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Chamila Subasinghe – Teaching in Higher Education, 2024
Studio, a breeding ground for curiosity and wonder, has become more of a confined space for innovation lately. Infrastructure shortage also has triggered a somewhat impersonal attitude to studio learning. Can Design-Activism mitigate such stresses on the studio by becoming an alternative mode of driving studio processes? Reflectively, this study…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Design, Activism, Educational Innovation
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Meth, Deanna; Brophy, Claire; Thomson, Sheona – Teaching in Higher Education, 2023
In design, aspirations of 'development' and 'innovation' are now scrutinised to redress persistent market-led practice. Socially and environmentally responsive pedagogies can shift students' mindsets to consider the impacts of design practices on the planet's complex systems and societies. At the Queensland University of Technology, Australia,…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Design, Sustainability, Foreign Countries
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Ngoc Nhu Nguyen – Teaching in Higher Education, 2024
When lecturers integrate feature films and TV series (FF/TV) into their teaching, they are not always fully aware of how these media achieve their effects on students. Regardless of discipline, lecturers need a working knowledge of film literacy to effectively enable student learning through FF/TV representations. This study surveyed and…
Descriptors: Universities, Films, Intermode Differences, Learning Modalities
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Giedre Kligyte; Mieke Van Der Bijl-Brouwer; Jarnae Leslie; Tyler Key; Bethany Hooper; Eleanor Salazar – Teaching in Higher Education, 2023
The benefits of student-staff partnerships are widely reported in the Students-as-Partners literature. It is envisaged that partnership initiatives can have a transformative effect on institutional cultures, however, how this transformation might be achieved is less clear. Building on transdisciplinary and systems change perspectives, we propose a…
Descriptors: Teacher Student Relationship, Interdisciplinary Approach, Systems Approach, Organizational Culture
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Ryan, Mary; Carmichael, Mary-Ann – Teaching in Higher Education, 2016
In our complex and incongruous professional worlds, where there is no blueprint for dealing with unpredictable people and events, it is imperative that individuals develop reflexive approaches to professional identity building. Notwithstanding the importance of disciplinary knowledge and skills, higher education has a crucial role to play in…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Study, Case Studies, Professional Identity, Longitudinal Studies
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Cooper, Trudi – Teaching in Higher Education, 2019
Information discernment has become a much needed twenty-first century skill and an essential outcome for university education. Technology has enabled more organisations to gain access to effective mass media to disseminate both accurate information and disinformation. As information sources have proliferated, information users are confronted by a…
Descriptors: Information Literacy, Credibility, Information Sources, Mass Media Effects
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Abrandt Dahlgren, Madeleine; Fenwick, Tara; Hopwood, Nick – Teaching in Higher Education, 2016
Despite the widespread interest in using and researching simulation in higher education, little discussion has yet to address a key pedagogical concern: difficulty. A "sociomaterial" view of learning, explained in this paper, goes beyond cognitive considerations to highlight dimensions of material, situational, representational and…
Descriptors: Simulation, Higher Education, Social Theories, Experiential Learning
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Mitsis, Ann – Teaching in Higher Education, 2015
There are many challenges that undergraduate students face when studying an honours research degree. Honours programmes though traditionally considered within the business discipline as a loss leader, nevertheless, form a direct entry requirement for PhD programmes. The honours degree can be considered a formative research programme for student…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Undergraduate Study, Honors Curriculum
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Pardede, Eric – Teaching in Higher Education, 2015
This paper describes the design of teaching and learning activities (TLAs) in an entrepreneurship subject offered to Information Technology (IT) students. We describe the challenges that we have encountered. Within one teaching semester, the students are expected to achieve a high level of applied knowledge in an area where they have little…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Entrepreneurship, Information Technology, Outcomes of Education
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Burrell, Andrew R.; Cavanagh, Michael; Young, Sherman; Carter, Helen – Teaching in Higher Education, 2015
Curriculum design in higher education environments, namely the consideration of aims, learning outcomes, syllabus, pedagogy and assessment, can often be ad hoc and driven by informal cultural habits. Academics with disciplinary expertise may be resistant to (or ignorant of) pedagogical approaches beyond existing practice. In an environment where…
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Change Agents, Course Descriptions, Outcomes of Education
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Wadley, David – Teaching in Higher Education, 2010
Higher education institutions are introducing standardised electronic course profiles (ECPs) to advance quality outcomes. Involving both "message" and "medium", they alter traditional practice and interpretations. Critical examination is required of the values, presuppositions and operation of the nascent system. Lacking much…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Investigations, Distance Education, Best Practices
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Clarkeburn, Henriikka; Kettula, Kirsi – Teaching in Higher Education, 2012
This study looks at the fairness of assessing learning journals both as the fairness in creating a valid and robust marking process as well as how different student groups may have unfair disadvantages in performing well in reflective assessment tasks. The fairness of a marking process is discussed through reflecting on the practical process and…
Descriptors: Student Evaluation, Reflection, Summative Evaluation, Formative Evaluation