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Breen, Myles P.; Gray, Philip A. – Journalism Educator, 1980
Describes a course in mass communication that prepares media producers as media consumers. Discusses the use of simulation as a teaching strategy in such a course. (RL)
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Higher Education, Journalism Education, Mass Media

McKinnon, Alan C. – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 1984
College seniors in a geography of marketing and distribution course learn about spatial optimizing techniques by participating in a freight distribution game. Students plan the distribution of confectionery from two factories in England to 20 wholesale and retail customers in Scotland. The team that designs the lowest cost system wins. (RM)
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Geography Instruction, Higher Education, Human Geography

Vander Heyden, Terry – Journalism Educator, 1986
Arguing that students in journalism need to have more exposure to the design aspects of communication, this article describes a course that simulates employment at a design company. (HTH)
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Graphic Arts, Higher Education, Journalism Education
Hodgkinson, Keith – Simulation/Games for Learning, 1980
This description of two simple simulations as taught to undergraduate teacher trainers in a history of education course includes materials, procedures, follow-up exercises, and a brief defense of the use of simulations in higher education. (Author/CMV)
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Curriculum Enrichment, Educational Games, Educational History

Shatz, Mark A. – Teaching of Psychology, 1985
A simulation exercise of a labor-management dispute is used to teach psychology students some of the basics of descriptive statistics. Using comparable data sets generated by the instructor, students work in small groups to develop a statistical presentation that supports their particular position in the dispute. (Author/RM)
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Higher Education, Labor Demands, Labor Problems

Harris, Cyril M.; Rosenthal, Albert J. – Journal of Legal Education, 1981
A course in the legal aspects of noise pollution, cross-listed for students in Columbia University's Law and Engineering Schools, is described. Although noise is used as the major source of environmental pollution in this course, the principles and methodology discussed apply to other forms of environmental law. (MLW)
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Environmental Standards, Higher Education, Interdisciplinary Approach
McGinley, Kevin – Simulation/Games for Learning, 1980
Describes the background scenario, operation, debriefing, and evaluation of a teacher training course simulation designed to introduce English for Special Purposes (ESP) courses in developing countries. The applicability of this simulation to other situations, modifications for future use, linguistic input, and sample simulation materials are also…
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Curriculum Development, Developing Nations, English Instruction

Sisney, Shirleen S.; Morgan, Jack C. – Social Education, 1985
An 18-week economics course for high school students is described. Students develop and present a group project that explains and justifies an economic policy for the United States, develop their own economic seminar consisting of student-invited speakers from the community, conduct economic research, and simulate a community business. (RM)
Descriptors: Business, Course Descriptions, Economics Education, High Schools

Bronson, Richard – Two-Year College Mathematics Journal, 1982
The use of continuous simulation is promoted as a teaching tool in the undergraduate curriculum. Simulation, advances in continuous simulation, an approach to teaching system dynamics, computer languages deemed suitable for continuous simulation, and an outline of a prototypic first course in continuous simulation are presented. (MP)
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Curriculum Development, Educational Change, Higher Education
Hovde, Peter C. – Teaching Political Science, 1981
Describes a college course which uses a national approach to the teaching of international politics. Students are grouped into "country teams." Each country team publishes an analysis of its nation's foreign policy. Country teams participate in other activities including press conference simulations and an inter-nation simulation. (RM)
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Foreign Policy, Higher Education, International Relations

Symsyk, Rick; MacNeill, Perley – History and Social Science Teacher, 1980
Describes two secondary school courses: an economics and a Canadian Studies course. The economics course focuses on national events and uses a budget project and Canadian election simulation. The Canadian studies course combines history, politics, and economics. (KC)
Descriptors: Comparative Education, Course Descriptions, Economics Education, Educational Objectives
Ellington, H. I.; Addinall, E. – Simulation/Games for Learning, 1979
Describes the development of a structured science lesson around a case study simulation. The rationale for this approach is explained, and two specific examples, The Buenafortuna Power Project and Power for Elaskay, are described. (Author/CMV)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Communication Skills, Course Descriptions, Decision Making

Harper, Gregory F. – Teaching of Psychology, 1980
Describes a college-level psychology course based on using simulation techniques to teach graduate students about child development. Topics discussed include course description, objectives, activities, evaluation methods, and a discussion of the advantages and disadvantages of the simulation approach. (Author/DB)
Descriptors: Child Development, Course Descriptions, Educational Needs, Higher Education

Corsino, Louis – Teaching Sociology, 1985
This simulation involves students in a critique and analysis of the social welfare response to social problems. Students are divided into welfare administrators and disadvantaged groups and asked to role play typical interactions between these two social categories of people. (Author/RM)
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Empathy, Higher Education, Simulation
Geist, Patricia – 1984
The bargaining simulation unit is a useful educational tool in the introductory organizational communication course. It provides students with the opportunity to apply concepts such as communication, authority, and decision making already taught in the course, and teaches responsibility in analyzing, enacting, and discussing the bargaining case.…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Collective Bargaining, Course Descriptions, Employer Employee Relationship