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    Explore "textbooks" with insightful episodes like "256. Indigenous Education in India", "Financial Success in Your College Years", "How to Use Homeschool Curriculum (Link in Show Notes)", "History Curriculum and the Extent of Accountability | Kevin Cheng" and "Back to School with Freedom Scientific, Access Digital Textbooks with JAWS Part 2" from podcasts like ""BIC TALKS", "Golden 1 Credit Union - Financial Wellness", "HomeSchool ThinkTank Parenting Podcast: Support for Homeschooling Parents", "Conversational Debate" and "Freedom Scientific Training Podcast"" and more!

    Episodes (24)

    256. Indigenous Education in India

    256. Indigenous Education in India

    It is generally believed that the indigenous vernacular education in India was oral, controlled by certain sections of the population and exclusive in nature. However, the archival data of 16,000 indigenous vernacular schools gives a very different picture. In 1813, the British Parliament earmarked 100,000 rupees a year for education in India. The colonial government did not utilise the amount. The British liberals collected the data on indigenous schools to urge the colonial government to spend on improving these schools. The data is diverse and covers the Madras, Bombay and Bengal Presidencies and North Western Provinces (Uttar Pradesh). It comprises nine linguistic groups – Bengali, Gujarati, Hindi, Kannada, Marathi, Malayalam, Odia, Tamil, and Telugu. It was collected between 1819 and 1838 by British officials and civilians proficient in local vernaculars.

    William Adam, a Sanskrit and Bengali scholar, collected the data for Bengal and Bihar. He sat in the classrooms and observed the method of teaching. So we have first-hand information on classroom practices of both Sanskrit and Bengali schools of Bengal. Many Sanskrit Pundits continued to correspond with Adam in Sanskrit long after the data collection was over. A.D. Campbell, who collected the data for the Bellary district, was proficient in both Kannada and Telugu languages.

    This episode of BIC Talks which took place in early July 2023, by Parimala V Rao Historian & Professor, History of Education, Jawaharlal Nehru University covers access, curriculum, textbooks, school holidays, fees charged by the teachers and the colonial policy towards them. It will also address how education became exclusive by the end of the nineteenth century.

    Subscribe to the BIC Talks Podcast on your favourite podcast app! BIC Talks is available everywhere, including iTunes, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Castbox, Overcast and Stitcher.

     

    Back to School with Freedom Scientific, Access Digital Textbooks with JAWS Part 2

    Back to School with Freedom Scientific, Access Digital Textbooks with JAWS Part 2

    Get the school year off to a great start using our teaching resources for both teachers and students. In this webinar, we provide an overview of our Teaching Resources page and also tell you about our Student of the Month program. In addition, you’ll learn more about:

    • Accessible typing tutorials
    • Downloadable resource files
    • Interactive JAWS training modules
    • Tools for reading and solving math equations

    https://www.freedomscientific.com/webinars/back-to-school-with-freedom-scientific/

    Should I Start Saving Up for Textbooks Now?

    Should I Start Saving Up for Textbooks Now?

    (College 101 Series: Chapter 13) Buying books for classes are notoriously a pain in the butt for college students.  They’re expensive and seldom used in certain classes.  For this episode, we discuss why books are so expensive.  We then jump into an impromptu ‘tips and trick’ segment where we talk about ways we’ve learned to help cut the cost of unnecessary books down for you.

    Are Insects Disappearing from your Biology Textbook?

    Are Insects Disappearing from your Biology Textbook?

    Are you noticing less insects in your biology textbook? You're not alone. Jennifer Landin, with student and co-author Kiran Gangwani, recently decided to quantify the coverage of insects in college-level introductory biology textbooks over time. By exploring the coverage of insect diversity concepts, the visual representation of insects, and conducting a text analysis of keywords, they discovered a significant decline in biology textbook content dedicated to insects, along with an increasingly neutral tone in addressing the animal kingdom's largest group. Jennifer joins Lab Out Loud to discuss her research, how it mirrors the decline of natural history in education, and the implications that taxonomic bias might have on our understanding of ecosystems and human society.

    Show notes:
    https://laboutloud.com/2019/01/episode-199-disappearing-insects/

    Episode 66: Research Relevance for Teachers, Textbooks, and Lambert Sauveur

    Episode 66: Research Relevance for Teachers, Textbooks, and Lambert Sauveur

    Welcome back to The TEFLology Podcast - a podcast all about teaching English as a foreign language and related matters. 

    In this episode, Rob reviews a debate about the relevance or irrelevance of academic research for English language reachers. Matt leads a discussion about the use of textbooks in the classroom. Finally, Matthew charts the life and work of Lambert Sauveur. 

    Please enjoy this episode!

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    MSM 513 Dr. Jeanne Middleton Hairston - Banned by the State!!

    MSM 513 Dr. Jeanne Middleton Hairston - Banned by the State!!

    In 1969, two professors from Millsaps and Tougaloo, Jim Loewen and Charles Sallis, decided to write a Mississippi History textbook with the help of their graduate students.  Mississippi: Conflict and Change was considered a ground-breaking textbook when it was published in 1974.  Despite receiving universal critical acclaim, the book was banned from use in Mississippi classrooms by the State Textbook Purchasing Board.

    In this episode, Dr. Jeanne Middleton Hairston, a member of the team of graduate students who assisted in writing the book, discusses the felt need for a more inclusive narrative in teaching Mississippi history. She also recalls their efforts to convince the State to reconsider its ruling and the decision to file a lawsuit against the Board.

    Podcast Extra: Thirty-five years after winning their lawsuit against the State Textbook Purchasing Board, Hairston reflects on the judge’s ruling and the importance of history in making Mississippi a better place to live.

     

    Science Surprises: An eBook to Help Your Students Explore the Nature of Science

    Science Surprises: An eBook to Help Your Students Explore the Nature of Science

    As webmaster for the ENSI (Evolution and the Nature of Sciences Institute) website, Larry Flammer has helped to provide a number of free, student-centered, interactive lessons focusing on the nature of science.  So Larry wrote Science Surprises: Exploring the Nature of Science - a text supplement available as an eBook that helps teach the nature of science, with lessons for practicing scientific argumentation, and critical and skeptical thinking.  Listen to the episode as Larry talks to us about the nature of science, and learn how his eBook could help replace (or at least supplement) the standard introductory chapter in any secondary science textbook.

    Show notes at: http://laboutloud.com/?p=2893

    Episode 1407: Samuel Otten

    Episode 1407: Samuel Otten

    Sam Otten from the University of Missouri discusses the artcle, "The mathematical nature of reasoning-and-proving opportunities in geometry textbooks," published by the journal Mathematical Thinking and Learning, Volume 16. (Co-authors: Gilbertson, Males, Clark)



    See the comments for references mentioned during the interview.


    Complete list of episodes

    the show: 48 - Revenie

    the show: 48 - Revenie

    This week, Chris and Marianne the week's hottest topics including: Apple's Stellar Fiscal Earnings, Absinthe Jailbreak, iBooks Sees 350,000 Textbooks Downloaded, Verizon's iPhone Sales and Virgin Names Jet After Steve Jobs. If you'd like to hear yourself on a future broadcast, please call us at 646-820-3431 and leave your question. For complete show notes, please visit http://www.everythingicafe.com and hit the Podcast tab. You can follow everythingiCafe on Twitter @everythingicafe. Marianne can be found @emschultz and Chris can be found @meinck.