Ragnar Thygesen
Norwegian University of Science and Technology
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by Ragnar Thygesen.
Perceptual and Motor Skills | 1987
Nils Søvik; Oddvar Arntzen; Ragnar Thygesen
The paper describes a study in which the relationship between the cognitive and psychomotor aspects of childrens spelling and writing performances was investigated. By comparing data from various categories of children the relationship between the semantic and psychomotor functions could be examined, and differences between the skill performances of the three groups of students were predicted. A four-way 3 × 3 × 2 × 2 orthogonal design with categories of subjects, type, structure, and length of task as independent variables was used in the laboratory study, with 24 “normal”, 24 dyslexic, and 24 dysgraphic nine-year-old children as subjects. Most of the 16 hypotheses were verified by data identifying some of the spelling and writing characteristics of the three groups of children and the effects of contextual parameters on their performances. Dyslexic children, for example, seemed to write more slowly than the others, and their mean score of spelling errors was the highest one, whereas the dysgraphic children had the lowest mean score in writing accuracy and rhythm.
Advances in psychology | 1986
Nils Søvik; Oddvar Arntzen; Ragnar Thygesen
Publisher Summary This chapter discusses the effects of a training program on the handwriting of both normal and dysgraphic children. Feedback is important in any training, including handwriting training. The effects of feedback, however, depend on the nature of the task and the kind of feedback being used. The program presented in the chapter involves social tracking—with a child doing a tracking task in cooperation with an instructor. Both sensory feedback and supplementary feedback (arising from the interactions between the instructors input and the childs sensory feedback during the task) were presented to children. When compared with control subjects, both the accuracy and smoothness of the writing of these children were significantly improved without any sacrifice of writing speed. There was also some indication that the dysgraphic children might benefit from the program more than the normal children. It was suggested that social tracking is preferable to a computer-assisted instruction.
European Journal of Special Needs Education | 1998
Annlaug Flem; Ragnar Thygesen; Harald Valås; Elin Magnes
ABSTRACT A programme for training social skills to a group of 6‐year‐old children was developed and evaluated. The group consisted of eight children, four boys and four girls; three of these were considered to be at risk of developing emotional and behavioural problems. The targeted skills were supporting, cooperating, establishing social contacts, participating, reducing aggression and handling conflict situations. The theoretical framework underlying the social skills intervention programme was based on cognitive‐social learning theory and scaffolding. The programme consisted of nine, 30‐35 minute, training sessions which were presented over a one and a half month period. Pretest/posttest assessment indicated that the intervention programme was effective in increasing some positive and reducing some negative behaviours. The sociometric assessment, however, showed few changes from pre‐training to posttraining.
Curriculum Journal | 2016
Kjell Lars Berge; Lars Sigfred Evensen; Ragnar Thygesen
ABSTRACT The model presented in this article aspires to represent a theoretically valid and coherent definition and description of writing, as a basis for teaching and assessing writing as a key competency in school. It represents a critique as well as an extension of previous alternatives in that it views writing as a culturally and individually intentional act of semiotic mediation. Its perspective is sociocultural and functional; focussing on the relation between writing acts and their purposes, and its dynamic construction captures flexible relations between these. The communicative aspects encapsulate semiotic tools which written mediation affords. A discussion of curricular and didactic potentials finishes the article, illustrating how the model may form a basis for a varied teaching of writing, as well as being a tool for learning and assessment within and across school subjects.
Curriculum Journal | 2016
Lars Sigfred Evensen; Kjell Lars Berge; Ragnar Thygesen; Synnøve Matre; Randi Solheim
ABSTRACT The Berge et al. article in this volume presents the functional construct of writing that underlies summative and formative assessment of writing as a key competency in Norway. A functional construct implies that specific acts of writing and their purposes constrain what is a relevant selection among the semiotic resources that writing generally affords. In this article, we present the specific criteria that are currently being introduced in Norwegian teaching and assessment of writing, as well as selected aspects of their development. The article builds on an assumption that assessment criteria have such educational importance that even their origins, intellectual trajectories and underpinnings should be given attention in educational research. In this context, the article presents elements of a rare approach, in that national ‘norms of expected proficiency’ at politically predefined educational grade levels have been grounded in sustained collaboration with experienced teachers of writing across the curriculum, and may thus be viewed as yet unofficial ‘standards’. In the first step, a combination of existing curricula and literature review of writer development was used to tentatively draft a first set of criteria for the grades included in a 2005 national test of writing (grades 4, 7, 10 and 11). In the second step, such criteria were developed through an iterative, long-term process where initial criteria were confronted with the judgements of experienced teachers. Through ‘think aloud’ assessment interviews, pairs of teachers across Norway were asked to assess specific cases of students’ writings and voice criteria for their judgements, both within and across a series of domains. In the third step, interview transcripts were used to search for criteria used by several pairs of locally situated teachers across geographically distributed schools. Criteria thus identified were pooled into a refined set of ‘national standards’ that were subsequently tested out in everyday classroom contexts. On the basis of this confrontation with educational reality, the set has been further refined to form the version presented in this article. The Norwegian case raises a range of issues related to curriculum development, ‘standards’ and educational sustainability.
Archive | 2017
Gustaf Bernhard Uno Skar; Ragnar Thygesen; Lars Sigfred Evensen
Assessment for learning in low-stakes contexts raises a series of problematic issues related to standards development. This chapter discusses several such issues on the basis of two interrelated data sets on writing as a key competency across the curriculum in Norway: How may standards communicate with teachers across the curriculum? How may standards fare in local learning environments over time? And most importantly: How can a shared rhetorical community among teachers develop over time and produce reliable assessment across local contexts? This chapter uses data sets that are based on a less than usual approach. In both data sets standards were developed in close collaboration with experienced primary-grade teachers, across the country. ICC analyses (time series as well as comparative analysis across contexts) demonstrate that a considerable increase in reliability develops over time, but simultaneously imply a number of remaining challenges and that further refinements will be needed in order to reach satisfactory levels.
Assessment in Education: Principles, Policy & Practice | 2017
Kjell Lars Berge; Gustaf Bernhard Uno Skar; Synnøve Matre; Randi Solheim; Lars Sigfred Evensen; Hildegunn Otnes; Ragnar Thygesen
Abstract This article reports consequences for student writing quality based on a long-term professional learning project. Project teachers, representing all school subjects in grades 3–7, were presented with a writing construct, ‘Wheel of Writing’, and norms of expectation for writing proficiency. Participating teachers used the writing construct and norms as a basis for writing instruction and writing assessment. The project was conducted in 24 schools across Norway. 3088 students from 20 project schools participated. Two hundred and thirty three students from 4 schools were used as a comparison group. The investigation showed that students in primary school improved their writing quality significantly. Students in lower secondary school did not. However, there was substantial variation in writing quality effects between schools, classes, and individual students. For instance at a number of schools, project students from lower secondary school improved their writing quality significantly. The article discusses potential explanations of the effects.
European Journal for Education Law and Policy | 2000
Ragnar Thygesen
The current reorganization of Norwegian special education is outlined, with an emphasis on transfer of resources from the national and regional resource centers for special education to the local Educational-Psychological Service. Underlying ideological principles, primarily egalitarian values, mainstreaming, adapted education, inclusion, and normalization, are highlighted.
Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research | 2009
Rolf B. Fasting; Ragnar Thygesen; Kjell Lars Berge; Lars Sigfred Evensen; Wenche Vagle
Norsk pedagogisk tidsskrift | 2011
Ragnar Thygesen; Lars Gunnar Briseid; Anne Dorthe Tveit; David Lansing Cameron; Velibor Bobo Kovač