Search
Full bibliography 2,190 resources
-
This thesis articulates the development of a holistic approach to enhance learning and teaching in an object-oriented programming course. Starting with the premise that it is not possible to improve teaching without understanding how students learn programming, this thesis embodies the processes and reflections experienced while applying knowledge of how students learn programming, to design a learning environment that enhances learning outcomes. First, a theoretically based framework for the teaching of the course is developed. A holistic approach using a plurality of pedagogic theories, taxonomies, and instructional designs is employed to bridge the gaps between the bodies of knowledge relating to the ways that students approach programming and the application of this knowledge to design the course. Second, in two cycles of action research, the course is implemented and the analysis of its outcome is conducted using mixed methods data collection techniques. The evaluation is integrative and seeks multiple forms of evidence for student engagement and improved learning. The original contributions from this research in the form of new initiatives, perceptions, and understandings, as well as implications for theory and practice are described. A claim to knowledge is established by explaining the significance of the research to student learning, personal practice and beliefs, institutional influence, and potential for influence on computing education research. Quality criteria are applied to assess the validity and rigor of the action research project, and the research is appraised as a scholarly enquiry and a transformative process that led to innovative forms of thinking and acting
-
Recent scholarly studies and media coverage have primarily focused on China’s increasing presence and sometimes asymmetrical engagement with Africa in tandem with the new trend of Chinese migration to that continent. Yet, the inverse flux of Africans to China and the emergence of African communities in Southern China over the last decades is influencing some areas of the Pearl River Delta Region, and changing the fabric of cities like Guangzhou, Macau and Hong Kong, in a way without precedent. There are representations or exotic descriptions from some mass circulation magazines and newspapers on the infamous Chungking Mansions in Hong Kong or the so-called “Chocolate-city,”an area centered aroundHongqiao, the village-district and Canaan market in the city of Guangzhou, with its arcades and strip malls filled with ethnic businesses and transnational migrants. In Macau, significant concentrations of African population of different origins are also seen in the “Papa pun” commercial center or in downtown areas. Despite many studies devoted to the “ethnoburbs” in other latitudes, only very recently, these entrepreneurial African communities in Mainland China are starting to become worthy of serious scholarly attention. Yet,there is total absence of studies dealing with the presence of more and more African students and the cultural manifestations of African communities well portrayed in the new African cinema, in music produced by Afro-Chinese bands or even singers.Besides a continuing inward flow of transient Africans who come to China for business on a regular basis, a significant number of settler African traders, particularly Nigerians, have already married local Chinese women, set up families, autonomously run their businesses without recourse to Chinese intermediaries, and established a web of informal and formal committees representing their home nations and states, to solve disputes while maintaining personal and business links with Africa. Besides, those emigrant ‘bushfallers’ who are coming to China solely for business purposes, a new form of “silent” migration of Nigerians comprising students from different backgrounds is enrolling in higher education institutions in the Macau Special Administrative Region of China. These students are coming to pursue their studies or to seek a job to pay their student fees at the margin of the PRC scholarship and stipendprograms for visiting African students that were popular in China in the 1960s and mid-1970s as part of CCP’s foreign policy for Third World aiming friendly relations with Africa. Today, these “transnational” Nigerian students are in their own way affirming their identity and difference, in southern China, in particularly in Macau SAR, thanks to their network of multiple interrelations across nation-states from Africa to Asia and to a combination of perseverance, zeal, and gentleness without subservience. Although they have not been targets for the hostility and even violence like the Shanghai incident of July 1979 or the Nanjing protests in December 1988 at Hehai University targeting African students, today these Nigerian students are facing more subtle forms of ethnocentrism and legal discrimination from immigration laws to daily practices, which always try to associate their citizenship to problematic or easy stereotypes of scam or colour. Yet, at the same time, everything seems to indicate that these newcomers are quick adapting and finding new forms of negotiating their social integration in the Chinese local society which in turn is offering more opportunities.This paper is part of a more ambitious project which aims to assess the new forms of migration from Africa to China and from China to Africa as well as their impact and contribution of globalization. First, this paper considers why and how Macau has evolved from a Portuguese outpost where slavery was a an institutionalized commodity to special administrative region of China where a new urban African community, mostly composed by Nigerian students, is in formation due to opportunities and rapid changes occurring in the region in the first years of the twenty-first century, by comparing the new to old African communities of students and business people/migrant workers from former Portuguese colonies (Angola, Cape Verde, São Tomé and Príncipe, Guinea-Bissau, and Mozambique).Finally, borrowing the title from a sequel movie with the same title of the promising New African cinema, the paper focus on the “China Wahala”or the troubles of these Nigerian students through their tales of their experiences of racism(s) and their negotiations and responses which radically contradicts not only the slogans of cultural diversity propagated by the official discourse and tourist channels as these Nigerians are confronted daily with often dramatic situations ranging from indifference and ostracism to exclusion.
-
Purpose – Given the diversity which exists among various groups of consumers, the purpose of this paper is to explore students' consumption of non‐alcoholic beverages in Nigeria. Design/methodology/approach – Three focus groups and 20 in‐depth interviews were conducted with students in three universities located in Lagos, Nigeria. Findings – Initial findings indicate that these students' consumption of non‐alcoholic beverages is influenced in many ways. Nevertheless, the most striking of these influences are found to be convenience of purchase, along with availability, price, health concerns, and culture/social reasons. Originality/value – The main contribution of the study lies in the relevance of segmentation, targeting, and positioning activities of business organisations in respect of marketing of non‐alcoholic beverages. Based on the findings, the empirical study will serve as a valuable input to marketers in their planning, analysis, and implementation of appropriate marketing strategies to students vis‐à‐vis the highlighted influences on their consumption of this category of food. It will thus serve as a tool for creating competitive advantage in this prevailing volatile business environment.
-
Use of CALMS to enrich learning in introductory programming courses
Explore
USJ Theses and Dissertations
-
Doctorate Theses
(68)
- Faculty of Art and Humanities (13)
- Faculty of Business and Law (15)
-
Faculty of Health Sciences
(2)
- Psychology (2)
- Faculty of Religious Studies and Philosophy (5)
- Institute for Data Engineering and Science (3)
-
Institute of Science and Environment
(10)
- Science (10)
-
School of Education
(20)
- Education (20)
-
Master Dissertations
(1,155)
-
Faculty of Arts and Humanities
(122)
- Architecture (8)
- Choral Conducting (10)
- Communication and Media (43)
- Design (25)
- History and Heritage Studies (28)
- Information System (3)
- Lusophone Studies in Linguistics and Literature (8)
- Faculty of Business and Law (522)
-
Faculty of Health Sciences
(215)
- Counselling and Psychotherapy (169)
- Organisational Psychology (25)
- Social Work (20)
-
Faculty of Religious Studies and Philosophy
(26)
- Philosophy (14)
- Religious Studies (12)
- Institute of Science and Environment (28)
-
School of Education
(245)
- Education (245)
-
Faculty of Arts and Humanities
(122)
Academic Units
- Domingos Lam Centre for Research in Education (1)
-
Faculty of Arts and Humanities
(263)
- Adérito Marcos (9)
- Álvaro Barbosa (32)
- Carlos Caires (15)
- Daniel Farinha (2)
- Denis Zuev (4)
- Filipa Martins de Abreu (11)
- Filipa Simões (2)
- Filipe Afonso (12)
- Francisco Vizeu Pinheiro (10)
- Gérald Estadieu (21)
- José Simões (41)
- Nuno Rocha (2)
- Nuno Soares (44)
- Olga Ng Ka Man, Sandra (7)
- Priscilla Roberts (4)
- Tania Marques (2)
-
Faculty of Business and Law
(212)
- Alessandro Lampo (21)
- Alexandre Lobo (92)
- Angelo Rafael (3)
- Douty Diakite (15)
- Emil Marques (2)
- Florence Lei (15)
- Ivan Arraut (17)
- Jenny Phillips (14)
- Sergio Gomes (2)
- Silva, Susana C. (4)
-
Faculty of Health Sciences
(40)
- Angus Kuok (17)
- Cynthia Leong (1)
- Helen Liu (1)
- Maria Rita Silva (1)
- Vitor Santos Teixeira (10)
-
Faculty of Religious Studies and Philosophy
(95)
- Andrew Leong (6)
- Cyril Law (11)
- Edmond Eh (6)
- Fausto Gomez (1)
- Franz Gassner (10)
- Jaroslaw Duraj (9)
- Judette Gallares (3)
- Stephen Morgan (18)
- Thomas Cai (6)
-
Institute for Data Engineering and Sciences
(29)
- George Du Wencai (23)
- Liang Shengbin (9)
-
Institute of Science and Environment
(128)
- Ágata Alveirinho Dias (42)
- Chan Shek Kiu (8)
- David Gonçalves (28)
- Karen Tagulao (17)
- Raquel Vasconcelos (11)
- Sara Cardoso (7)
- Shirley Siu (9)
- Thomas Lei (8)
- Wenhong Qiu (1)
-
Library
(3)
- Emily Chan (3)
-
Macau Ricci Institute
(17)
- Jaroslaw Duraj (4)
- Stephen Rothlin (13)
-
School of Education
(194)
- Elisa Monteiro (7)
- Hao Wu (5)
- Isabel Tchiang (2)
- Keith Morrison (91)
- Kiiko Ikegami (3)
- Miranda Chi Kuan Mak (11)
- Mo Chen (3)
- Rochelle Ge (19)
- Susannah Sun (6)
Resource type
- Blog Post (3)
- Book (67)
- Book Section (128)
- Conference Paper (139)
- Document (4)
- Encyclopedia Article (1)
- Film (1)
- Journal Article (435)
- Magazine Article (19)
- Manuscript (1)
- Newspaper Article (34)
- Preprint (4)
- Presentation (64)
- Radio Broadcast (5)
- Report (62)
- Thesis (1,220)
- TV Broadcast (1)
- Web Page (2)
United Nations SDGs
- 01 - No Poverty (1)
- 02 - Zero Hunger (1)
- 03 - Good Health and Well-being (33)
- 04 - Quality Education (17)
- 05 - Gender Equality (1)
- 07 - Affordable and Clean Energy (3)
- 08 - Decent Work and Economic Growth (6)
- 09 - Industry, Innovation and Infrastructure (26)
- 10 - Reduced Inequalities (1)
- 11 - Sustainable Cities and Communities (11)
- 12 - Responsable Consumption and Production (6)
- 13 - Climate Action (8)
- 14 - Life Below Water (19)
- 15 - Life on Land (4)
- 16 - Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions (2)
- 17 - Partnerships for the Goals (1)
Cooperation
Student Research and Output
-
Faculty of Business and Law
(5)
- Neto, Andreia (1)
-
School of Education
(4)
- Áine Ní Bhroin (1)
- Emily Chan (3)
Publication year
- Between 1900 and 1999 (12)
-
Between 2000 and 2024
(2,163)
- Between 2000 and 2009 (155)
- Between 2010 and 2019 (963)
- Between 2020 and 2024 (1,045)
- Unknown (15)