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Showing all 13 results Save | Export
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Kähkönen, Elina; Hölttä-Otto, Katja – European Journal of Engineering Education, 2022
Interdisciplinary engineering programs have many perceived benefits including developing broader skills and an ability to work with complex real-life problems. However, the development of interdisciplinary programs faces many challenges including how to balance breadth and depth, how to integrate interdisciplinary learning into existing studies…
Descriptors: Engineering Education, Interdisciplinary Approach, Genetics, Models
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Stavroula Philippou; Vassilis Tsafos – Curriculum Journal, 2024
This paper explores the transfer, translation and recontextualisation of Laurence Stenhouse's work, as encapsulated in the 'teacher as researcher' metaphor, to the Greek language and in the fields of research and policy in Greece and Cyprus. We first briefly frame action research work as emerging through and within a specific space-time (and in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Theories, Greek, Translation
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Kelli A. Rushek; Ellie MacDowell – Journal of Language and Literacy Education, 2023
Disrupting the canon of Eurocentric literature often used as a whole-class novel study in the secondary English Language Arts (ELA) curriculum is needed in order to push back against white hegemony in and out of ELA spaces. This disruption needs to occur at the teacher preparation level through discussion, examination, and curriculum development,…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Language Arts, Teacher Education Programs, Curriculum Development
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Lee Smythe, Jon – Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy, 2020
In this article, I propose the use of the Taoist philosophy of "emptiness" as a healing balm for the increasing anxiety experienced by both students and teachers in the American educational system. While in Western culture, "emptiness" carries with it negative connotations of sadness, loss, meaninglessness, and nothingness,…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Religion, Anxiety, Psychological Patterns
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Lawless, Brandi; Rudick, C. Kyle; Golsan, Kathryn – Communication Education, 2019
Given the political Right's attacks on U.S. academics as too liberal, we broach questions about knowledge production and curriculum development. We first explore how the Right has used arguments for freedom of speech and ideological diversity to undermine higher education's mission in the hope of polluting the public sphere with ideas that are…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Academic Freedom, Ideology, Institutional Mission
Emmah Mwongeli Muema – ProQuest LLC, 2020
No country can afford mass access and high quality-it will never happen (Altbatch, 2012). Massification has characterized global higher education since the mid-1940s starting in the United States, spreading to Europe and East Asia in the 20th Century, before expanding to Sub-Sahara Africa. Various scholars have linked massification, and the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, State Universities, Educational Change, Curriculum Development
Eichenlaub, Mark – ProQuest LLC, 2018
In this thesis, I study some aspects of how students learn to use math to make sense of physical phenomena. Solving physics problems usually requires dealing with algebraic expressions. That can take the form of reading equations you're given, manipulating them, or creating them. It's possible to use equations simply according to formal rules of…
Descriptors: College Students, College Mathematics, Mathematics Education, Mathematical Applications
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Willis, Holly; Anderson, Steve – Journal of Media Literacy Education, 2013
Randy Bass, Executive Director of Georgetown's Center for New Designs in Learning and Scholarship, recently made the provocative claim that we inhabit a "post-course era." Building on the findings of the National Survey of Student Engagement that show that the places in which undergraduate students demonstrate the highest degree of…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Majors (Students), Media Literacy, Higher Education
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Simon, Susan E – Australian Journal of Teacher Education, 2013
Teacher educators rightfully dream of delivering inspiring programs to benefit future teachers and the students they will in turn inspire. However, in the current teacher education environment in Australia, the artisan's craft of weaving rich texture and producing a masterpiece is potentially over-shadowed by the educational administrator's…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Curriculum Development, Figurative Language, Foreign Countries
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Rice, Mary; Pinnegar, Stefinee – Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice, 2010
This inquiry explores the collaborative relationship between Mary, a teacher at a junior high, and Stefinee, a teacher educator at a nearby university. Through the use of emblematic narratives that emerged through the process of reliving and retelling experiences from a shared professional knowledge landscape, we make assertions about our…
Descriptors: Figurative Language, College School Cooperation, Cooperative Planning, Personal Narratives
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Rosenbloom, Al; Cortes, Juan Alejandro – Journal of Management Education, 2008
This article describes the current relationship between management education in Colombia and the efforts of the management program at Universidad Pontificia Bolivariana (UPB) in Medellin to reduce local poverty. The article uses the metaphor of "the bubble" to illustrate how social class, family socialization, and the current UPB…
Descriptors: Business Administration Education, Poverty, Figurative Language, Poverty Programs
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Frederickson, Mary – History Teacher, 2004
Many historians agree that the United States survey has been in critical need of a new paradigm for some time, a paradigm in which chronology does not dominate and students can learn about multiple viewpoints and competing historical narratives, one in which gender and multiculturalism are expanded beyond male/female, beyond black/white/ brown.…
Descriptors: Cultural Pluralism, Textbooks, Social Change, Internet
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He, Ming Fang – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2002
In a series of three papers, I examine the identity development of three Chinese women teachers as they moved back and forth between Eastern and Western cultures and languages amid the rapidly changing events of the last four decades. This life-based narrative inquiry, situated between non-fiction, fiction, and academic discourses opens up…
Descriptors: Doctoral Degrees, North Americans, Intellectual Development, Females