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Amzalag, Meital; Shapira, Noa – International Review of Research in Open and Distributed Learning, 2021
This study examined an online professional development program designed to support meaningful acquaintance and reduce stereotypes and prejudices among teachers from different cultures in Israeli society. The rationale of the online program was based on the premise that indirect online contact might improve intergroup relations in diverse…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary School Teachers, Secondary School Teachers, Faculty Development
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Stanhill, Hadassah; Fenwick, Natalie Ann; Bogard, Geraldine Marie Alexandrine; Troper-Hochstein, Gavriella; Hassenfeld, Ziva – Journal of Jewish Education, 2021
This study examines a Pre-K-first grade full-time synchronous remote track in a Jewish day school. In the fall of 2020, Hassenfeld (Fifth Author) remotely taught biblical literature to Pre-K-first grade students. Through our analysis of two months of classroom transcripts, we sought to understand, first, the nature of student-to-student text…
Descriptors: Jews, Religious Schools, Day Schools, Preschool Education
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Beverley McCormick; Roger Austin; Rhiannon N. Turner; Elaine Hoter; Miri Shonfeld – Journal of Technology and Teacher Education, 2024
The contact hypothesis, initially formulated in 1954 to delineate conditions conducive to addressing entrenched intergroup differences, has undergone continuous evolution. Originally based on face-to-face interactions, it began incorporating virtual contact from 2006 (Amichai-Hamburger & McKenna). The subsequent proliferation of blended…
Descriptors: Blended Learning, Teaching Methods, COVID-19, Pandemics