Browsing by Author "Webster, Mark"
Now showing 1 - 2 of 2
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item Open Access Flipped Learning in Junior High Math Classes: Almadina Language Charter Academy Research Brief(2021-08) Webster, Mark; Delanoy, Nadia; Brown, BarbaraThis study was designed as a research partnership project and a collaboration among researchers from the Werklund School of Education at the University of Calgary and practitioners from Almadina Language Charter Academy, a school authority with a unique emphasis on meeting the needs of English language learners. The purpose of this study was to explore how a technology-enhanced pedagogy, such as a flipped classroom intervention, can support students in grade seven and nine mathematics. The flipped learning method offered an entry point for students to be introduced to mathematical concepts with an aim to increase disciplinary literacy prior to in-class work. The focus of the design-based study was to work in partnership with teachers and students in two junior high mathematics classes using flipped learning to help iteratively develop instruments for data collection, including a framework for teacher reflection and questionnaires for students, and a process for reviewing video analytics. Findings from this study demonstrated the participants were satisfied with the approach for improving mathematical understanding and problem-solving skills. Using a flipped learning approach was also timely during the COVID-19 pandemic and participants considered this a helpful medium for supporting students at home and students in the classroom. A future study could continue exploring the flipped learning approach by extending to other disciplinary areas and grades.Item Open Access Quantitative Trilobite Biostratigraphy of the Middle Cambrian (Wuliuan Stage; Miaolingian Series) and Microfacies Analysis of the Middle Cambrian Stephen Formation, Southern Canadian Rocky Mountains(2021-07-06) Morgan, Chad Alexander; Henderson, Charles Murray; Beauchamp, Benoit; Hubbard, Stephen; Dewing, Keith; Webster, MarkCarbonate microfacies and trilobite successions were examined in seven sections of the Stephen Formation, southern Canadian Rocky Mountains. Seven microfacies and three ichnofacies are identified, including a new Protopaleodictyon ichnofacies with Protopaleodictyon aitkeni (n. isp.). Palaeoenvironments include ephemeral oolitic shoals, intraclastic/oncoidal tempestites, and quiescent muddy-bottomed mid-shelf within a low-latitude, carbonate platform. Three parasequences were identified in the Narao Member, and five in the Waputik Member. Narao Member parasequences are sub-tidal muddy carbonate, shallowing toward microbial build-ups. Waputik Member parasequences contain green-grey, laminated shale, with sporadic carbonate tempestites, indicating a platform inundated by upwelling cool-dysoxic water. Carbonate production was shut-off, except within localized shoals and build-ups. The stacking pattern indicates slow base-level change with periodic upwelling events. The overlying Eldon Formation re-established carbonate platform deposition associated with a stabilised chemocline. Chemocline perturbation is postulated to affect trilobite biomere extinction at the Narao-Waputik boundary. Fifteen trilobite species, eleven trilobite genera, one orthothecid, one edrioasteroid, and three Burgess Shale organisms (Tuzoia, Haplophrentis carinatus, Margaretia dorus) were identified in the Stephen Formation, which ranges from the uppermost Glossopleura Assemblage Biozone into the Ehmaniella Assemblage Biozone. Four new biozones are established in this interval, including the Glossopleura boccar, Proehmaniella basilica, Ehmaniella waptaensis, and Spencella montanensis interval biozones. A quantitative biostratigraphy using Unitary Association (UA), integrates regional biozones from southwestern USA and western Canada into a unified Miaolingian trilobite succession (582 taxa, 1035 samples, 121 sections, and 48 formations). Seventy-three UA biozones, including 33 previously defined biozones, are delineated from the upper Bonnia-Olenellus to Cedaria assemblage zones. Six new Wuliuan interval biozones (Fieldaspis superba, Albertella bosworthi, Glossopleura boccar, Proehmaniella basilica, Spencella montanensis, and Bathyuriscus adaeus) are established. Nineteen UA zones encompass the top of the upper Bonnia-Olenellus Assemblage Biozone, 11 in the Plagiura-Poliella Assemblage Biozone, 18 in the Albertella Assemblage Biozone, 10 within the Glossopleura Assemblage Biozone, 7 within the Ehmaniella Assemblage Biozone, and 8 in the Bolaspidella and Cedaria biozones. This is the first recognition of temporal equivalence of regional biozones using quantitative biostratigraphic methods. The faunal succession informs biostratigraphic correlation potential pointing to mid-Cambrian intervals that may yield additional high-resolution biozones in the future.