Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Yehuda Peled is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Yehuda Peled.


Interactive Learning Environments | 2016

Technological, pedagogical and content knowledge in one-to-one classroom: teachers developing “digital wisdom”

Ina Blau; Yehuda Peled; Anat Nusan

One-to-one (1X1) laptop initiatives become prevalent in schools aiming to enhance active learning and assist students in developing twenty-first-century skills. This paper reports a qualitative investigation of all 7th graders and their 15 teachers in a junior high-school in Northern Israel gradually implementing 1X1 model. The research was conducted during a second year of 1X1 implementation at the school level, which was a first year of teaching and learning with laptops for all study participants. The study triangulates non-participant lessons’ observations and semi-structured interviews with 15 teachers. The data were collected twice: at the beginning and toward the end of the 2011–2012 academic year – in total, 30 observations and 30 interviews were conducted. The results were examined through phenomenological research techniques and discussed in terms of the technological, pedagogical and content knowledge (TPACK) and “digital wisdom” approaches. The teachers showed significant increase of technological knowledge. However, only moderate connections between technology and pedagogy as well as between technology and content were found. Some of the teachers functioned as moderators, scaffolding students and supporting their individual or collaborative learning. However, many teachers struggled with effective management of 1X1 classroom. Neither conjunction of teacher TPACK nor facilitation of student digital skills was observed. The paper suggests an overlap of the TPACK framework and the digital wisdom approach and provides implications for curriculum developers and educational policy-makers.


Interdisciplinary Journal of e-Skills and Lifelong Learning | 2015

Does 1:1 Computing in a Junior High-School Change the Pedagogical Perspectives of Teachers and Their Educational Discourse?.

Yehuda Peled; Ina Blau; Ronen Grinberg

Transforming a school from traditional teaching and learning to a one-to-one (1:1) classroom, in which a teacher and students have personal digital devices, inevitably requires changes in the way the teacher addresses her role. This study examined the implications of integrating 1:1 computing on teachers’ pedagogical perceptions and the classroom’s educational discourse. A change in pedagogical perceptions during three years of teaching within this model was investigated. The research analyzed data from 14 teachers teaching in a junior high school in the north of Israel collected over the course of three years through interviews and lesson observations. The findings show that the 1:1 computing allows teachers to improve their teaching skills; however, it fails to change their fundamental attitudes in regard to teaching and learning processes. It was further found that the use of a laptop by each student does not significantly improve the classroom’s learning discourse. The computer is perceived as an individual or group learning technology rather than as a tool for conducting learning discourse. An analysis of the data collected shows a great contribution to collaboration among teachers in preparing technology-enhanced lessons. The findings are discussed in terms of Bruner’s (Olson & Bruner, 1996) “folk psychology” and “folk pedagogy” of teachers and “the new learning ecology” framework in 1:1 classroom (Lee, Spires, Wiebe, Hollebrands, & Young, 2015). One of the main recommendations of this research is to reflect on findings from the teaching staff and the school community emphasizing 1:1 technology as a tool for significant pedagogical change. It seems that the use of personal technology per se is not enough for pedagogical changes to take place; the change must begin with teachers’ perceptions and attitudes.


Interactive Learning Environments | 2014

Characterisation of pre-service teachers' attitude to feedback in a wiki-environment framework

Yehuda Peled; Oded Bar-Shalom; Rakefet Sharon

This is a two-phase research process in a wiki environment. The first phase explored (1) the significance of peer-feedback on students’ academic performance on a specific task in a wiki environment, (2) three types of peer-feedback and (3) students’ constraints on offering meaningful feedback to their peers. The objective of phase two was to determine the reasons why students refrain from peer-feedback. Significant correlation exists between the willingness to give feedback and the willingness to receive feedback. Significant correlation also exists between the difficulty of giving feedback and the difficulty of receiving feedback. Female students tend to consider feedback as the teachers responsibility more than male students. Religious beliefs did not have any significant effect on any of the parameters tested. The results indicate that traditional students tend to be more conservative regarding feedback. There are worrying implications to pre-service teachers’ refraining from giving feedback.


Technology, Pedagogy and Education | 2016

Pedagogical aspects of integrating wikis in pre-service teacher education

Olzan Goldstein; Yehuda Peled

The study examines pedagogical approaches in using wikis in teaching and learning in teacher education colleges. It focuses on: instructors’ motivation for wiki-based teaching; course types; teaching methods; evaluation; content structure; characteristics of student collaboration and learning outcomes; involvement of instructors in the learning process. The study is based on semi-structured interviews with 11 teacher educators from six colleges of education in Israel. The authors discuss added value and challenges of wiki-based teaching, the impact of assessment on shaping the learning process, as well as general conclusions regarding wiki-based pedagogy.


Archive | 2014

Technological Pedagogical Content Knowledge in Pre-service Teacher Education: Research in Progress

Anat Oster; Yehuda Peled

The Israeli Ministry of Education launched the IT National Initiative Program (ITNIP) in 2011, with the objective of transforming teacher education in order to meet the demands of the twenty-first century [1, 2]. The ITNIP program emphasizes the need to develop required skills among students, including ICT literacy, critical thinking, inquiry and problem solving, communicating and teamwork, self-oriented learning and ethics and cyber awareness. The initiative focuses on teachers as agents of change, on the need to teach them how to integrate ICT wisely into teaching and how to develop innovative pedagogy that will enhance learning and teaching processes. Implementation of the ITNIP began in the 2011–2012 school year.


Interdisciplinary Journal of e-Skills and Lifelong Learning | 2014

A Chaperone: Using Twitter for Professional Guidance, Social Support and Personal Empowerment of Novice Teachers in Online Workshops.

Efrat Pieterse; Yehuda Peled

This research examines the feasibility and benefits of using Twitter as a support tool to enhance social interaction among teachers in their first year of service, as they participate in an online induction workshop, and as a tool to aid the workshop’s moderator in monitoring the group and enhancing and supporting the early-service teachers’ development. The 6914 tweets that were posted during the induction workshop enabled the workshop’s moderator to constantly monitor the participants’ progress – both their lows and their highs. These tweets reveal a process of socialisation that was taking place among the participants, which led to an increased availability of personal and professional support, and thus enhanced the new teachers’ professional growth. Content analysis was conducted on the 6914 tweets that were posted during the eight months of the induction workshop. Participants answered a feedback questionnaire in the middle, and at the end of the induction workshop. Findings revealed the existence of a process of creating a “community of practice” – a process that creates professional and social support, through its members sharing their feelings and experiences directly from the field. This confirms the claim that tweets on Twitter can be a worthy substitute for face-to-face meetings. However, the questionnaire painted a different picture, in that participants’ evaluations of the Tweets were neutral, which raises questions for further research.


Interdisciplinary Journal of e-Learning and Learning Objects | 2012

Teachers' Openness to Change and Attitudes towards ICT: Comparison of Laptop per Teacher and Laptop per Student Programs.

Ina Blau; Yehuda Peled


Interdisciplinary Journal of e-Skills and Lifelong Learning | 2010

The Effect of Procrastination on Multi-Drafting in a Web-Based Learning Content Management Environment

Miriam Sarid; Yehuda Peled


Society for Information Technology & Teacher Education International Conference | 2012

Learning Motivation and Student Academic Dishonesty – A Comparison Between Face-To-Face And Online Courses

Yehuda Peled; Casimir Barczyk; Yovav Eshet; Keren Grinautski


Educational practice and theory | 2012

Institutional Policies and Faculty Perceptions of Student Academic Dishonesty.

Yehuda Peled; Casimir Barczyk; Miriam Sarid

Collaboration


Dive into the Yehuda Peled's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Efrat Pieterse

Open University of Israel

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Yovav Eshet

Western Galilee College

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Ina Blau

Open University of Israel

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Casimir Barczyk

Purdue University Calumet

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Miriam Sarid

Western Galilee College

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Lynn Zimmerman

Purdue University Calumet

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Petrea Redmond

University of Southern Queensland

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge