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Dive into the research topics where Jessica Mantei is active.

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Featured researches published by Jessica Mantei.


Technology, Pedagogy and Education | 2009

Using Computers to Support Children as Authors: An Examination of Three Cases.

Lisa Kervin; Jessica Mantei

The changing nature of literacy is well documented within the literature, challenging educators to examine their pedagogies in light of the needs of learners in the current climate. The development and creation of non‐linear texts within primary classrooms is of current interest as they reflect the types of texts accessed and created by users of technology and afford children opportunities to make connections between their in and out of school literacy experiences. The authors observed children over extended periods as they collaborated with teachers and peers to author non‐linear texts for a range of purposes. Three case studies will be reported, providing examples of how three cohorts of primary school children (one lower primary, one middle primary, one upper primary) responded to the challenge to create texts using Information and Communication Technology and the specific learning observed. What is interesting about these cases is the process that the children engaged with as they planned, constructed and evaluated their texts. This paper describes this process and the implications it presents for what we understand about the pedagogy of writing, the creation of text and the opportunities for providing classroom literacy experiences aimed at supporting and fostering student learning.


Archive | 2012

Developing a model for a self-study professional learning community

Garry Hoban; Peter McLean; Wendy Nielsen; Amanda Berry; Christine Brown; Gordon L. Brown; Barbara Butterfield; Tricia Forrester; Lisa Kervin; Jessica Mantei; Jillian Trezise; Celeste Rossetto; Irina Verenikina

Although the term self-study may suggest an individual teacher educator studying his or her own practice, most self-studies involve pairs or small groups of teacher educators working together in what is often called collaborative self-study. An extension of an informal collaboration is to formalize self-study as professional learning for teacher educators. This means that a group of teacher educators and other academics can study their practices over an extended period of time and share experiences as a community. This chapter identifies and explains the nature of a professional learning framework that underpins a group of academics becoming a self-study community. The framework is developed from previous research with teachers in schools and is adapted for self-study of academic teaching practices. The framework is based on the dynamic interaction of three professional learning influences: (1) content, (2) process, and (3) conditions that support such a community. Development of the framework is based on the progress of a group of ten academics, mostly teacher educators, over a 12-month period. Refinement of the framework is supported by case studies of the experiences of two of the participants in the self-study community.


E-learning and Digital Media | 2012

Online Advertising: Examining the Content and Messages within Websites Targeted at Children

Lisa Kervin; Sandra C. Jones; Jessica Mantei

It is recognised that from a young age children spend considerable portions of their leisure time on the Internet. In Australia a number of child-targeted magazines have associated websites, which have high and ever-increasing readership. We do not yet know the impact of this medium upon children. Overt advertising is evident on webpages, but so too are hidden advertisements in the written text, images and games. This material usually does not comply with existing broadcasting codes of practice for mainstream advertising. This article examines the instances of overt and covert advertisements for food within three websites monitored over a 12-month period. Across this time the authors found 13 examples of overt and 39 examples of covert food advertising. In this article they focus on three example advertisements as they analyse them in response to the following research questions: What examples of overt and covert advertising are evident within websites attached to childrens magazines? What messages are presented? The authors discuss the implications this advertising presents for media literacy and the critical reading strategies required by young people as they navigate their way through and make meaning from these digital texts.


Herrington, J. <http://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/view/author/Herrington, Jan.html>, Herrington, A., Mantei, J., Olney, I. and Ferry, B. (2009) New technologies, new pedagogies: Mobile learning in higher education. University of Wollongong, Wollongong. | 2009

New technologies, new pedagogies: Mobile learning in higher education

J. Herrington; Anthony Herrington; Jessica Mantei; Ian Olney; Brian Ferry


Herrington, A., Herrington, J. <http://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/view/author/Herrington, Jan.html> and Mantei, J. (2009) Design principles for mobile learning. In: Herrington, J., Herrington, A., Mantei, J., Olney, I. and Ferry, B., (eds.) New technologies, new pedagogies: Mobile learning in higher education. University of Wollongong, Wollongong, pp. 129-138. | 2009

Design principles for mobile learning

Anthony Herrington; J. Herrington; Jessica Mantei


Herrington, J. <http://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/view/author/Herrington, Jan.html>, Herrington, A., Mantei, J., Olney, I. and Ferry, B. (2009) Using mobile technologies to develop new ways of teaching and learning. In: Herrington, J., Mantei, J., Olney, I., Ferry, B. and Herrington, A., (eds.) New technologies, new pedagogies: Mobile learning in higher education. University of Wollongong, Wollongong, pp. 1-14. | 2009

Using mobile technologies to develop new ways of teaching and learning

J. Herrington; Anthony Herrington; Jessica Mantei; Ian Olney; Brian Ferry


Herrington, J. <http://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/view/author/Herrington, Jan.html>, Mantei, J., Herrington, A., Olney, I. and Ferry, B. (2008) New technologies, new pedagogies: Mobile technologies and new ways of teaching and learning. In: 25th Australasian Society for Computers in Learning in Tertiary Education (ASCILITE) Annual Conference, 30 November - 3 December 2008, Melbourne, Vic. pp. 419-427. | 2008

New technologies, new pedagogies: mobile technologies and new ways of teaching and learning

J. Herrington; Jessica Mantei; Anthony Herrington; Ian Olney; Brian Ferry


The Journal of Interactive Learning Research | 2010

Computers and Play in Early Childhood: Affordances and Limitations.

Irina Verenikina; J. Herrington; Rob Peterson; Jessica Mantei


English Teaching-practice and Critique | 2014

Interpreting the Images in a Picture Book: Students Make Connections to Themselves, Their Lives and Experiences.

Jessica Mantei; Lisa Kervin


Archive | 2009

Collaborative gathering, evaluating and communicating 'wisdom' using iPods

Lisa Kervin; Jessica Mantei

Collaboration


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Lisa Kervin

University of Wollongong

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Ian Olney

University of Western Sydney

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Brian Ferry

University of Wollongong

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Anne Power

University of Western Sydney

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Beryl Exley

Queensland University of Technology

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