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Featured researches published by Neil Baumgart.


Assessment in Education: Principles, Policy & Practice | 1999

Approaches to Learning across Cultures: The role of assessment

Neil Baumgart; Christine Halse

In the context of a broader research study on the intercultural understanding of teachers in Australia, Japan and Thailand, this paper focuses on approaches to learning and the role of assessment in shaping such approaches. Popular contrasts portray Asian learners as compliant and favouring rote memorisation and Western learners as independent and favouring deep, conceptual learning. Yet Asian students frequently outperform their Western counterparts in competitive tests purported to measure higher cognitive skills. Biggs and his associates have challenged the stereotypical view of Asian students as rote learners as a Western misperception. But data from the present cross-cultural study suggest it is more than a Western misperception, being shared by teachers in Japan and Thailand. With this background, this paper then explores the role of assessment through an analysis of examination papers in the three countries at the high stakes, year 12 level. This analysis of the ways in which knowledge and comprehe...


International Journal of Intercultural Relations | 2000

Cross cultural perspectives of teachers: a study in three countries

Christine Halse; Neil Baumgart

In a shrinking world where globalization has blurred the boundaries across nation states and cultural divides, limitations on intercultural communication can readily give rise to glib generalizations and lack of understanding of diversity. Acknowledging the key role of teachers in shaping the views of future generations, this paper reports on the first stage of a research study on the intercultural understanding of teachers in Australia, Japan, and Thailand. Overall, the teacher participants had diverse cross-cultural experience, differing both in extent and nature of the contact. The methodology used a common survey instrument, except for its language of presentation. However, instead of using a traditional comparative approach to contrast responses of the three target groups, the study asked teachers to provide their perceptions of prevailing world views of people in their own AND the other two countries. The reciprocal nature of the observations provides a powerful methodology to explore perceived intercultural similarities and differences. The article also considers problems associated with response set in investigations of this kind. Three scales are considered — change through intervention, symbolic inner self, and independent thought and action — and the data reveal some similarities but also some striking differences in perceptions across countries. The differences signal a lack of intercultural understanding which is being explored further in a second, qualitative stage of the research. The findings indicate the need for increasing shared programs, exchanges and other opportunities for reciprocal relations that foster genuine dialogue, partnership and intercultural understanding between countries.


Assessment in Education: Principles, Policy & Practice | 1996

Codes of Ethics on Assessment Practice: confronting a quandary or inculcating ethical character? — overview of two sample documents

Neil Baumgart

Abstract This article reviews two examples of ethical codes produced to provide a set of standards, principles, or guidelines for professional conduct relating to educational assessment. Both codes classify professional responsibilities under key functions of assessment described in the article. The commentary identifies as important uses of the Codes self‐regulation of ethical standards within the profession and facilitation of teaching about ethical conduct. Although institutions and bureaucracies are increasingly regulating professional and research practice through ethics committees, it is argued that ethical behaviour is likely to be more effective and more pervasive when developed through education, reflection and deliberate modelling. Similarly, such behaviour is more likely to be sustained through peer scrutiny and professional self‐regulation than through monitoring via bureaucratic control. Such a stance implies the need for ready access to ethics codes widely known and endorsed within the profe...


Archive | 1999

Asia Education Foundation : national evaluation of the second triennium

Neil Baumgart; Christine Halse


Archive | 1998

Studies of Asia : future perspectives

Neil Baumgart; Christine Halse; J. Buchanan


Unicorn | 1996

International education and culture : getting the balance right

Christine Halse; Neil Baumgart


Archive | 1995

DO TEACHERS REGARD AUSTRALIA AS PART OF ASIA? AN EDUCATIONAL AND POLITICAL DILEMMA

Christine Halse; Neil Baumgart


ERA/AARE 1996 : Proceedings of the joint conference of the Education Research Association and the Australian Association for Research in Education. 25-29 November, Singapore. | 1996

Perspectives on culture : meeting points and divergences

Christine Halse; Neil Baumgart


Archive | 1998

Interim Report of the Asia Education Foundation : national evaluation of the second triennium

Neil Baumgart; Christine Halse


Archive | 1995

Meeting the needs of indigenous communities : evaluation of Batchelor College

Neil Baumgart; Christine Halse; Hugh Philp; Natascha McNamarra; Jean Aston; Aileen Power

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