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Minjoon Kouh – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2024
An introductory physics course may be run like a video game, where students have an almost unlimited number of attempts to demonstrate their competencies through a sequence of zero-penalty assessments until the end of a semester. Each checkpoint is conducted as a 10-minute, one-on-one oral interview with the instructor, and students are not…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Physics, Science Education, Pacing
Fish, Jillian – Teaching of Psychology, 2023
Introduction: Since the 1990's, psychology has demonstrated a strong commitment to the full spectrum of human diversity (Vera & Speight, 2003). Statement of the Problem: However, psychologists from underrepresented backgrounds and diversity science (DS) remain marginalized in psychology (Syed & Kathawalla, 2020), which affects the ease…
Descriptors: Psychology, Psychologists, Diversity, Disproportionate Representation
Jordan, Rachael; Stepankiw, Mika; Rickly, Rebecca J. – Composition Forum, 2022
The discourse-based interview (DBI) allows researchers to explore writers' tacit knowledge. This article describes how we taught and learned to adapt a DBI-based interviewing process through the reflections of both the professor and two graduate students in a graduate-level course, Field Methods in Technical Communication. By participating in a…
Descriptors: Interviews, Discourse Analysis, Graduate Students, Field Experience Programs
Ivy Chia; Wai Cheong Eugene Chew – Sage Research Methods Cases, 2022
The COVID-19 pandemic resulted in educators making a sudden shift to a largely online modality in teaching. For educators used to studio teaching, this change would require them to adapt their teaching approaches online and adopt new teaching approaches. Using the online videoconferencing tool (i.e., Zoom) for online interviews in real-time, a…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Online Courses, Videoconferencing
Gallant, Karen – Schole: A Journal of Leisure Studies and Recreation Education, 2023
This short brief describes conversational interview podcasts as an alternative to traditional guest lectures in the context of an online undergraduate course that shifted from in-person to virtual course delivery during the COVID-19 pandemic. The informal format of conversational interviews counters the impersonal tone that can often pervade…
Descriptors: Lecture Method, Computer Mediated Communication, Interviews, Online Courses
Seung Hee Choi; Thomas Templin; Anna Marrocco – Journal of American College Health, 2025
Objective To develop an online discrete choice experiment (DCE) to elicit preferences for the format and content of tobacco treatment and determine the feasibility of the survey in face-to-face online interviews among college students. format content Participants A convenience sample of 28 college students. Methods A pilot online DCE survey with…
Descriptors: College Students, Preferences, Smoking, Intervention
Ruth Tate; Fatima Beauregard; Cristina Peter; Laura Marotta – Impacting Education: Journal on Transforming Professional Practice, 2023
This essay presents the reflections of four Education Doctorate (EdD) students on the pilot testing strategies used during an online research methods course. Rigorous questionnaire and interview development skills are challenging to acquire. Pilot testing is an under-researched stage of instrument design, yet it is crucial to ensure validity and…
Descriptors: Doctoral Students, Pilot Projects, Skill Development, Interviews
Rona Tamiko Halualani – Communication Teacher, 2025
This essay highlights a critical assessment approach for intercultural communication courses that engages in a "doing--undoing" practice for instructors, with the aim of "doing" culture as learned through society and traditional intercultural communication instruction with the limited, romanticized, and settler colonial…
Descriptors: Intercultural Communication, Teaching Methods, Cultural Awareness, Colonialism
Hashimoto, Takehiro; Sato, Takeshi – Research-publishing.net, 2022
This study investigated L2 learners' perception changes at each stage of online collaborative writing. Previous studies revealed the familiarity of L2 collaborative learning with Information and Communication Technology (ICT), whereas few described at which stage of the learning process L2 learners' perceptions change. Therefore, this study…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Collaborative Writing, Online Courses, Electronic Learning
Lun, Man Wai Alice – Educational Gerontology, 2019
The increase of the US older adult population requires additional professionally trained staff in health and social services. Exposing knowledge and skills of gerontology to address aging competency among student in higher education can better prepare for students' future educational and career planning. The aim of this study is to understand…
Descriptors: Educational Gerontology, Aging Education, Aging (Individuals), Student Attitudes
Zhu, Meina; Bonk, Curtis J.; Sari, Annisa R. – Canadian Journal of Learning and Technology, 2019
This mixed methods study explores instructor motivations for offering massive open online courses (MOOCs) as well as the instructional innovations used to enhance the MOOC design. The researchers surveyed 143 MOOC instructors worldwide and then interviewed 12 of these instructors via Zoom. They also extensively reviewed the MOOCs of the…
Descriptors: Online Courses, Teacher Motivation, Design, Teacher Surveys
Mitchell, Jerry T. – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2018
How to improve geography education via teacher preparation programs has been a concern for nearly three decades, but few examples of a single, comprehensive university-level course exist. The purpose of this article is to share the model of a pre-service geography education methods course. Within the course, geography content (physical and social)…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Geography Instruction, Teaching Skills, Teaching Experience
Choi, Min-Seok; Rhoades, Mindi – Teaching in Higher Education, 2022
The critique, central to teaching and learning in fine arts studios, allows expert teachers to apprentice novice art students into their professional community, through feedback and guidance. This article examines ways teachers' discursive practices during desk critiques, in particular, socially construct opportunities for students to learn what…
Descriptors: Art Education, Fine Arts, Discourse Analysis, Introductory Courses
Carian, Emily K.; Hill, Jasmine D. – Teaching Sociology, 2021
Qualitative methods courses lack tools for teaching students how to capture and analyze the nuanced ways participant subjectivity shows up in interviews. This article responds to the call for greater depth in qualitative methods instruction by offering teachers a series of discussion questions and an in-class worksheet that will help students more…
Descriptors: Sociology, Teaching Methods, Social Desirability, Self Concept
Shannon L. Cooper; Scott E. Renshaw – International Journal of Designs for Learning, 2023
For many instructional designers (ID), subject matter experts (SMEs) are viewed as a necessary evil. Depending upon their day job, SMEs can be challenging to work with due to their schedules and responsibilities outside the ID's project. They can be unaware of the eLearning process, learning models and theories, and expensive -- a SME can easily…
Descriptors: Instructional Design, Expertise, Intellectual Disciplines, Medical Students