Libby Lee
Murdoch University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Libby Lee.
Research in Science & Technological Education | 2003
Renato Schibeci; Libby Lee
There are increasing calls in the science education community for ‘science for citizenship’ as an important goal for the school science curriculum of the 21st century. The potential influence of portrayals of science and scientists in popular culture on the achievement of this goal is explored in this paper through a review of the literature. We develop a framework of important questions citizens ask in considering personal and social decision making in relation to science and technology issues, and how portrayals of science and scientists might contribute to this decision making process.
High Ability Studies | 1999
Libby Lee
Efforts by schools to cater more adequately for highly able students necessitate a shared understanding regarding the gifted and talented. This research aims to ascertain the qualitatively different ways in which teachers identify and describe gifted and talented children. It examines the variety of conceptions of giftedness held by teachers and analyses the patterns and inconsistencies among them. Initial findings of the study, conducted with 16 early childhood teachers (two male and 14 female), are reported. A qualitative phenomenographic research design was adopted because of its focus on revealing individual understandings (conceptions). These results show that teachers understand giftedness as a series of conceptions, namely excellence, potential, rarity, behaviour, innate ability, motivation and asynchrony. These are discussed with reference to existing theories and pertinent research. Results represent the initial findings of an ongoing major research project.
British Journal of Educational Technology | 2010
Kate Lowe; Libby Lee; Renato Schibeci; Rick Cummings; R. Phillips; David Lake
This paper reports on a completed field study that examined the usability and effectiveness of learning objects designed for Australian and New Zealand primary and secondary schools. It focuses on student engagement by observing the ways students interacted with learning objects and by listening to what they said about them. Questions that guided the field study included the following: Could the students use the learning objects easily? Did they enjoy the experience? Did they engage with the intended learning? These questions are examined with reference to students at different levels of schooling, and examples drawn from the fieldwork illustrate that, while some learning objects achieved their potential as engaging multimedia educational resources, others fell short. The paper provides a detailed examination of two learning objects to reveal what worked and what created barriers or subverted the intended learning. In particular, it explores interest, challenge and importance as elements that contributed to engagement and socially constructed learning.
Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood | 2007
Zsuzsa Millei; Libby Lee
International Journal of Research | 2006
Libby Lee; Maureen O'Rourke
The international journal of learning | 2009
Catherine Anne Harrison; Libby Lee; Maureen O'Rourke; Nicola Yelland
Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood | 2002
Libby Lee
Down, B. <http://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/view/author/Down, Barry.html>, Ditchburn, G. <http://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/view/author/Ditchburn, Geraldine.html> and Lee, L. <http://researchrepository.murdoch.edu.au/view/author/Lee-Hammond, Libby.html> (2008) Teachers’ ideological discourses and the enactment of citizenship education. Curriculum perspectives, 28 (2). pp. 1-27. | 2008
Barry Down; G. Ditchburn; Libby Lee
Australian Journal of Early Childhood | 2007
Libby Lee; Anne Wilks
Archive | 2005
Shelley Dole; Nicola Yelland; Gloria Latham; Heather Fehring; Anne Wilks; Julie Faulkner; Libby Lee; Jennifer Masters; Tom Lowrie; Therese Glynn