Peer-assisted Learning

Peer-assisted Learning
Author: Keith Topping
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 390
Release: 1998-07
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1135686866

Peer Assisted Learning (PAL) involves children in school consciously assisting others to learn, and in so doing learning more effectively themselves. It encompasses peer tutoring, peer modeling, peer education, peer counseling, peer monitoring, and peer assessment, which are differentiated from other more general "co-operative learning" methods. PAL is not diluted or surrogate "teaching"; it complements and supplements (but never replaces) professional teaching--capitalizing on the unique qualities and richness of peer interaction and helping students become empowered democratically to take more responsibility for their own learning. In this book, PAL is presented as a set of dynamic, robust, effective, and flexible approaches to teaching and learning, which can be used in a range of different settings. The chapters provide descriptions of good practice blended with research findings on effectiveness. They describe procedures that can be applied to all areas of the school curriculum, and can be used with learners of all levels of ability, including gifted students, students with disabilities, and second-language learners. Among the distinguished contributors, many are from North America, while others are from Europe and Australia. The applicability of the methods they present is worldwide. Peer-Assisted Learning is designed to be accessible and useful to teachers and to those who employ, train, support, consult with, and evaluate them. Many chapters will be helpful to teachers aiming to replicate in their own school environments the cost-effective procedures described. A practical resources guide is included. This volume will also be of interest to faculty and researchers in the fields of education and psychology, to community educators who want to learn about the implications of Peer Assisted Learning beyond school contexts, and to employers and others involved in post-school training.

Peer-assisted Learning

Peer-assisted Learning
Author: Keith Topping
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 401
Release: 1998-07-01
Genre: Education
ISBN: 1135686858

Peer Assisted Learning (PAL) involves children in school consciously assisting others to learn, and in so doing learning more effectively themselves. It encompasses peer tutoring, peer modeling, peer education, peer counseling, peer monitoring, and peer assessment, which are differentiated from other more general "co-operative learning" methods. PAL is not diluted or surrogate "teaching"; it complements and supplements (but never replaces) professional teaching--capitalizing on the unique qualities and richness of peer interaction and helping students become empowered democratically to take more responsibility for their own learning. In this book, PAL is presented as a set of dynamic, robust, effective, and flexible approaches to teaching and learning, which can be used in a range of different settings. The chapters provide descriptions of good practice blended with research findings on effectiveness. They describe procedures that can be applied to all areas of the school curriculum, and can be used with learners of all levels of ability, including gifted students, students with disabilities, and second-language learners. Among the distinguished contributors, many are from North America, while others are from Europe and Australia. The applicability of the methods they present is worldwide. Peer-Assisted Learning is designed to be accessible and useful to teachers and to those who employ, train, support, consult with, and evaluate them. Many chapters will be helpful to teachers aiming to replicate in their own school environments the cost-effective procedures described. A practical resources guide is included. This volume will also be of interest to faculty and researchers in the fields of education and psychology, to community educators who want to learn about the implications of Peer Assisted Learning beyond school contexts, and to employers and others involved in post-school training.

Athletic Training Students' Transfer of Learning During Their Clinical Education Experience

Athletic Training Students' Transfer of Learning During Their Clinical Education Experience
Author: Thomas B. Franek
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2013
Genre:
ISBN:

Transfer of learning refers to how previous learning influences current and future learning and how past or current learning is applied or adapted to similar or novel situations. Athletic training students enrolled in accredited programs are exposed to didactic theory and clinical practice in the form of educational competencies and clinical proficiencies. The learner progresses through established coursework in which he or she must successfully transfer their learning to clinical practice. This transfer is necessary to ensure the learner matriculates from the level of a student learner to that of an independent practitioner. A variety of supervised clinical rotations are provided to give students the opportunity to apply previously learned knowledge and skills in "real world" situations. These rotations must include controlled problem solving/critical thinking situations that allows for the utilization of knowledge and skills learned from course content. In this sense, the goals of clinical education include authenticating student knowledge, interpreting theoretical and applied knowledge, developing and refining skills, familiarizing students with the workplace, and developing problem-solving and time management skills. Transfer of learning is at the heart of this development. Assessments of transfer of learning will assist athletic training educators authenticate the development of the athletic training student as a learner in the clinical setting.

Athletic Training Student Perceptions of the Clinical Learning Environment in an Integration and Immersive Clinical Model for Education

Athletic Training Student Perceptions of the Clinical Learning Environment in an Integration and Immersive Clinical Model for Education
Author: Brett A. Winston
Publisher:
Total Pages: 142
Release: 2019
Genre:
ISBN:

ABSTRACT: The current study was designed to investigate if differences existed in professional degree athletic training student (ATS) perceptions of the clinical learning environment with regards to immersive and clinical integration models of clinical education and preceptor to student ratios. In order to investigate ATS perspectives of the clinical learning environment a 34 item, four factor scale was developed by the researcher and named the Clinical Learning Environment Inventory – Athletic Training (CLEI-AT). Participants included 1,491 professional degree ATSs from across the United States who were recruited based on non-certified student membership status with the National Athletic Trainers Association (NATA). Participants completed the CLEI-AT using Qualtrics Software (Provo, UT) and a 2 x 3 multivariate analysis of variance was computed to determine if mean vector differences existed among the independent variables with regard to the four subscales of the CLEI-AT. No significant multivariate differences were found therefore univariate analyses were conducted. A significant (p