Academic literature on the topic 'Interaction between a pedagogue and a pupil'

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Journal articles on the topic "Interaction between a pedagogue and a pupil"

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Yakusheva, Svetlana Dmitrievna. "Artistry as a component of pedagog's creative individuality." Moscow University Pedagogical Education Bulletin, no. 4 (December 29, 2010): 67–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.51314/2073-2635-2009-4-67-79.

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The article raises the issues of a pedagog's creative individuality. It defines the way through which creativity based on the achievements of theatrical peda- gogies influences a personality development in future specialists. The author of the article suggests several definitions of artistry, which models the process of professional self-perfection and self-education in teachers. The article regards the pedagogical artistry as a co-creative interaction between the pupil and the teacher and demonstrates the traits common for professional performance of pedagog's, actors and stage directors. The author describes the basic elements necessary for the creative work of an actor as well as a teacher. The article also discloses the value of humour as a tool of a pedagog's acting skill.
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Priede, Ligita, and Dagnija Vigule. "INTERACTION BETWEEN PEDAGOGUE AND CHILD TO PROMOTE PLANNING SKILLS." SOCIETY. INTEGRATION. EDUCATION. Proceedings of the International Scientific Conference 2 (May 21, 2019): 577. http://dx.doi.org/10.17770/sie2019vol2.3820.

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The goal of the pre-school competence-based education lies in the promotion of all areas of development – physical, social, emotional and cognitive, as well as helping children to acquire core competencies, including the ability to plan own activities. The research aims at theoretical and empirical study of opportunity to promote planning skills within interaction between child and pedagogue.When dealing with both daily and teacher-created problem situations, children are involved in decision-making, are trusted to be co-responsible for the decision made. By working together with an adult, child acquires planning skills, ability to achieve the goal set. To reveal the pedagogical problem of the research in full, it is also important to look at it from the point of view of a preschool teacher. To find out opinion of pre-school pedagogues, surveying was conducted; it was aimed at studying principles of child development and upbringing taken into account in practice when organizing pedagogical process promoting planning skills of pre-schoolers. The experience of pre-school teachers was analysed by frequency and interpretation using descriptive and analytical statistics method (IBM SPSS Statistika-v19.0).
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Milanaccio, Alfredo. "Teaching Nature, to Learn from Nature." Politics and the Life Sciences 5, no. 1 (1986): 83–91. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0730938400001660.

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This article describes some aspects of an Italian didactic-pedagogic experiment about interaction between “town” pupils and natural environments. The project's general philosophy is to try to make pupils aware of our condition as “biocultural beings,” as results of biological, technological, and cultural co-evolution. The presence of extensive natural, cultural, and technological resources at the site where the experiment takes place favors such an awareness.Some examples of teaching techniques designed especially to introduce pupils to the difficult but necessary subject matter of co-evolution are also described. Such teaching techniques have as their main goal to make the pupils themselves able to construct a logical network of questions, rather than in teachers giving them already prepared answers.The as yet unresolved problems, which concern the training of teachers steeped in traditional methods, are also briefly described.
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Yel'kina, Irina Yu. "Research of influence of communicative qualities of the pedagogue on the relation of students to educational activity." Vestnik Kostroma State University. Series: Pedagogy. Psychology. Sociokinetics, no. 4 (2019): 155–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.34216/2073-1426-2019-25-4-155-159.

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The article touches upon the topic of pedagogic communication. A review of psychological and pedagogic approaches to the definition of communicative qualities necessary for the pedagogue to organise effective interaction with students, as well as for the organisation of personality-developing educational space. The emotional side of the attitude of students to educational activity, consisting in satisfaction with this activity is considered. Mathematical processing of the data showed the presence of a statistically significant relationship between the degree ofmanifestation of communicative qualities of the pedagogue and the level of satisfaction of students with educational activities in the classes of this pedagogue. It is revealed that the most pronounced relationship of satisfaction with educational activities with indicators of pedagogic cooperation and emotional attractiveness of pedagogues. The author emphasises the need to develop the communicative qualities of future pedagogues in the system of higher pedagogic education. The article will be of interest to specialists, pedagogues of higher education.
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MOHR, BARBARA. "THE HISTORY OF GEOLOGY WALLS IN CENTRAL EUROPE AND THEIR USE AS PEDAGOGIC TOOLS FOR EXPLAINING GEOSCIENCES." Earth Sciences History 38, no. 2 (2019): 371–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.17704/1944-6178-38.2.371.

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ABSTRACT During the second half of the nineteenth century, geology was added as a topic taught at schools of higher education in central Europe. As a consequence, teachers had an interest in finding practical methods to make theoretical knowledge more interesting to their pupils. Pedagogic tools included fieldtrips which could be logistically challenging, and the so called ‘geology walls’ and other stone structures, such as ‘geology pyramids’. These solidly built structures erected from various types of rocks, were put together to simulate the complexities of the underground geology from the lowlands to the mountains of certain geographic areas and may be considered to represent precursors of modern geoparks. Many of these ‘geology walls’ built in several central European cities are preserved and may still be used today to explain and discuss geoscientific phenomena. The fruitful interactions between teachers and pupils, and scientists and amateurs, are topics of this paper. Questions of restitution and international relationships are touched on as well.
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��������, V. Teslenko, ���������, and Yuliya Kornilova. "Museum and Educational Complex as an Effective Means of Iteraction Between the School and the Museum." Standards and Monitoring in Education 2, no. 5 (2014): 43–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.12737/6892.

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The article considers one of the ways to create open information and educational space on the basis of interaction of two social environments: school
 and museum.Four models are analyzed on the basis of the following criteria: frequency and duration of interaction and forms of carrying out studies in
 "school and museum"system. For ensuring this interaction authors offer a special museum and educational complex representing the educational form
 that materialize the teacher�s model of training of pupils and allow its implementation in educational process.Conceptual aspects of the offered complex
 are provided and interaction models are presented: incidental, periodic, systematic and system. These models place teacher, pupil and their interaction
 into museum space. The article presents a short characteristic of the allocated models, along with forms of estimating the results of pupil�s interaction
 with museum space.
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Bär, Karl-Jürgen, Michael Karl Boettger, Steffen Schulz, et al. "The interaction between pupil function and cardiovascular regulation in patients with acute schizophrenia." Clinical Neurophysiology 119, no. 10 (2008): 2209–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.clinph.2008.06.012.

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Pawłucki, Andrzej. "Olympic Education as an Intergenerational Relation of the Third Degree." Physical Culture and Sport. Studies and Research 46, no. 1 (2009): 99–108. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/v10141-009-0007-z.

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Olympic Education as an Intergenerational Relation of the Third DegreeOlympic education is a more complex social reality than is commonly thought to be the case. Olympic education, understood as a social relation, is expressive when it takes place between the three generations, and when its axiological leader: the Olympic pedagogue, engages all subjects of the Academy.Olympic education must be constructed in such a way as to include both the act and the thought about the sense of the act. It must include the act of participation and the culture of actions through Olympic practice and the cultural awareness of the act. It must account for the cognitive capabilities of the pupil. Olympic students must participate in the adults' thoughts about cultural acts and in cultural acts themselves. Olympic education, like any other kinds of education, should encourage students to participate in the thoughts about cultural acts and cultural acts themselves. Education based exclusively on thoughts is not effective, and education based exclusively on acts is incomplete.It is easier to imagine and provide students with education through sport than with education through the culture of sport. In everyday school practice, sport education is provided only through actions, through learning by doing. This duality of education: through culture and through action, is demonstrated to the Olympic pedagogue by the concept of universal good, which grants every member of the Olympic family access to the truth about himself or herself, access to the knowledge about the meaning of one's destiny. This concept concerns each subject to education in each relationship it experiences. The discursive deficit of the Olympic good in one such relationship destroys education as an intergenerational transfer of self-knowledge.
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Kantor, Jiří, Libuše Ludíková, Miluše Hutyrová, and Pavel Svoboda. "INTERACTIONS BETWEEN PUPILS WITH SEVERE MULTIPLE DISABILITY AND TEACHERS." SOCIETY, INTEGRATION, EDUCATION. Proceedings of the International Scientific Conference 3 (July 24, 2015): 44. http://dx.doi.org/10.17770/sie2014vol3.701.

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The paper presents a study (mostly of a quality design) aimed at the teacher-pupil interaction performed at the Institute of Special Education Studies, Palacky University in Olomouc. The data was collected by semi-structured interviews, observation of the educational process and a questionnaire survey. Open, axial and selective coding as well as logic analysis of the responses was used for the data analyses. A synthesis of various data as well as various theoretical backgrounds led to the development of a model for the description of the relationship between the teacher and the pupil with severe mental, physical and communicational disability. The paper includes a description of the categories of this model and their process-based classification into inputs, course and outputs.
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Creech, Andrea. "Teacher-pupil-parent triads: A typology of interpersonal interaction in the context of learning a musical instrument." Musicae Scientiae 13, no. 2 (2009): 387–413. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/102986490901300208.

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The main objective of this research was to create a typology of teacher-pupil-parent interpersonal interaction in the context of learning a musical instrument. Three hundred and thirty-seven teacher-pupil-parent triads participated in the research, completing a survey measuring “control” and “responsiveness”. Factor analysis revealed a number of underlying interpersonal dimensions. A cluster analysis was carried out, using control and responsiveness factors as predictors of cluster membership. A model of six distinct interaction types was revealed and validated with in-depth interviews with teacher-pupil-parent triads representing each cluster. Clusters 1, 2 and 3 were each conceptualised as a primary dyad plus a third party, while Cluster 4 was represented as two primary dyads connected by one common member. Cluster 5 was characterized by very little communication between any two of the three individuals, while Cluster 6 was characterized by reciprocity amongst all three participants. This model of interaction types provides a framework within which teachers may interpret their own teacher-parent and teacher-pupil experience, potentially empowering teachers to alter their interaction patterns when migration from one cluster type to another is deemed to be appropriate in terms of enhancing learning or teaching outcomes.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Interaction between a pedagogue and a pupil"

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Trimailovienė, Jūratė. "Pedagogo ir ugdytinio sąveika neformaliame muzikiniame ugdyme taikant kompleksinio poveikio metodą." Master's thesis, Lithuanian Academic Libraries Network (LABT), 2006. http://vddb.library.lt/obj/LT-eLABa-0001:E.02~2006~D_20060613_102612-24673.

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In the current paper it is striven to define the connection between a pedagogue and a child applying a complex influence methodology. The subject is important trying to activate teaching and learning methods in music and art schools. Educational process and its organization are not indiscrete, they have common and specific principles and their implementation requires diligent and structural activities from the educator. For the efficiency of education humane interaction between a pedagogue and a child is important. It is striven to have a close correlation between different parts of activities using a complex educating system. Therefore, a pedagogic interaction is based on the contents of teaching and education, it is conditioned by the educating methods, organizational forms and pedagogy ethics. The Hypothesis of the research raised: interaction of a pedagogue and a child will be effective applying a complex influence method. The purpose: to estimate striving for the interaction between a pedagogue and a pupil applying a complex influence method. The tasks raised: a) to study the references of Lithuanian and foreign educology and art science; b) to collect data about the methodology used for the definition of efficiency and importance; c) to compare schoolchildren’s assessment criteria applying different musical activity parts; d) to compare the link between a pedagogue and a child applying a complex influence method in Mazeikiai Music School (hereinafter referred to MMM)... [to full text]
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Leung, Po Ying Enique. "An analysis of interaction between a pupil and a guidance teacherin [i.e. teacher in] the helping process." HKBU Institutional Repository, 2002. http://repository.hkbu.edu.hk/etd_ra/377.

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Priest, Mary. "Learning science from television in the classroom : a case study of the interaction between the science message, the message of the medium, the pupil and the teacher." Thesis, University of Reading, 1993. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.384874.

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Lin, Mei-Hung, and 林美紅. "A Study on Interaction and adaption Process between Teacher and Pupil in a Primary School in Taiwan." Thesis, 2009. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/03943195050116909616.

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碩士<br>南華大學<br>教育社會學研究所<br>97<br>This paper attempts to realize applications of the teacher-student interaction strategies and to explore the relationship between the interactive strategies and adaptation process, in order to describe Transfer appropriate course of teacher-student interaction. Through the participant observation and interviews of qualitative study and 4 cases analysis the teacher and students in the class 1st fourth grade of the elementary school of Yunlin County. In this thesis, it selects 4 students who have distinctive performance in their personal qualities, classes, and behaviors as main interview objects. Lastly, this thesis develops the realistic features of Through the Interactive Strategy through observing those teacher and students.     The following are resulted: 1、The interaction between teacher and students is similar to Elastic,teacher performs as a leader. During the interaction, the interaction strategies between teacher and students are based on tacit knowledge. 2、In teaching, class management, the teacher-student adaption and so on, there are plentiful implications for teacher-student interaction strategy. 3、The teacher-student interaction strategy presents the sexual diversity. The application moment and frequency of the strategy and the personality of students will form their different characters and affect their adaptation process. 4、The transfer appropriate course of teacher-student interaction shall experience such test period and alienation period process.     Based on the above-mentioned conclusions, it is recommended as following: 1、The teacher inspects what the students say and the compatibility of question type and courses. The teacher has to think of the personality and behavior of the students and to dialogue with them rationally. Additionally, respecting their gender diversity, avoiding the langue violence and organizing a collaborative learning team, these will help the students to increase their capability and establish an equal learning environment. 2、Organizing the Inter-School Union around the country and absorbing other school’s experience , and provides gender equality and active learning environment. 3、Teacher training institutions shall provide a gender equality and Transfer appropriate subject in their training courses. 4、For the future study, it may extent the scope to an urban district and apply critical ethnography to do more deeper research in the transfer appropriate course of teacher-student interaction in depth.
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Tsao, Pi Ju, and 曹碧如. "An Investigation to The Relations between The Leisure Values and The Parents- Child Interaction of Primary School in Higher Grade Pupil at Area of South Pingtung County." Thesis, 2014. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/33275920547337775794.

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碩士<br>亞洲大學<br>休閒與遊憩管理學系碩士在職專班<br>102<br>Abstract The purpose of this study is to investigate the current situation of the relations between the leisure values of family leisure activity and the parent-child interactsof primary school in higher grade pupil,at Areaof south Pingtung county. The relations are acquired by comparing pupil’s sexplace of residence family type,and parent with or no This study took questionnaire investigation to collectdatum. The main investigatedgroup washighergadepupilatAreaof south Pingtungcounty.Therestudy instruments were used whichwere the paticipation rating scaleoffamilyleisure activity,therelationshipratingscaleofleisurevalueandtherelationshipratingscaleofparent-child iteract. Lising statistical mthode with of living areas, family styles, and social economic status on perception of parent-child relationship. Family leisure participation has positive correlation with the numberoftimes distribution found thattheparticipation lating of family leisure activity wasupper-medium,thefamily leisure valuewas high-leaning, andthe parent-child interactwasupper-medium with positive.using scheffe statistical methodwith c-checkandsingle factor variance found that the relation between theplace ofresidence family type,and parent with or no This study took leisure values offamily leisure activity andparent-childwereoutstandingdifferencee becauceof sexplaceof residencefamily typeandparentwithor no occupation.Using base-differencecorrelationmethod foundthatbettwn theleisure valuesoffamily leisure activity and theparent-child interacts anoutstandingpositivecorrelation existed. Keywords:family leisure activity, leisure value, parent-child interact
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Book chapters on the topic "Interaction between a pedagogue and a pupil"

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Seery, Niall. "Pedagogy Involving Social and Cognitive Interaction Between Teachers and Pupils." In Contemporary Issues in Technology Education. Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-41548-8_16.

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Fukumoto, Kiyotaka, Takumi Tsuzuki, and Yoshinobu Ebisawa. "Improvement of Accuracy in Remote Gaze Detection for User Wearing Eyeglasses Using Relative Position Between Centers of Pupil and Corneal Sphere." In Human-Computer Interaction: Interaction Technologies. Springer International Publishing, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-20916-6_2.

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Andrade, Javier, Juan Ares, Rafael García, Santiago Rodríguez, María Seoane, and Sonia Suárez. "Knowledge Management as an E-Learning Tool." In Encyclopedia of Human Computer Interaction. IGI Global, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-59140-562-7.ch058.

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The goal of educational methods is to allow the pupil the acquisition of knowledge. Even so, the way in which this aim is pursued originates four different currents of methods sorted by two criteria: (1) who leads the educational process and (2) requirement of pupil physical attendance. Regarding the former criterion, the process may be conducted either by the teacher—Teaching-Oriented Process—or by the pupil—Learning-Oriented Process. Obviously, both processes have the same aim: the interiorization and comprehension of knowledge by the pupil. But the difference between them is based on the distinctive procedure followed in each case to achieve the common goal. Regarding the second criterion, the methods may or may not require pupil attendance. Bearing in mind this classification, four different types of educational methods could be described: 1. Teaching Method: This includes the already known classic educational methods, the Conductivity Theory (Good &amp; Brophy, 1990) being the foremost one. This method is characterized by the fact that the teacher has the heavier role during education—the transmission of knowledge. 2. E-Teaching Method: This second type comes from the expansion and popularity of communication networks, especially the Internet. This method brings the teacher to the physical location of the pupil; one of its most important representative elements is the videoconference. 3. Learning Method: This constitutes a new vision of the educational process, since the teacher acts as a guide and reinforcement for the pupil. The educational process has the heavier role in this method. In other words, the teacher creates a need for learning and afterwards provides the pupil with the necessary means in order to fill these created requests. Piaget Constructionist Theory is one of the most remarkable methods for this (Piaget, 1972, 1998). 4. E-Learning Method: This method is supported both by learning methods and by the expansion of communication networks in order to facilitate access to education with no physical or temporal dependence from pupil or teacher. As in learning methods, the pupil, not the teacher, is the one who sets the learning rhythm.
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Stillwell, John, Adam Dennett, and Oliver Duke-Williams. "Interaction Data." In Technologies for Migration and Commuting Analysis. IGI Global, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-61520-755-8.ch001.

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This initial chapter has two aims. Firstly, it seeks to clarify definitional and conceptual issues relating to the key interaction phenomena, migration and commuting, on which the authors concentrate in this book and for which they strive to obtain information to enhance their understanding of the processes that are taking place in the real world. The chapter explains the conceptual distinction between migrants and migrations, the importance of which becomes clear when the difference between transition and movement data is outlined, and it considers the alternative units of migrant measurement that are used such as individuals, wholly moving households and moving groups. Whilst migration tends to be measured over a period of time, typically a year, commuting is an activity that occurs on a much more frequent basis and consequently is usually measured as the numbers making a journey on one day. The chapter indicates how commuting to work and commuting to study are defined and measured. Secondly, the chapter contains the summary of an audit of interaction data sources, outlining the characteristics of the different types of data that are available from censuses, registers and surveys. Particular emphasis is placed on the former, the Census of Population, for which there are a number of data products providing migration and commuting counts at different spatial scales and disaggregated by various attributes; micro data are distinguished from macro data. However, the chapter also introduces a range of other interaction data sources such as the registers of National Health Service patients, the Pupil Level Annual School Census, the databases of the Higher Education Statistics Agency, various national level surveys such as the Labour Force Survey and the International Passenger Survey. In some cases, the data are exemplified using tables or maps. The chapter concludes with a reflection on the importance of the census as a key data source for small area analysis and a plea that, in a post-census world, sufficient steps be taken by central government to ensure the creation and provision of information systems for monitoring migration and commuting in an effective way, providing accurate and reliable intelligence on trends and creating opportunities for new research projects that develop explanations.
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Conference papers on the topic "Interaction between a pedagogue and a pupil"

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Matušů, Renáta. "INTERACTION BETWEEN TEACHER AND PUPIL AND ITS INFLUENCE ON THE PERCEIVED CLOSENESS OF PUPILS." In International Conference on Education and New Developments. inScience Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.36315/2019v2end082.

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Sushchik, Anastasia. "ALTERNATIVE FORMS OF TEACHING CHINESE TO YOUNG SCHOOLCHILDREN." In ЯЗЫК. КУЛЬТУРА. ПЕРЕВОД = LANGUAGE. CULTURE. TRANSLATION. Science and Innovation Center Publishing House, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.12731/lct.2019.35.

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The article is devoted to the alternative forms of teaching Chinese to young schoolchildren. The work deals with extraordinary approaches to teaching subjects, the principles of interaction between the teacher and the pupil during the lesson. The purpose of the article is to describe several forms of training that can be used in foreign language learning. Much attention is given to the cultural intercourse during the lessons in the Chinese language and extracurricular courses. In conclusion, it is stressed that the attitude to teaching Chinese to young schoolchildren should be based on alternative forms. The work is of interest for narrow circle of readers and experts working in the given branch.
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Levine, P. H. "ACQUIRED IMMUNODEFICIENCY SYNDROME, HUMAN IMMUNODEFICIENCY VIRUS AND HEMOPHILIA." In XIth International Congress on Thrombosis and Haemostasis. Schattauer GmbH, 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0038-1644752.

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Less than 15 years ago the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute surveyed physicians in the United States in order to characterize the demographics of hemophilia. The average age of persons with hemophilia in the United States was found to be 11.5 years old. By 10 years later, the life expectancy was predicted to be normal, and indeed the average age of persons with hemophilia in the U.S. is now in the early twenties. Early, intensive and predictably efficacious control of hemorrhage has made this result possible, and the therapeutic product which has allowed such control is commercial clotting factor concentrate.We now know that starting in 1978, and with great frquency during 1982 and 1983, the majority of U.S. hemophiliacs were infected with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). It is estimated that as of January, 1987, approximately two thirds of the 20,000' persons with hemophilia in the United States have been infected with HIV. Among those with severe factor VIII deficiency, more than 9056 are seropositive. As of 1/5/87, there were 288 cases of AIDS among U.S. hemophiliacs, for an AIDS rate of approximately 2.256 of those with HIV infection. This number included 185 with severe, 32 with moderate and 28 with mild hemophilia A; 12 with severe, 6 with moderate and 1 with mild hemophilia B; 9 with vWD, and 4 others. A disproportionate number were older patients: 55 were ages 1-19; 62 ages 20-29; 85 ages 30-39, and 86 age 40 or older. Although the AIDS attack rate is no longer climbing logarhythmically, new cases are certainly still occurring.A variety of other HIV-related syndromes have emerged. Of great concern is immune thrombocytopenia, which is now relatively common; among a group of 209 carefully followed HIV-positive patients at our center, 31 (1556) are or have been thrombocytopenic. Progressive failure to normally gain height and weight in children with hemophilia has recently been shown by our group to correlate with HIV antibody positivity, and also with decreased T4/T8 ratio, decreased T4 cell count, decreased skin test reactivity, and subsequent development of ARC or AIDS in some such children. Finally, a picture of progressive fall in T4 count associated with recurrent non-specific infections and increased likelihood of positive viral culture, may predict an increased risk of developing AIDS.We know that the immune dysfunction in hemophilia is complex, and not wholly explained by HIV infection. One important factor may be the many foreign proteins contained in commercial clotting factor concentrates, and their ability to stimulate T cells. It is known that latent HIV infection in cultured T4 lymphocytes can be induced to enter the proliferative, viral secretory phase by the addition of soluble foreign antigens to the cell culture. Recent data of Brettler and colleagues, to be presented at this meeting, suggest that the use of highly purified VI!I:C (specific activity &gt;3000 u/mg) in place of the present extremely impure products, may improve the immune dysfunction in hemophilia. This observation offers a new hypothetical approach to the prevention of progressive T4 cell depletion in HIV infected hemophiliacs, and requires immediate and extensive further study.The psychosocial burden of HIV infection is immense. The need for extensive, formal education and support programs is largely unmet in most parts of the world. Such programs are best run out of hemophilia treatment centers in most cases, and must include an active program on prevention of sexual transmission, provision of HIV testing before and during pregnancies, provision for maintenance of confidentiality, etc. Education concerning HIV is like all other forms of education. It requires formal organization, a curriculum, active rather than passive learning in which there is interaction between the teacher and the pupil, time for planned repetition, reinforcement with written materials, and assessment of goals achieved. For all of these reasons it is inappropriate to assume that the physician at the hemophilia center will be able to provide an adequate education program. Adquate paramedical personnel will need to undertake this effort, under the directjon of the physician.
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