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Showing all 11 results Save | Export
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Kathleen Rodgers; Willow Scobie – Teaching Sociology, 2024
Teaching introductory sociology is one of the primary means by which sociologists mobilize knowledge. Ongoing critical reflection on the content of sociology textbooks is therefore an important disciplinary enterprise. The current critical moment in which many nations, institutions, and publics face a reckoning with their historic and current…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Sociology, Textbooks, Textbook Content
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Chang, Hsin-Yi; Lin, Tzung-Jin; Lee, Min-Hsien; Lee, Silvia Wen-Yu; Lin, Tzu-Chiang; Tan, Aik-Ling; Tsai, Chin-Chung – Studies in Science Education, 2020
In this study, we reviewed 76 journal articles on employing drawing assessment as a research tool in science education. Findings from the systematic review suggest four justifications for using drawing as a type of research tool, including assessment via drawing as (a) an alternative method considering young participants' verbal or writing…
Descriptors: Science Education, Formative Evaluation, Student Evaluation, Cognitive Tests
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MacLeod, Katarin – European Journal of Physics Education, 2013
Science, technology, society, and environment (STSE) education has recently received attention in educational research, policy, and science curricular development. Fewer strides have been made in examining the connections between STSE education and learning/teaching physics. Examples of moving STSE theory into practice within a physics classroom…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Physics, Science Education, Correlation
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Nowrouzian, Forough L.; Farewell, Anne – Journal of Problem Based Learning in Higher Education, 2013
Teamwork has become an integral part of most organisations today, and it is clearly important in Science and other disciplines. In Science, research teams increase in size while the number of single-authored papers and patents decline. Team-work in laboratory sciences permits projects that are too big or complex for one individual to be tackled.…
Descriptors: Teamwork, Problem Based Learning, Teaching Methods, Science Instruction
Evans, Ronald W. – 1989
This review of philosophy of history examines questions of the meaning and purpose of historical study and draws implications for teaching. The discussion of philosophers of history is organized into six general categories within two broad groups. The two broad groups are analytic philosophers, who generally write about the historian's craft, and…
Descriptors: Historians, Historiography, History, Intellectual History
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Jackson, David F. – Interchange, 1993
This study aims to identify an internally consistent, teachable philosophical approach to the nature and practice of science, providing new perspectives on the debate over the definition of scientific literacy. Information comes from the works of a physicist, Richard Feynman, and the American Association for the Advancement of Science report…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Literature Reviews, Preservice Teacher Education, Science Education
Cherryholmes, Cleo H. – 1990
A review of eight leading political science journals beginning with the first volume of the "American Political Science Review" in 1906 revealed no articles or statements about how elementary civic education is or should be taught. Several reasons for this omission are suggested. First, the elementary civic education curriculum was established…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Civics, Elementary Education, Elementary School Curriculum
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Zaaiman, R. B. – Education for Information: The International Review of Education and Training in Library and Information Science, 1984
Investigates problem of whether largely nonresearch approach to teaching in many library schools is likely to inhibit entry of students with academic backgrounds in science, and whether teaching of information science should be classed with librarianship or science. It is concluded that information science courses should be research-oriented. (52…
Descriptors: Courses, Graduate Students, Graduate Study, Information Science
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Cohen, Michael R.; Harper, Edwin T. – Teaching Education, 1991
Through a review of the literature, looks at instructional and curricular issues related to the student-as-scientist model and the critical nature of the teacher's role in expanding school science activities to include this model. (SM)
Descriptors: Discovery Learning, Elementary Secondary Education, Learning Strategies, Literature Reviews
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Hanagan, Michael – Historical Methods, 1990
Examines practices and training of historians and sociologists. Cites problems in both fields for graduate students interested in social science approaches to historical questions in developing generalized interests into well-defined research topics. Suggests that collaboration will help sociology students ground research in historical evidence…
Descriptors: Graduate Study, Higher Education, Historiography, History
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Gold, John R.; And Others – Journal of Geography, 1993
Asserts that college students often do not understand or appreciate the way that the mass media construct images of place. Describes a day-long simulation exercise in which students work on journalistic teams sent to an unfamiliar location to report on its landscape and environment. (CFR)
Descriptors: Educational Strategies, Experiential Learning, Field Studies, Geography