Refine
Has Fulltext
- yes (479)
Year of publication
Document Type
- Book article / Book chapter (479) (remove)
Keywords
- Psychologie (26)
- Animal Studies (23)
- Cultural Animal Studies (23)
- Cultural Studies (23)
- Ecocriticism (23)
- Environmental Humanities (23)
- Human-Animal Studies (23)
- Literary Studies (23)
- cultural studies (13)
- Kulturwissenschaften (12)
Institute
- Institut für deutsche Philologie (104)
- Institut für Psychologie (bis Sept. 2007) (82)
- Neuphilologisches Institut - Moderne Fremdsprachen (70)
- Institut für Altertumswissenschaften (33)
- Neuphilologisches Institut - Moderne Fremdsprachen (bis 2007) (32)
- Institut für Internationales Recht, Europarecht und Europäisches Privatrecht (21)
- Institut für Psychologie (21)
- Institut für Biblische Theologie (18)
- Theodor-Boveri-Institut für Biowissenschaften (18)
- Institut für Pharmakologie und Toxikologie (14)
Schriftenreihe
- Cultural Animal Studies, Band 3 (23)
- Aesthetische Eigenzeiten, 17 (1)
- Akten des ... Symposiums des Mediävistenverbandes; 13,2 (1)
- Aventiuren; 13 (1)
- Deuterocanonical and Cognate Literature Studies (1)
- Deuterocanonical and Cognate Literature Yearbook (1)
- GenderCodes - Transkriptionen zwischen Wissen und Geschlecht; 17 (1)
- Image ; 185 (1)
- International Archives of the History of Ideas / Archives internationales d’histoire des idées 242 (1)
- Jahrbuch der Oswald-von-Wolkenstein-Gesellschaft; 17 (1)
Sonstige beteiligte Institutionen
No abstract available.
No abstract available.
No abstract available.
No abstract available.
No abstract available.
No abstract available.
No abstract available.
Einführung
(2021)
Der vorliegende Band zeichnet sich durch zwei thematische Säulen aus. Im ersten Teil versammelt er Beiträge zu allgemeinen Fragen des kolumbianischen Verwaltungsund Staatshaftungsrechts, wobei auch die rechtsvergleichende Perspektive mit der deutschen Rechtsordnung eingenommen wird. Der zweite Teil widmet sich sodann unterschiedlichen Facetten der Nachhaltigkeitsdebatte und ihres normativen Rahmens im Recht Kolumbiens und Ecuadors.
Introducción
(2021)
El presente volumen se caracteriza por dos pilares temáticos. En la primera parte, reúne contribuciones sobre cuestiones generales del derecho colombiano administrativo y de responsabilidad del Estado, en lo cual también se adopta una perspectiva de derecho comparado con el ordenamiento jurídico alemán. La segunda parte está dedicada a las diferentes facetas del debate sobre la sostenibilidad y su marco normativo en la legislación colombiana y ecuatoriana
No abstract available.
No abstract available.
No abstract available.
Christian Flemmer
(2022)
Die Indogermanen sind schuld
(2022)
No abstract available.
V.2 Literarische Rezeption
(2022)
No abstract available.
To reopen educational institutions and return to the classroom, we all need to modify how we act to successfully face the challenges of the new normal resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic and entailing our insights into and the after-effects of the pandemic. More specifically, the new normal might encompass online education we are getting used to during the pandemic and the age-old onsite education as well. Thoughtfully integrated, online and onsite learning combine to create blended learning. However, the pertinent literature reveals that English as a foreign language (EFL) students and teachers differently perceive and react to blended learning in diverse contexts. This study was designed to explore student and teacher perceptions of and reactions to blended learning in the Department of English, Jahangirnagar University in the new normal. Fifty undergraduates of EFL and eight teachers of the department participated in the study. To collect data from them, the Student Questionnaire and the Teacher Questionnaire were used. And the data were processed by applying the SPSS programme module. The findings revealed that the majority of the students and the teachers had mostly positive perceptions of blended learning, although the former did not have sufficient exposure to online learning and the latter lacked adequate insights into online teaching. Further, both the students and the teachers expressed mostly positive reactions to blended learning in the new normal, though the former deemed online examinations inadequately smooth and reliable, and the latter had insufficient experience of online instruction and assessment. The study categorically recommends reforming the curriculum, adopting relevant instructional strategies, developing suitable materials, customizing the assessment, integrating and installing technology, training the teachers, upskilling the students for blended learning, improving the infrastructure, and adjusting the management.
Teaching comprises all types of disciplines and teachers need to look outside the confines of English as a Second Language. The acquisition of knowledge comes in a variety of the learners’ educational potential. English as a Second Language in teaching and learning, focuses on active learner’s involvement and reduction of coercion. Indeed, Gibran’s thoughts remain true that “wisdom leads one to discuss his or her potentials. To realize this, teachers in all educational levels have to portray a less dominant classroom role in accord with the importance of classroom interaction in the teaching learning process.
N.A. Flaunders retorted that “in the average classroom someone is talking for two-thirds of the time, two-thirds of the task is direct influence.” What does this mean? Students’ participation or interaction in the classroom has a significant content to enhance their linguistic competence and its core basis is how to use the language as the most important factor in the classroom. Comprehending the information caters one to establish a fair and well-balanced condition that teachers are facilitators, and the learners are to stay in the frontline.
In today’s classroom setting, the adoption-adaption of teaching strategies focuses on the learners’ ability to have a strong command or fluency of the language. ESL is learned around the globe and the learners’ interests are the primary goals in the teaching and learning process. Colin Blakemore once said that “True knowledge, as Plato argues, must be within us all, and learning consists of solely of discussing what we already know.”
In an ESL classroom, discovery of knowledge is not a new game. Teachers do perform their tasks and the learners serve not as passive listeners but as active recipients in the transformation-sharing of all the five macro skills namely speaking, reading, writing, listening, and viewing. In fact, if commitment, knowledge of subject-matter for independent learning, and management of learning are packaged in one big box, both the teachers and the learners will operate a mutual process of generating a lively culture and quality of educational life.
With the aforementioned views I had experienced in teaching ESL, the teacher’s passion for teaching and attitude in dealing with the learners create a strong impact on the learners cognitive, affective, and psychomotor domains.