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Wilkins, S. A. – 1984
Many instructors teaching large survey courses use the chalkboard to aid their lectures in spite of the waste of class time in writing and erasing, the clutter and confusion that may result, and the messiness of chalkdust. As an alternative, the slide-lecture method has been used for several years at Bossier Community College in teaching…
Descriptors: Audiovisual Aids, Community Colleges, Lecture Method, Slides
Rich, John Martin – Performance and Instruction, 1988
Identifies different types of statements that make up the structure of a lecture, including concepts, definitions, formulas, theories, models, and predictive statements. The selection of statements and their relationship to pedagogical processes is described, and the importance of knowledge of the abilities of the intended audience is discussed.…
Descriptors: Audience Analysis, Definitions, Instructional Design, Instructional Improvement
Brookes, Bob – Media in Education and Development, 1985
Discusses several considerations of which trainers should be aware when teaching the following radio production techniques to trainees in developing nations: equipment use, use of talkback facility, scriptwriting, location interviewing, drama production, educational radio production, and editing. (MBR)
Descriptors: Developing Nations, Editing, Interviews, Lecture Method

Murray, John P.; Murray, Judy I. – College Teaching, 1992
A systematic approach to preparation of successful college lectures is outlined, including four stages: anticipation (of content and expectations); preparation (selection, acquisition, design, and construction); execution (attention to speech habits, demeanor, and body language); and support (evaluation, maintenance, and enhancement). (MSE)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, College Instruction, Higher Education, Instructional Development
Williams, Cal Robertson – 1986
Volunteer teachers working with the Oregon State University Extension Service Home Economics Program have found the feedback lecture method of instruction to be effective in reaching nontraditional adult students ranging in age from the mid-40s to the mid-90s. This method provides guidelines for the volunteer-teacher--who may or may not have…
Descriptors: Adult Students, Course Organization, Feedback, Guidelines
Cowan, John – Educational Technology, 1984
Outlines positive and negative features of the lecture method and the resource-based learning method, recounts a personal experience with the responsive lecture, and discusses its potential. (MBR)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Higher Education, Independent Study
Hyon, Sunny – 1997
The speech introduces a colloquium on the teaching of listening comprehension to students of English for academic purposes (EAP). The colloquium's aim is to address ways that EAP instructors can improve students' lecture listening skills by discussing the types of background discourse knowledge and listening strategies that…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, English for Academic Purposes, Language Styles, Lecture Method

Barrett, L. R. – Higher Education Review, 1991
Critics of student writing in British lecture courses as "mere rehash of lecture notes" are reminded that (1) by its nature, the lecture course focuses on and is limited to information conveyed in lectures, and (2) professors refuse to use materials such as U.S. textbooks that could supplement the information conveyed in class. (MSE)
Descriptors: Assignments, Comparative Analysis, Expository Writing, Foreign Countries
Miller, Michael T. – 1991
This paper introduces and compares three types of college level teaching: discussion, lecture, and personalized systems. The discussion method is described and identified as one that allows the learner to question and probe, giving increased internalization, greater acceptance of conclusions than other teaching methods, and other benefits. The…
Descriptors: College Instruction, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Higher Education, Individualized Instruction
Engle, Shirley H. – 1986
The paper gives reasons why the type of social studies genuinely committed to the education of citizens in a democracy has never flourished in the United States, though such education is crucial to the nation's survival. Social studies, as a discipline, should be utilized to solve social problems and not be a vehicle for imposing a particular…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Classroom Techniques, Critical Thinking, Educational Practices
Carrier, Carol A. – Journal of Instructional Development, 1983
Presents five preliminary conclusions about notetaking practices based on findings in the literature. Each conclusion is followed by a discussion of its implications for classroom instruction, and links between various lecturer and student behaviors and the external events of instruction are proposed. (Author/MBR)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Educational Research, Higher Education, Learning Activities

Weaver, Richard L. – Teacher Educator, 1980
The lecturer's first job is to get the students' attention. Techniques to hold the students' interest include: adapting the lecture to the audience; covering a few topics in depth rather than many superficially; and putting variety in the format. Nonverbal communication is as important as the content of the lecture. (JN)
Descriptors: Attention Control, Body Language, Classroom Environment, Higher Education

Blumenthal, Arthur L. – International Journal of Social Education, 1991
Discusses an analysis of 10 common introductory psychology textbooks. Argues that the books tend to present psychology as tedious, even silly, and as a canned, multimedia, self-teaching program. Concludes that replacing textbooks with lectures based on the instructor's personal knowledge and experience would improve the teaching of psychology. (SG)
Descriptors: Educational Improvement, Experience, Higher Education, Humanistic Education
Clark, D. Joseph – Instructional Innovator, 1984
Describes components of videodisc learning stations, and discusses important factors distinguishing videodisc technology from other forms of instruction that make it likely to succeed where self-paced instruction has fallen short. Elements of other educational formats are also examined and related to strengths and disadvantages of videodiscs. (MBR)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Costs, Futures (of Society), Individualized Instruction

Keller, Fred S. – Teaching of Psychology, 1985
Salient features of an ideal system of instruction are discussed. There have been recent attempts to write formulas for instruction and to individualize teaching in ways suggested by the science of behavior. DNA technologies may some day enable us to trace correlates of intelligence. We could then design individual educational strategies. (RM)
Descriptors: Behavioral Sciences, Conventional Instruction, Educational Strategies, Elementary Secondary Education
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