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Article
Publication date: 14 June 2013

Improving the candidate experience

Leigh Carpenter

The purpose of this paper is to cover the inaugural UK employment candidate experience awards (The C&Es). It aims to include details of the program, best practice case…

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Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to cover the inaugural UK employment candidate experience awards (The C&Es). It aims to include details of the program, best practice case studies and some of the 2012 C&Es winner success stories.

Design/methodology/approach

This paper draws on research findings from participating organizations that shared data on their candidate experience processes and practices. This also includes research findings from 857 candidates who applied to these organizations. References may also be made to the North American research data – the second year has just concluded – with 90 participating companies and 17,500 candidate responses. Some of the organizations featured include UK winners GE Capital, Risk Management Solution and Avanade, and North American winners Adidas Group and Deloitte.

Findings

Organizations which do not recognize the importance of providing good candidate experience practices will find it increasingly difficult to source the right talent. Candidates expect a return on investment, and time invested will become the currency that fuels their expectations. Their key expectation/requirement will be timely, accurate and transparent communication. A personalized experience, and all that entails, will become the norm.

Originality/value

The paper provides evidenced research findings which were verified by candidates who experienced part or all of the organizations' recruitment processes.

Details

Strategic HR Review, vol. 12 no. 4
Type: Research Article
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/SHR-03-2013-0017
ISSN: 1475-4398

Keywords

  • Human resource management
  • Recruitment
  • UK
  • North America
  • Candidate experience
  • Talent acquisition
  • Candidate screening
  • Candidate selection

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Article
Publication date: 9 September 2019

Secondary teacher candidates’ experiences teaching about religion within a history curriculum

Sarah B. Brooks

The National Council for the Social Studies (2014, 2017) has called for increased attention to religion in social studies curriculum. A small but growing body of research…

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Abstract

Purpose

The National Council for the Social Studies (2014, 2017) has called for increased attention to religion in social studies curriculum. A small but growing body of research has examined the preparation of social studies teacher candidates to teach about world religions, but critical questions remain. The purpose of this paper is to explore the question: what is the experience of the secondary social studies teacher candidate as he/she teaches about religion in a high school, world history course?

Design/methodology/approach

This study employed a phenomenological approach to examine the experiences of six teacher candidates as they endeavored to teach about world religions through a two-semester, intensive internship.

Findings

Findings, drawn from individual interviews with the candidates, suggest that their efforts to teach about religion were marked by fears, worries and concerns. Additionally, candidates understood their personal religious identities and experiences as significant influences on their experience teaching about religion. Finally, candidates experienced several features of their internship as key supports in their efforts to teach about religion.

Originality/value

This paper concludes with a series of recommendations for strengthening the preparation of social studies teacher candidates to teach about religion in public school settings.

Details

Social Studies Research and Practice, vol. 14 no. 2
Type: Research Article
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/SSRP-05-2019-0032
ISSN: 1933-5415

Keywords

  • Pre-service teachers
  • High school
  • Religion
  • Public school
  • Teacher candidates
  • World history

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Book part
Publication date: 25 April 2017

A Glimpse into the Future: Practice Teaching in Fifth-grade Math

Michelle Novelli and Vicki Ross

In this chapter, we explore two intersecting plotlines of teacher knowledge and content knowledge through an experience in which we engaged our teacher candidates during…

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Abstract

In this chapter, we explore two intersecting plotlines of teacher knowledge and content knowledge through an experience in which we engaged our teacher candidates during our mathematics methods course. Teacher candidates were tasked with the challenge of creating hands-on, interactive activities for small groups of fifth-grade students based on a selected Common Core State Standard for Mathematics (CCSS-M) related to the area of fractions. Responsible for both planning and preparing their activities, the teacher candidates were the curriculum designers. What we designed as the practice teaching activity involved a morning of planning and implementing a fraction activity with small groups of fifth-graders in short sessions, making adjustments, prompting and cueing students, extending learning, managing behaviors and distractibility – experiencing the early challenges and rewards of their first experiences in teaching – gaining practice and feedback. Forming the core of this chapter is a narrative construction of Michelle’s personal experience working with teacher candidates and fifth-grade students in practice teaching spaces for the first time, discovering moments along with our students, when they bridged the expansive gap from living as education students to feeling like beginning teachers. Teacher candidates’ responses to the experience and reflections on their challenges and successes are shared.

Details

Crossroads of the Classroom
Type: Book
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/S1479-368720160000028006
ISBN: 978-1-78635-796-0

Keywords

  • Narrative inquiry
  • teacher knowledge
  • teacher identity
  • practicum
  • curriculum
  • planning and implementation

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Book part
Publication date: 18 February 2011

Tip-toeing past the fear: Becoming a music educator by attending to personal music experiences

Shelley M. Griffin

Purpose – This chapter focuses on how teacher candidates engage in a process of body mapping to narratively inquire into how their daily informal and formal music…

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Abstract

Purpose – This chapter focuses on how teacher candidates engage in a process of body mapping to narratively inquire into how their daily informal and formal music experiences inform elementary music teaching practices.

Methodology and findings – In a primary/junior music education course at Brock University, teacher candidates utilize a course assignment to create a visual narrative (body map), along with oral and written narratives that outline their music experiences. Through this narrative inquiry, teacher candidates become aware of how their personal lived experiences influence their perceptions about elementary music teaching. This chapter offers conceptualizations of five threads that emerged from the narratives: process of body mapping and musical experience, music everywhere, school influences, family, and fear.

Value – This inquiry deepens understandings of curriculum making possibilities in elementary music teacher education as teacher candidates begin to form their music teacher identity based on their lived experiences. Such visual, oral, and written narratives contribute to increased narrative understandings by demonstrating the power teacher candidates' personal music experiences have in shaping teacher identity and, in turn, teaching practice.

Details

Narrative Inquiries into Curriculum Making in Teacher Education
Type: Book
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/S1479-3687(2011)00000130012
ISBN: 978-0-85724-591-5

Keywords

  • Elementary music
  • music experiences
  • teacher education
  • narrative inquiry
  • body mapping

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Book part
Publication date: 7 March 2013

Learning to Teach and the False Apprenticeship: Emotion and Identity Development During the Field Experience Placement

Shawn Michael Bullock

The field experience placement is an integral part of teacher education programmes. It is ostensibly meant to provide a place for teacher candidates to enact pedagogical…

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Abstract

The field experience placement is an integral part of teacher education programmes. It is ostensibly meant to provide a place for teacher candidates to enact pedagogical theory gained during coursework under the supervision of an experienced host teacher. In reality, the field placement is a source of considerable tension for teacher candidates, as they struggle to reconcile their prior assumptions about teaching and learning and their prior identities as students with the demands of school culture that requires teachers and students to act in particular ways. The field experience is emotional work that has a considerable impact on the development of new teachers’ identities. In this chapter I will focus on how two new teachers learn during the field experience placement, with a particular emphasis on the roles of emotion and the development of professional identity in learning to teach. Cultural–historical activity theory (CHAT) will provide a useful lens to interpret some of the challenges of learning to teach during the field placement.

Details

Emotion and School: Understanding how the Hidden Curriculum Influences Relationships, Leadership, Teaching, and Learning
Type: Book
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/S1479-3687(2013)0000018011
ISBN: 978-1-78190-651-4

Keywords

  • Mentoring
  • beginning teacher
  • field placement
  • identity
  • false apprenticeship
  • cultural–historical activity theory

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Article
Publication date: 1 February 1982

Selection and Recruitment of Library Staff

Richard Proctor

I approach this work in the knowledge that the recruitment and selection of staff is one of the most neglected areas of library management. I have been unable to trace any…

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Abstract

I approach this work in the knowledge that the recruitment and selection of staff is one of the most neglected areas of library management. I have been unable to trace any monograph devoted to the subject published during the past 10 years and few general books on library management spare more than a cursory glance in its direction.

Details

Library Management, vol. 3 no. 2
Type: Research Article
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/eb054860
ISSN: 0143-5124

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Book part
Publication date: 1 November 2012

Using Technology to Enhance Teacher Education

Barbara Schwartz-Bechet and Eva Garin

In this chapter, we discuss how to use technology to enhance teacher education through the discussion of teacher education programs at two Maryland universities…

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Abstract

In this chapter, we discuss how to use technology to enhance teacher education through the discussion of teacher education programs at two Maryland universities. University of Maryland University College, a public university, was founded to address the needs of the military overseas following the end of World War II, as an offshoot of the University of Maryland College Park. It has become the largest primarily online public, not for profit, university in the United States. Its Master of Arts in teaching program was reinstituted in 2009, after a several year hiatus. The second university, Bowie State University (BSU), is a more traditional, historically black university (HBCU) founded as a teacher education institution in the 1800s and has been training teachers ever since. Both institutions of higher education are part of the University System of Maryland and the teacher education programs are certified by the Maryland State Department of Education (MSDE). These two universities were selected to highlight how different types of universities are implementing technology into their teacher education programs. The distinction illustrates a fully online teacher education program and a fully face-to-face teacher education program and the nuances between the two. These distinctions offer a broader view of how technology is used to enhance teacher education and to offer equal opportunity to students who want to become teachers. The chapter focuses on the uses of technology for the instruction of teacher candidates’ field experiences and internships. Technology enhancements provided in teacher preparation courses for student academic instruction and university faculty and school personnel training in the use of technology and Web 2.0 tools are discussed.

Details

Increasing Student Engagement and Retention Using Social Technologies
Type: Book
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/S2044-9968(2012)000006B011
ISBN: 978-1-78190-239-4

Keywords

  • Teacher education
  • technology integration
  • virtual field and clinical experiences
  • instructional technology
  • technology enhanced internship

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Book part
Publication date: 18 September 2014

Monolingual Teacher Candidates Promoting Translingualism: A Self-Study of Teacher Education Practices Project

David Schwarzer and Mary Fuchs

This chapter is based on a self-study of teacher education practices (S-STEP) project that explored the pedagogical practices of a teacher educator and the impact of such…

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Abstract

This chapter is based on a self-study of teacher education practices (S-STEP) project that explored the pedagogical practices of a teacher educator and the impact of such practices on a teacher candidate engaged in the process of becoming a translingual teacher. This S-STEP study includes David, a professor in a teacher education program in the greater New York City metropolitan area, and Mary, a teacher candidate enrolled in the program. The purpose of the study was to discover how different class activities influenced the philosophical and pedagogical views of one teacher candidate in the program. The following are the two research questions of the study:

  1. How did the class experiences that a teacher education professor, David, designed help teacher candidates conceptualize translingual approach to language and literacy development?

  2. How did a monolingual teacher candidate, Mary, develop her role as a translingual English teacher through the completion of these experiences?

How did the class experiences that a teacher education professor, David, designed help teacher candidates conceptualize translingual approach to language and literacy development?

How did a monolingual teacher candidate, Mary, develop her role as a translingual English teacher through the completion of these experiences?

The findings of this S-STEP project demonstrate that the Sociocultural Reflection, the Community Study, and the Linguistic Landscape fostered a translingual approach to language and literacy in the classroom. Moreover, the findings suggest that upon the completion of the projects, one teacher education candidate was able to better define translingualism as a phenomenon of study, ideology, and pedagogy.

Since this investigation is based on a S-STEP project of a single teacher educator and a single teacher candidate, more research with larger populations is needed. Practical implications for teacher educators and teacher candidates in other settings are explored.

Details

Research on Preparing Preservice Teachers to Work Effectively with Emergent Bilinguals
Type: Book
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/S1479-368720140000021003
ISBN: 978-1-78441-265-4

Keywords

  • Multilingualism
  • translingualism
  • linguistic landscape
  • culturally responsive teaching
  • mainstream teacher candidates
  • second language

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Book part
Publication date: 10 July 2014

Mobilised by mobility? determinants of international mobility plans among doctoral candidates in Germany

Nicolai Netz and Steffen Jaksztat

This chapter identifies factors influencing doctoral candidates’ mobility plans based on empirical studies as well as theories of social inequality and migration. The…

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This chapter identifies factors influencing doctoral candidates’ mobility plans based on empirical studies as well as theories of social inequality and migration. The relative importance of the identified factors is assessed through a series of linear and logistic regressions, which are calculated based on data from a 2010 online survey of doctoral candidates employed at German universities. The theoretical considerations are mostly confirmed: mobility experiences during the previous studies and during the doctorate mobilise doctoral candidates to plan further research periods abroad. Moreover, contextual factors play an important role. For instance, working in an internationalised institutional environment and having regular contact with academics abroad increase the likelihood of developing mobility plans. Regarding social factors, age turns out to be negatively associated with mobility plans. Parenthood also affects mobility plans negatively, but only among female doctoral candidates. Contrary to the hypothesis, we do not find that a high social background significantly increases the likelihood of planning a research period abroad.

Details

Academic Mobility
Type: Book
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/S1479-362820140000011009
ISBN: 978-1-78350-853-2

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Article
Publication date: 9 November 2015

The Australian doctorate curriculum: responding to the needs of Asian candidates

Sarojni Choy, Minglin Li and Parlo Singh

The purpose of this paper is to present a case for appraisal of the current curriculum provisions for international students. In this paper, the authors summarise the key…

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Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to present a case for appraisal of the current curriculum provisions for international students. In this paper, the authors summarise the key challenges of Asian international research graduate students pursuing doctorate studies in Australian universities to become researchers for the global communities. The intention is to advocate further research on current higher degree research curriculum with a view to enriching the developmental experiences of international research graduate students in preparation for global practice.

Design/methodology/approach

This is an analytical paper that adopts a conceptual and rhetorical approach.

Findings

The authors review a growing body of research on higher degree research studies and establish a need for appraisal of current curriculum provisions.

Originality/value

This is the first paper to concentrate on an emerging need to appraise current higher degree research curriculum provisions to enhance the development international research graduate students for global practices.

Details

International Journal for Researcher Development, vol. 6 no. 2
Type: Research Article
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/IJRD-08-2014-0024
ISSN: 2048-8696

Keywords

  • Cultural knowledge
  • Curriculum
  • Cultural difference
  • Global researchers
  • International research students
  • Western theories and philosophies

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