University of Oslo (UiO): FRITT (E-Journals)
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VR-teknologi åpner for nye metoder innen simuleringstrening for helsepersonell: Intervju med Cathrine W. Steen, psykologspesialist, spesialrådgiver i selvmordsforebygging ved Sykehuset Innlandet og stipendiat Høyskolen Innlandet
Å møte pasienter som har selvmordstanker oppleves av mange terapeuter som noe av det vanskeligste ved jobben. De sisteårene har det blitt gitt mer undervisning om temaet, men det er fortsatt mye vi ikke vet om hva som er beste form forundervisning
Først engasjement, så innhold: Bruk av serien På tro og Are i religionsundervisning i videregående skole
Sammendrag: Artikkelen diskuterer bruken av serien På tro og Are i religionsundervisning basert på observasjoner fra et case-studie i videregående skole. Fokus er på seriens episode om buddhisme. Denne episoden er kontroversiell og har blant annet blitt kritisert av Buddhistforbundet for å fremme et feilaktig og negativt bilde av buddhismen. Likevel brukes episoden omfattende i den observerte undervisningen. Artikkelen argumenterer for at seriens underholdende og engasjerende egenskaper veier tyngst som utvalgskriterier, men at lærerne tar grep for å kompensere for problematisk innhold. Ved hjelp av medialiseringsteori ana-lyserer artikkelen konsekvenser denne typen mediebruk får for undervisning.
Nøkkelord: På tro og Are, religionsundervisning, medier, populærkultur
Abstract: This article discusses the use of the TV-show På tro og Are in religious education in Norway, using observations from a case study of religious education in an upper secondary school. The main focus of the article is on the show’s episode about Buddhism. This episode is controversial and has been criticized by the Buddhist Federation of Norway for representing Buddhism in a negative and erroneous way. Still, this episode is used extensively in the observed lessons. The article argues that the show is chosen for its entertaining and engaging character. However, the teachers also take steps to counter the problematic content. Using mediatization theory, the article analyses some consequences of using this type of media material in religious education.
Key words: På tro og Are, religious education, media, popular cultur
Bokmeldinger
Tone Pernille Østern, Jesper Aagaard Petersen, Alex Strømme, Thomas Dahl, Anna-Lena Østern, Staffan Selander (2019) Dybde//læring, - en flerfaglig, relasjonell og skapende tilnærming, Oslo: Universitetsforlaget. Anmeldt av Siw Fjelstad.
Bente Afset og Arne Redse (red.) Religion og etikk i skole og barnehage (2019). Cappelen Damm Akademisk. Anmeldt av Kristine Toft Rosland.
Olav Hovdelien, Religion og samfunn. En innføring, Fagbokforlaget, 2019. Anmeldt av Vebjørn Horsfjord
Reaching Out to be in Reach. Museum Communication in the Current Museum Zeitgeist
This article focuses on art museums as multi-layered media- and eventmakers. By discussing the National Gallery of Denmark’s Mysteries from the Museum podcast series and the event SMK Fridays, Louisiana’s digital platform Louisiana Channel and the Glyptotek’s Slow arrangements, we scrutinise these museums’ onsite and offsite outreach techniques and strategies. These are further discussed regarding the current museum zeitgeist, and how this relates to dominant cultural policy paradigms in Denmark. The article is based on interviews with museum professionals, observations of onsite events and document analysis; they indicate that museums constantly renew their outreach techniques and strategies, adding layers to their museum communication. While museums succeed in creating quality digital content and arranging events attracting attention and audiences, these productions do not challenge the power dynamics between museums and their users described in current literature on the museum zeitgeist, as in dominant cultural policy strategies in a Danish context.This article focuses on art museums as multi-layered media- and eventmakers. By discussing the National Gallery of Denmark’s Mysteries from the Museum podcast series and the event SMK Fridays, Louisiana’s digital platform Louisiana Channel and the Glyptotek’s Slow arrangements, we scrutinise these museums’ onsite and offsite outreach techniques and strategies. These are further discussed regarding the current museum zeitgeist, and how this relates to dominant cultural policy paradigms in Denmark. The article is based on interviews with museum professionals, observations of onsite events and document analysis; they indicate that museums constantly renew their outreach techniques and strategies, adding layers to their museum communication. While museums succeed in creating quality digital content and arranging events attracting attention and audiences, these productions do not challenge the power dynamics between museums and their users described in current literature on the museum zeitgeist, as in dominant cultural policy strategies in a Danish context
Museientreprenörskap som praktik- och kunskapsfält
This study, “Museum entrepreneurship as practice and knowledge field”,examines how museum directors view museum entrepreneurship, why they thinkit is important and how it can develop. Results show that the museum directorsview entrepreneurship from a broad perspective that goes beyond a traditionalimage of entrepreneurship as exclusively an economic phenomenon. The resultsemphasize the need to turn to museum entrepreneurship as a way of thinkingabout renewal of museum activities, solving financial problems linked to decreesin public funding, find new sources of income and to create business models thathave potential to refine opportunities coming from digitalization. The need formuseum entrepreneurship is also about clarifying an awareness of what kind ofvalues are created and how these can be formed while maintaining integrity incollaboration with the rest of society. The results also show that there is a need todevelop museum entrepreneurship through collaborative research approaches.This study, “Museum entrepreneurship as practice and knowledge field”,examines how museum directors view museum entrepreneurship, why they thinkit is important and how it can develop. Results show that the museum directorsview entrepreneurship from a broad perspective that goes beyond a traditionalimage of entrepreneurship as exclusively an economic phenomenon. The resultsemphasize the need to turn to museum entrepreneurship as a way of thinkingabout renewal of museum activities, solving financial problems linked to decreesin public funding, find new sources of income and to create business models thathave potential to refine opportunities coming from digitalization. The need formuseum entrepreneurship is also about clarifying an awareness of what kind ofvalues are created and how these can be formed while maintaining integrity incollaboration with the rest of society. The results also show that there is a need todevelop museum entrepreneurship through collaborative research approaches.This study, “Museum entrepreneurship as practice and knowledge field”,examines how museum directors view museum entrepreneurship, why they thinkit is important and how it can develop. Results show that the museum directorsview entrepreneurship from a broad perspective that goes beyond a traditionalimage of entrepreneurship as exclusively an economic phenomenon. The resultsemphasize the need to turn to museum entrepreneurship as a way of thinkingabout renewal of museum activities, solving financial problems linked to decreesin public funding, find new sources of income and to create business models thathave potential to refine opportunities coming from digitalization. The need formuseum entrepreneurship is also about clarifying an awareness of what kind ofvalues are created and how these can be formed while maintaining integrity incollaboration with the rest of society. The results also show that there is a need todevelop museum entrepreneurship through collaborative research approaches
Kunsten å skrive om Hamsunsenter-planer i nord og sør
 
Voice vs. Silence: A code of Egyptian and Tunisian lifeworlds in 2016
A cluster of arrays “provid[ing] principles of order within the unstructured simultaneity of everyday-worlds”* in Egypt and Tunisia in 2016, forming part of the two countries’ “culture” during the In 2016 project’s target year.
*H. U. Gumbrecht, In 1926: Living at the Edge of Time (1997), 443.
GOTO
ARRAYS: ʔAlsh | Apartment Wanted | ʿAshwāʾiyyāt | Baby Milk | Celebrities | Clash | Commemoration / Memorial Days | Conversions | Court Trials | Crowdfunding | Dancing | Disappearances | Disasters | Dollar Crisis | Downtown/Centre-ville | Dual Identities / Masking | Éveil d’une nation / Ṣaḥwat umma | Father Figures | Football | Garbage | Gated Communities / Compounds | Hashish | High School Exams | The Honourable Citizen | In Islam, … | Kamīn | Language | LGBT | Manīsh msāmiḥ | Migration | Mobile Phones | The Policeman Criminal | Pop Music | Prison | Psychiatrists | Public Hearings | Red Sea Islands | Self-help | Social Media | Suicide | The Suspect Foreigner | Tourist Resorts | Tricking the System / Tricked by the System | Tuk-tuk | Uber | Valentine’s Day | The Voice from Above | Zaḥma
CODES: Affluence vs. Destitution | Beautiful vs. Ugly | Center vs. Periphery | Freedom vs. Constraint | Hope vs. Hell | Inferiority vs. Superiority | Male vs. Female | Normality vs. Heroism | Past vs. Present | Security vs. Fear | “The System” vs. “The People” | True vs. False | Young vs. Settled
CODES COLLAPSED: Hope = Hell (Dystopia) | Inferiority = Superiority (Satire) | Normality = Heroism (Surviving) | Present = Past (Stuck) | Security = Fear (Police State) | True = False (Life in Limbo
Young vs. Settled: A code of Egyptian and Tunisian lifeworlds in 2016
A cluster of arrays “provid[ing] principles of order within the unstructured simultaneity of everyday-worlds”* in Egypt and Tunisia in 2016, forming part of the two countries’ “culture” during the In 2016 project’s target year.
*H. U. Gumbrecht, In 1926: Living at the Edge of Time (1997), 443.
GOTO
ARRAYS: ʔAlsh | Apartment Wanted | ʿAshwāʾiyyāt | Baby Milk | Celebrities | Clash | Commemoration / Memorial Days | Conversions | Court Trials | Crowdfunding | Dancing | Disappearances | Disasters | Dollar Crisis | Downtown/Centre-ville | Dual Identities / Masking | Éveil d’une nation / Ṣaḥwat umma | Father Figures | Football | Garbage | Gated Communities / Compounds | Hashish | High School Exams | The Honourable Citizen | In Islam, … | Kamīn | Language | LGBT | Manīsh msāmiḥ | Migration | Mobile Phones | The Policeman Criminal | Pop Music | Prison | Psychiatrists | Public Hearings | Red Sea Islands | Self-help | Social Media | Suicide | The Suspect Foreigner | Tourist Resorts | Tricking the System / Tricked by the System | Tuk-tuk | Uber | Valentine’s Day | The Voice from Above | Zaḥma
CODES: Affluence vs. Destitution | Beautiful vs. Ugly | Center vs. Periphery | Freedom vs. Constraint | Hope vs. Hell | Inferiority vs. Superiority | Male vs. Female | Normality vs. Heroism | Past vs. Present | Security vs. Fear | “The System” vs. “The People” | True vs. False | Voice vs. Silence
CODES COLLAPSED: Hope = Hell (Dystopia) | Inferiority = Superiority (Satire) | Normality = Heroism (Surviving) | Present = Past (Stuck) | Security = Fear (Police State) | True = False (Life in Limbo
Conversions: ...in Egypt
An array of Egyptian lifeworlds in 2016.
GO TO
ARRAYS: ʔAlsh | Apartment Wanted | ʿAshwāʾiyyāt | Baby Milk | Celebrities | Clash | Commemoration / Memorial Days | Court Trials | Crowdfunding | Dancing | Disappearances | Disasters | Dollar Crisis | Downtown/Centre-ville | Dual Identities / Masking | Éveil d’une nation / Ṣaḥwat umma | Father Figures | Football | Garbage | Gated Communities / Compounds | Hashish | High School Exams | The Honourable Citizen | In Islam, … | Kamīn | Language | LGBT | Manīsh msāmiḥ | Migration | Mobile Phones | The Policeman Criminal | Pop Music | Prison | Psychiatrists | Public Hearings | Red Sea Islands | Self-help | Social Media | Suicide | The Suspect Foreigner | Tourist Resorts | Tricking the System / Tricked by the System | Tuk-tuk | Uber | Valentine’s Day | The Voice from Above | Zaḥma
CODES: Affluence vs. Destitution | Beautiful vs. Ugly | Center vs. Periphery | Freedom vs. Constraint | Hope vs. Hell | Inferiority vs. Superiority | Male vs. Female | Normality vs. Heroism | Past vs. Present | Security vs. Fear | “The System” vs. “The People” | True vs. False | Voice vs. Silence | Young vs. Settled
CODES COLLAPSED: Hope = Hell (Dystopia) | Inferiority = Superiority (Satire) | Normality = Heroism (Surviving) | Present = Past (Stuck) | Security = Fear (Police State) | True = False (Life in Limbo
Dancing: An array of Egyptian and Tunisian lifeworlds in 2016
An array of Egyptian and Tunisian lifeworlds in 2016.
GO TO
ARRAYS: ʔAlsh | Apartment Wanted | ʿAshwāʾiyyāt | Baby Milk | Celebrities | Clash | Commemoration / Memorial Days | Conversions | Court Trials | Crowdfunding | Disappearances | Disasters | Dollar Crisis | Downtown/Centre-ville | Dual Identities / Masking | Éveil d’une nation / Ṣaḥwat umma | Father Figures | Football | Garbage | Gated Communities / Compounds | Hashish | High School Exams | The Honourable Citizen | In Islam, … | Kamīn | Language | LGBT | Manīsh msāmiḥ | Migration | Mobile Phones | The Policeman Criminal | Pop Music | Prison | Psychiatrists | Public Hearings | Red Sea Islands | Self-help | Social Media | Suicide | The Suspect Foreigner | Tourist Resorts | Tricking the System / Tricked by the System | Tuk-tuk | Uber | Valentine’s Day | The Voice from Above | Zaḥma
CODES: Affluence vs. Destitution | Beautiful vs. Ugly | Center vs. Periphery | Freedom vs. Constraint | Hope vs. Hell | Inferiority vs. Superiority | Male vs. Female | Normality vs. Heroism | Past vs. Present | Security vs. Fear | “The System” vs. “The People” | True vs. False | Voice vs. Silence | Young vs. Settled
CODES COLLAPSED: Hope = Hell (Dystopia) | Inferiority = Superiority (Satire) | Normality = Heroism (Surviving) | Present = Past (Stuck) | Security = Fear (Police State) | True = False (Life in Limbo