Central China Normal University
Publishes on Online and Blended Learning, Judicial and Constitutional Studies, Experimental Learning in Engineering. 3 papers and 36 citations.
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The research on the relationship between the teaching model of seminar and the learning gain of students has been a hot topic for a long time. As the Classroom Response System (CRS) is widely used in interactive teaching environments to attract students by asking questions. This paper takes electromagnetism of introductory physics as an example to study the teaching mode of review seminar based on CRS. Focusing on the necessity of review seminar based on CRS, the teaching efficiency as well as the stability of students' learning effect under this teaching mode, this paper qualitatively discusses the necessity and teaching efficiency of review seminar based on CRS, and quantifies the learning effect of students under this mode from the correct transformation of students' concept and its stability. The results show that the teaching model of seminar based on CRS is suitable for the teaching of problem sets in introductory and has high teaching efficiency. Most of the students have the right change of physics concept after the discussion with their peers, and have stable learning gain. At the end of the paper, we discuss the shortcomings of the research and looks forward to the future research direction.
This chapter traces the development of an arrestee’s right to counsel in the Republic of China or Taiwan (ROC or Taiwan) and explores the role of the island’s lawyers and lawyers’ associations in advancing that development. It argues that the specific case of the expansion of the right to counsel in Taiwan serves as a model where lawyers’ activism in bolstering their role in the legal system brings about reforms that strengthen criminal defense and, more generally, contributes to positive change in attitudes towards lawyers. This study is also an attempt to broaden the comparative perspectives of those who seek to promote vigorous criminal defense in the People’s Republic of China (PRC). Chinese defense lawyers’ access to their detained clients has remained very limited, and the scope of legal assistance that lawyers are allowed to provide has been far from adequate in both law and practice. As the National People’s Congress is now considering a new round of revisions to the Criminal Procedure Law, including changes concerning the defense lawyer’s role before trial, the time is ripe to again consider how to make meaningful improvements in the right to counsel in China and the prospects of reforms. Because of the similarities in political-legal culture between Taiwan and the PRC, the Taiwan experience is extremely relevant to this task.