- Home
- Conference Proceedings
- QScience Proceedings
- Conference Proceeding
Global Innovators Conference 2013
- Conference date: 4-7 Apr 2013
- Location: College of the North Atlantic-Qatar, Doha, Qatar
- Volume number: 2013
- Published: 01 April 2013
-
-
Global Innovators Conference 2013 Cartoon
By J. WicksAbstractCartoon of the Global Innovators Conference 2013 - College of the North Atlanic-Qatar, 4-7th April 2013
-
-
-
Writing centres and the idea of community outreach
Authors: Kevin Pittman and Paula HaydenAbstractThe writing centre's history has been eventful, all the more as its pedagogical innovations increasingly set it in opposition to standard curricular practice. As, on the one hand, classroom instructors absorbed the student-centred philosophy of the writing centre, and on the other, deans and management pressed tutors/mentors to justify their roles and methods vis. curricular outcomes, writing centres struggled to articulate why they matter, other than as a remedial service for poor student writers. Community outreach offers writing centres an opportunity to revive the spirit of discovery and innovation that drove the work and writings of Kenneth Bruffee, Stephen North and others in the 1970s and 80s. The innovations devised in outreach 'laboratories' have pragmatic implications for their primary student clientele. Furthermore, community service offers writing centre scholarship a quarry of research that could contribute to the development of an overarching theory of the writing centre, which some scholars say is the necessary next step, and which others warn may lead to the death of writing centres as we know them.
-
-
-
Instructor tutoring in the classroom: A merger of domains
By Edwin BalsomAbstractTraditionally, teaching and tutoring have been considered interdependent realms of education, dedicated in mutual ways to improving students’ learning. Instructors in classrooms deliver course material, supervise skill development, and regularly test students to guarantee learning standards. In a supporting role, tutors work in help centers to improve students’ skills and knowledge of course content already covered by the instructor. From this perspective, these two domains are clearly symbiotic in nature, conjoined in purpose, but distinct in roles and responsibilities.
-
-
-
Practical teaching and its importance in teaching civil engineering
More LessAbstractStudents pursuing their civil engineering degree usually learn the theory part in class but may struggle to relate theory to practice if the instructor has no industry experience. Engineering graduates can benefit more when civil engineering courses are taught by instructors that have both academic and practical experience. An instructor with industry experience can motivate students, enable them to relate what was learned in the class with the real world, and allow them to start developing their own engineering judgment, which is essential for the successful practice of civil engineering. The paper discusses the importance of practical experience in civil engineering education, problems facing practical teaching, and successful practices in practical teaching.
-
-
-
Careers counsellors as change agents and innovators
Authors: Christine Elizabeth Coutts and Abdulridha Jaffar DismalAbstractThe Kingdom of Bahrain seeks to make Bahraini youth the employees of choice, posing major challenges for careers counsellors in counselling and supporting students to plan for their futures in a way that contributes to the economic development of the country.
-
-
-
Business Transformation and Innovation using Storytelling
By Ginger GrantAbstractThe demand for innovation within organizations is a worldwide concern. In order for innovation to occur, creativity must first be unleashed in the individual. Education is under heavy criticism for failure to produce the workforce needed to meet the innovation challenge. The solution lies in the human imagination.
-
-
-
Outbound Train: The Instructor Support Project, Universal Design for Learning and the Role of Technology
More LessAbstractThe technological revolution that global society has undergone during the last few decades has completely transformed the way in which people interact with each other and their environment. Digital technology has permeated every corner of the globe and has permanently changed the way in which we function. The importance of technology for individuals in our society is ever increasing and creating a scenario where people, institutions and organizations are forced to adapt or be left behind. As Marshall McLuhan, the eminent Canadian Sociologist and scholar famously wrote, “the message of any medium or technology is the change of scale or pace or pattern that it introduces into human affairs. The railway did not introduce movement or transportation or wheel or road into human society, but it accelerated and enlarged the scale of previous human functions, creating totally new kinds of cities and new kinds of work and leisure” (1968) ( http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OMEC_HqWlBY&feature=related ). For education our medium is dynamic, vivid, flexible digital technology. Like the railroad, or the airplane before it, the world is not as it once was.
-
-
-
Giving students a voice to achieve positive change: Using appreciative inquiry to maximize student engagement
By Paul MacLeodAbstractStudent engagement is an area of concern for many educators, as students with higher levels of engagement and motivation tend to learn more than their less-motivated or engaged peers (Schreiner, 2007). Research into strengths-based approaches shows that people working from their strengths display higher levels of motivation, confidence, satisfaction and competence and that they tend to learn and retain information more easily (Rath, 2007; Clifton & Harter 2003; Linley & Harrington, 2006; Peterson & Seligman, 2004). In addition, when teachers are both socially supportive and intellectually demanding students tend to be more engaged and positive about their own learning (Stipek, 2002; Turner, Meyer, Cox, DiCintio & Thomas, 1998).
-
-
-
One Side of the Equation
Authors: Christine Elizabeth Coutts and Abdulridha Jaffar DismalAbstractStudent Services at Bahrain Polytechnic support students’ leadership and career development through mentoring, coaching, advising and counselling. Student Services work closely with Faculties to ensure a co-ordinated approach to meet student needs. In collaboration with industry partners, the polytechnic ensures that its students receive a quality educational experience that develops the technical and employability skills that will open the door to rewarding career opportunities. Students are encouraged to make the most of the opportunities available to them to develop themselves as leaders and as citizens.
-
-
-
Personalising the professional in the TVET SAC
By Kirsten GearAbstractBy 2036, UNESCO (2012) has estimated that there will be more people with college and university diplomas and degrees than ever before in history combined. However, many people are getting better qualifications of higher prestige for less work and of poorer quality. So, having such credentials not only no longer makes graduates marketable, but possessing this caliber of aptitude also makes individuals tremendously liable as accomplices and culprits in perpetuating real world problems (RWPs) unless they opt to instead use gained knowledge to participate in constructive conversations towards their reduction, remediation and resolution.
-
-
-
Educational innovations for empowering teachers in acomplishing better education in Indonesia
Authors: Neila Ramdhani and Djamaludin AncokAbstractAn assessment of Indonesian teacher competence, conducted nationally in 1999, indicated that there were less than 25% of teachers meeting the national standard requirement. To address the pressing need of improving their competence, the Ministry of National Education (MONE) issued Regulation No. 16/2077 on teacher competence certification. The Teacher Quality Improvement (TQI) program was invented to address the requirement in accordance with the regulation. TQI focuses on facilitating teachers to be inspiring teachers and equipping them with capacity to implement a sound teaching method.
-
-
-
Occupational standards quality procedure
More LessAbstractThis paper was presented at the Global Innovators 2013 Conference in Doha, Qatar. The issue of assessing the quality of occupational standards is important as a first step to identify the needs of a countries vocational training system. Elaborate methods like DACUM and functional analysis can be applied to develop occupational standards. Subject matter experts usually assess the results and quality of the standard development. This assessment does not rely on objective scientific evidence and is often driven by politics and subjective decision. This manuscript shows an approach how to apply a quality procedure with reflect the needs of the labor market.
-
-
-
Collected abstracts from the GIC2013 conference
By Skipp SymesAbstractCollected abstracts from the GIC2013 conference
-
-
-
TVET Education Reform in the MENA region following the Arab Spring
By Samah GamarAbstractThe Arab Spring of 2011 deconstructed enduring post-colonial dictatorships that perpetuated propaganda politics and penalized democratic expression. Within four months of the start of the revolutions, intellectuals began actively discussing how the uprisings of Tunisia, Egypt, Yemen, Libya, and Syria, along with resistance movements in neighbouring countries, offered “a particular opportunity to switch pedagogic and scholarly modes and strategies” in the region (Jadaliyyah, 2011). Indeed, it is an opportune time to discuss fundamental education reforms – amendments that remedy specific ideological paradoxes and incongruences that have obstructed education for a democratic society and thwarted civil empowerment in the Middle East and North African (MENA) region. This study provides an overview of the major factors that plague MENA education systems which include increasing educational disparity, a decrease in the quality of education despite high per capita education expenditures, and a mismatch between labour market needs and the outputs of education systems. It specifically highlights the post- revolution evolution technical and vocational education and training systems must undergo to effectively address one of the highest youth unemployment rates in the world – a significant contributor to ongoing unrest among the 85 million youth in the region. Specific recommendations for ways in which TVET reforms can positively impact this demographic through measures that address education quality and relevance are presented.
-