Kamil Özerk

Kamil Özerk (born 8 October 1954 in Cyprus) is a Norwegian-Turkish Cypriot[1] educator and professor of pedagogy at the University of Oslo.[2]

Publications

Özerk's published works include:

English

  • Hall, Kathy; Özerk, Kamil (2009), "Primary Curriculum and Assessment: England and other countries" (PDF), in Alexander, Robin (ed.), Cambridge Primary Review Research Surveys, Routledge, pp. 375–414, ISBN 978-0-415-54869-4.
  • Özerk, Kamil (2009), "The Revitalisation of a Threatened Indigenous Language - The Case of the Sami People in Norway", in Danaher, Patrick Alan; Kenny, Máirín (eds.), Traveller, Nomadic and Migrant Education, Routledge, pp. 132–144, ISBN 978-0-415-96356-5.
  • Özerk, Kamil (2001), "Teacher-Student Verbal Interaction and Questioning, Class Size and Bilingual Students' Academic Performance", Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 45 (4): 353–367, doi:10.1080/00313830127212.
  • Özerk, Kamil (2001), "Reciprocal Bilingualism as a Challenge and opportunity", International Review of Education, 47 (3–4): 253–265, doi:10.1023/A:1017945624774.
  • Özerk, Kamil; Hall, Kathy; Valli, Yasmin (1999), "Curriculum Reform, with Particular Reference to Primary Literacy, in Contemporary English and Norwegian Official Documents", European Journal of Intercultural Studies, 10 (1): 85–104, doi:10.1080/0952391990100108.

Norwegian

gollark: You can look at "Jalal, B., Romanelli, A., & Hinton, D. E. (2015). Cultural Explanations of Sleep Paralysis in Italy: The Pandafeche Attack and Associated Supernatural Beliefs. Culture, Medicine, and Psychiatry, 39(4), 651–664. doi:10.1007/s11013-015-9442-y " via [REDACTED], or [DATA EXPUNGED].
gollark: Hold on while I """legitimately""" attain a paper.
gollark: Oh hey, "Cultural Explanations of Sleep Paralysis in Italy: The Pandafeche Attack and Associated Supernatural Beliefs".
gollark: I'll check Wikipedia, as Wikipedia knows all information.
gollark: So now it *is* inherently scary...?

References

  1. Norvec Genci. "KAMIL ÖZERK ILE RÖPORTAJ". Archived from the original on 2011-07-14. Retrieved 2011-02-18.
  2. BBC (2008-02-08). "England young 'among most tested'". BBC News. Retrieved 2011-02-18.


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