


Lorell Sandi
High School Student
Marketing
swimming
Journal of Student Affairs in Africa
The scope of JSAA is indicated by keywords such as: student affairs, student career development, student counselling, student development theory and research, student discipline, student engagement, student experience, student finances and financial aid, student housing, disability/disabled students, student leadership and governance, student life cycle, student living and learning, student movement, student organisations, student orientation, student policy, student politics and activism, student sport, student support, academic development (and its intersection with the student affairs co-curriculum), graduate attributes, and teaching and learning support. This list of keywords is not exhaustive. Our key focus area is the core functions of student affairs and services in Africa.
By:
Lorell Sandi
Wednesday, May 12, 2021
CULTURE AND SOCIETY
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Educational research
Cross-national Studies
Educational research which crosses national boundaries offers much promise for generating new insights for at least two reasons (Aldridge et al. 1999). First, there usually is greater variation in variables of interest (e.g., teaching methods, student attitudes) in a sample drawn from multiple countries than from a one-country sample. Second, the taken-for-granted familiar educational practices, beliefs, and attitudes in one country can be exposed, made ‘strange,’ and questioned when research involves two countries. In a recent cross-national study, six Australian and seven Taiwanese researchers worked together on a study of classroom climate.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/social-sciences/educational-research
By:
Lorell Sandi
Wednesday, May 12, 2021
HEALTH AND NUTRITION
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Perceptions of Educators
Introduction
As McCrary (2001, p.29) remarked, “music educators and researchers should be tireless in their efforts when seeking answers to vitally important questions [including] are we providing outstanding music experiences that foster life-long participation in music”? Research evidence supports the benefits of musical participation across the lifespan. This includes intellectual transfer effects in earlier life (Henriksson-Macaulay and Welch, 2015; Williams et al., 2015) as well as broader benefits to socio-emotional and physical health and well-being into old age (Krause et al., 2018). Accordingly, the present research asks: What are the music educators’ practices for promoting on-going musical engagement? Are there practices appropriate to different forms of music education that serve different cultural contexts and life stages?
By:
Lorell Sandi
Wednesday, May 12, 2021
AGRI-FOOD SYSTEMS
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Agri and food
AGRICULTURE AND FOOD
As agricultural goods progress from field to fork they require attention, tracking and integrity. We offer an end-to-end supply chain range of services that reduce risk, ensure quality and improve productivity.
By:
Lorell Sandi
Wednesday, May 12, 2021
YOUTH EMPOWERMENT
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Agri and food
AGRICULTURE AND FOOD
As agricultural goods progress from field to fork they require attention, tracking and integrity. We offer an end-to-end supply chain range of services that reduce risk, ensure quality and improve productivity.
By:
Lorell Sandi
Wednesday, May 12, 2021
YOUTH EMPOWERMENT
Leave a comment
Effective Educational Strategies to Promote Life-Long Musical Investment: Perceptions of Educators
Effective Educational Strategies to Promote Life-Long Musical Investment: Perceptions of Educators
While research has broadly considered the wide-ranging intellectual, social, personal, and physical benefits of active musical participation across the lifespan, there is little research that explores how music educators work to promote participant investment inside school and beyond. The present research, therefore, aimed to investigate the practices employed by leading music educators within a range of cultural and pedagogical contexts that facilitate investment toward life-long engagement in music. Interviews with North American, European, and Australian music educators with both practitioner and research expertise from within school as well as higher education institutions were undertaken to gather reflections on participants’ own practices and beliefs. Content analysis of the interview transcripts revealed deep knowledge and skills relating to teaching music, education philosophy and pedagogy, and strong recognition of the support of peers, supervisors, institution/school, and local community. It was clear that interviewees were deeply influenced by local, national, and cultural trends.
By:
Lorell Sandi
Wednesday, May 12, 2021
CULTURE AND SOCIETY
+1

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