research of secondary school students in 2005 and 2007 confirmed that academic subjects such as Citizenship Education and Social Studies have taken important position in the formal education of students about parliamentary democracy and citizens participation in political processes.

Due to the 2003 Act of School Self-Government, student councils in secondary schools can be established and it is this framework where the informal education of students takes place. In 2005 such councils existed in as many as 50 % of secondary schools in Slovakia. Our surveys of participation of secondary school students in school self-governments revealed that a kind of participatory pyramid is being formed which reflects the logics of participatory democracy. Data of surveys in 2005 and 2007 revealed similar trends. About 75 % of secondary schools students in our samples replied that were informed about the existence of students council in their school, 30 % students took part in the school council elections, and approximately 11 % of secondary school students ran in the students school council elections.

PEDAGOGIKA SK, 2010, Vol. 1. (No. 4: 273-293)

Key words: citizen, participation, democratic citizenship education, school self-government PEDAGOGIKA.

5 novembra, 2010   Komentáre vypnuté na Ladislav Macháček: Formal and Informal Education of Secondary School Students in Slovakia about Democratic Citizenship

Beata Kosová: The Present-day University Education – Changes and Challenges

The process of approximation that is ongoing in varied types of higher education results in degradation of the university learning. In the past, the university well represented its Latin name, universitas, which means the entirety united by singularity; it signified the entirety of knowing. Due to the Bologna Process, the current notion of the university trend promotes quick and narrowly-aimed training for economic practice and the labour market. However, it neglects the cultivation of free and autonomous thinking, human individuality and free science. This process affects also universities in Slovakia, which were established as predominantly regional educational institutions which gradually developed to be full-universities. However, due to the Bologna Process, the traditional principles of universities now fade. Universitas scientiarum signifies entirety of science, universitas universum means relationship to the whole, universitas scholarum et doctorum is a unity of the learners and the teachers, universitas litterarum means unity of educated and moral scholarship and integrity of an individual. In order to keep to these principles, universities should pursue philosophical and scientific reflection of themselves. Being autonomous learning organisations, they should organize pro-university and further education of its employees.

PEDAGOGIKA.SK, 2010, Vol. 1, (No. 4: 263-272)

Key words: the idea of the university, university education, entirety of science, universitas as a principle of entirety, traditional principles of universities, philosophy of education

5 novembra, 2010   Komentáre vypnuté na Beata Kosová: The Present-day University Education – Changes and Challenges