Browsing by Author "Viana, Isabel"
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- Cross-curricular teaching: recommendations for cross-curricular teaching implementationPublication . Timmerman, Virginie; Caeiro, Sandra; Dalaaker, Dina; Hjort, Michael Fabrin; Gaussel, Marie; Greczylo, Tomasz; Harju, Vilhelmiina; Michelsen, Claus; Paz, João; Reverdy, Catherine; Rintakumpu, Annina; Rostworowski, Michal; Serrano, Ana; Teixeira, António; Tervaniemi, Antonio Mari; Viana, IsabelThis eBook is the fourth and last output of the CROSSCUT project. The main purpose of CROSSCUT is to support the professional development of secondary school teachers by training them to develop the competences necessary for the implementation of cross curricular teaching. The eBook contains key information and tools produced during three years by participating institutions. It aims at providing the project’s targeted audiences with key recommendations backed by research conducted during the three years of the project. This eBook is organised in a way that, depending on who you are, you are directly pointed to the results and messages that may be of interest for you. Nevertheless, the CROSSCUT team invites you to read the eBook in its entirety.
- Intergenerational learning among teachers’ professional development and lifelong learning: an integrative review of primary researchPublication . Batista, Paula; Mouraz, Ana; Viana, Isabel; Graça, AmândioThis integrative literature review aims to provide a broader and updated perspective of teachers’ intergenerational learning (IL). The search was done in Web of Science and EBSCO ultimate databases between 2011 and 2022. Thirty-two empirical studies were selected and submitted to a thematic analysis and five themes were identified: (a) defining and conceptualising generation, (b) IL from understandings to practices, (c) contexts, factors and roles from different generations and institutions to promote IL, (d) factors that facilitate the success of IL, and (e) factors that make IL difficult. Data shows an increase in the last decades of research in IL within the educational context, but an absence of the prospective dimension still prevails. Intergenerational knowledge has been researched mainly from an individual professional perspective at the micro and meso levels of scholarship. Effectiveness requires intentional cultivation and a genuine desire for intergenerational knowledge exchange, involving active engagement and awareness among diverse generations and alignment with organizational aims. The promotion of IL takes place in very different ways and forms, and reflection on what is different seems to be a dominant trait. Furthermore, the review could conclude that intergenerational opportunities to work together will improve teacher education and continuous professional development.