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Werbung und Identität im multikulturellen Raum: Der Werbediskurs in Luxemburg; ein kommunikationswissenschaftlicher Beitrag
Reddeker, Sebastian. - : transcript Verlag, 2022. : DEU, 2022. : Bielefeld, 2022
In: 18 ; Literalität und Liminalität ; 320 (2022)
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2
Spanish Tipsters and the Millennial and Centennial Generations in the Scenario of a Pandemic
In: Media and Communication ; 10 ; 1 ; 286-296 ; New Narratives for New Consumers: Influencers and the Millennial and Centennial Generations (2022)
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3
Gegen die Öffentlichkeit: Alternative Nachrichtenmedien im deutschsprachigen Raum
Schwaiger, Lisa. - : transcript Verlag, 2022. : DEU, 2022. : Bielefeld, 2022
In: 46 ; Digitale Gesellschaft ; 327 (2022)
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4
The Role of Media and Communication in Reducing Uncertainty During the Syria War
In: Media and Communication ; 9 ; 4 ; 297-308 ; Ten Years after the Arab Uprisings: Beyond Media and Liberation (2022)
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5
Salient practices of award-winning undergraduate research mentors–balancing freedom and control to achieve excellence
Walkington, H; Stewart, KA; Hall, EE. - : Informa UK Limited, 2021
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6
Vaccine Hesitancy and the Cultural Politics of Trust in the Dengvaxia Controversy: A Critical Discourse-Ethnographic Study of Online News Content, Producers, and Audiences
In: ASEAS - Austrian Journal of South-East Asian Studies ; 13 ; 2 ; 1-8 (2021)
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7
Critical Discourse Analysis of Selected Newspaper Articles Addressing the Chapel Hill Shooting Incident
In: Media Watch ; 11 ; 1 ; 21-34 (2021)
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8
The Threat and Fear of War: The State and Politics in American Mass Media
In: Media Watch ; 11 ; 3 ; 439-446 (2021)
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9
Literaturrezeption und Leseverhalten bei den Deutschen in der Sowjetunion
In: 8 ; Arbeitsberichte Forschungsprojekt "Deutsche in der Sowjet-Gesellschaft" ; 20 (2021)
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10
PISA reading. Mode effects unveiled in short text responses ...
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11
Factions: acts of worldbuilding on social media platforms ...
Little, Dana L.. - : University of Glasgow, 2020
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12
News media performance evaluated by national audiences: how media environments and user preferences matter
In: Media and Communication ; 8 ; 3 ; 321-334 ; Media Performance in Times of Media Change (2020)
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13
Audience-based indicators for news media performance: a conceptual framework and findings from Germany
In: Media and Communication ; 8 ; 3 ; 293-303 ; Media performance in times of media change (2020)
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14
Automated Journalism: A Meta-Analysis of Readers’ Perceptions of Human-Written in Comparison to Automated News
In: Media and Communication ; 8 ; 3 ; 50-59 ; Algorithms and Journalism: Exploring (Re)Configurations (2020)
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15
Passport Experience: Impact Analytics Fall 2014 to Fall 2018
In: Publications (2020)
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16
Monitoring Academic Studies of Turkish Lexicography: A Bibliometric Study of 84 Years
In: Lexikos; Vol. 29 (2019) ; 2224-0039 (2019)
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17
Beyond Filter Bubbles and Echo Chambers: The Integrative Potential of the Internet
In: 5 ; Digital Communication Research ; 246 (2019)
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18
Exploring the Alignment of the Secondary School Certificate English Examination with Curriculum and Classroom Instruction: a Washback Study in Bangladesh
Abstract: In the nearly three decades of research, washback research has explored a range of factors such as teachers, students, and social contexts in order to understand how testing influences teaching and learning globally. However, little research has been done on how (mis)aligned assessment systems may create test washback on classroom teaching and learning. In South Asian contexts, test washback is especially noticeable due to the region’s extremely examination-oriented education system, yet studies on washback in this part of the world are extremely limited especially in Bangladesh. This doctoral dissertation attempted to bridge this gap in the literature by investigating the alignment of curriculum, textbook, and examination in Bangladesh to examine how alignment or misalignment relationships created washback effects on classroom teaching and learning. The Secondary School Certificate (SSC) examination is the most high-stakes examination in Bangladesh. Approximately two million students take the SSC examination each year. High scores on this examination, particularly SSC English-language scores, are needed to gain admission to higher education and top universities; high SSC scores can also help students obtain better jobs. Also, getting a better grade in the English subject is a badge of status marker for students and their parents. Thus, securing the highest possible score on the SSC English examination is essential for test takers. To explore how the SSC English examination influenced English classroom teaching and learning, this study used a multimethod, qualitative approach. Drawing on an adapted argument and evidence-based validation framework (Pellegrino et al., 2016), I collected evidence from multiple stakeholders to build the instructional validity of the classroom instruction. Instructional validity seeks evidence about the alignment of examination with the defined knowledge and skills in the curriculum, and how examination guides classroom teaching and learning (Pellegrino et al., 2016). Data were collected through documents, interviews, classroom observations, and focus groups. Three main findings of the study highlight the complex and non-linear nature of washback in the context of Bangladesh. First, the SSC English examination was largely misaligned with the national English curriculum and the prescribed textbook because of bureaucratic and contextual problems in the country’s educational system. Second, because of this misalignment, teachers taught to the test rather than the curriculum. Since high SSC English examination scores were the most highly valued outcome, English skills not on the examination were ignored by teachers. Third, students prepared only for the examination, fulfilling their short-term goal of high SSC English scores while neglecting their long-term goal of improving English proficiency. While students took intense test preparation, they were privy to the fact that test preparation was not going to improve their English skills. For national curriculum and textbook developers, these washback effects were unintended. However, for teachers and students, these results were intentional and what they wanted, as students and teachers prioritized high SSC examination scores over English proficiency which was the original goal in the English curriculum. ; PhD
Keyword: Bangladesh; Curriculum Alignment; EFL; ESL; Influence of Examinations; Qualitative Research; Secondary School Certificate English Examination; South Asia; Teaching and Learning of English; Test Impact; Washback
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/1974/26482
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19
Estudio de la producción académica sobre comunicación en España e Hispanoamérica
In: Comunicar: Revista científica iberoamericana de comunicación y educación, ISSN 1134-3478, Nº 61, 2019, pags. 113-123 (2019)
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20
Aggie Recreation Center Impact Report Fall 2015 to Spring 2019
In: Publications (2019)
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