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Dayna Henry; Julia Sell; Lucy Bryan Malenke – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2024
The chapter describes the design, implementation, and evaluation of repeated peer review assignments in a health sciences program. Details of the assignment, quantitative and qualitative indirect assessments, and considerations for implementing this type of assignment in other courses are provided.
Descriptors: Peer Evaluation, Assignments, Skill Development, Research Skills
Within Our Reach: Essential Learning Outcomes, Engaged Pedagogy, and Assessment for Quality Learning
Rhodes, Terrel – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2021
This article describes the alignment between a liberal arts education and essential learning outcomes that prepare individuals with a breadth of skills and knowledge in preparation for work and life. Association of American Colleges and Universities' (AAC&U) efforts prompt institutions to adopt essential learning outcomes and assess students'…
Descriptors: Liberal Arts, Educational Objectives, Student Evaluation, College Students
Silva, Steve; Vyn, Reuben; Gatewood, Rachel; Colombo, Mariana; Saichaie, Kem – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2020
This chapter describes a program where graduate students serve as instructional technology consultants on educational projects that enhance the student-learning experience. In the process, they develop skills to prepare them for a variety of academic and professional settings.
Descriptors: Communities of Practice, Graduate Students, Consultants, Educational Technology
Best Practices for Online Team-Based Learning: Strengthening Teams through Formative Peer Evaluation
Brown, Tom; Rongerude, Jane; Leonard, Bruce; Merrick, Laura C. – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2021
This chapter describes best practices for the peer evaluation process in online team-based learning (TBL). Formative peer evaluation is an essential element of effective course delivery for online TBL classes, and when done well, shapes a group of individuals with a shared set of tasks into an interdependent team of learners. More generally,…
Descriptors: Best Practices, Electronic Learning, Online Courses, Cooperative Learning
Gillian-Daniel, Donald L.; Petty, Elizabeth M.; Schmid, Megan E.; Stahr, Anne; Raymond, Nancy C. – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2020
This chapter offers an evidence-based approach for training faculty educators in the health professions that includes raising awareness of inequities, facilitating self-reflection about identity, and building skills through applied improvisational techniques to act when bias or microaggressions occur.
Descriptors: Allied Health Occupations Education, College Faculty, Consciousness Raising, Social Bias
Goncalves, Zan; Bennett, Thomas; Murray-Chandler, Lynn; Hall, Caroline – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2018
This article describes a multi-institution collaboration to improve student skills in information literacy and inquiry and analysis (as described by the American Association of Colleges & Universities' VALUE rubrics). The project is unique in that it captures the student voice in all phases of the process--from choosing the kind of inquiry…
Descriptors: Information Literacy, Information Skills, Skill Development, Inquiry
Sowers, Kerri L.; Meyers, Shelly – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2021
Stockton University is a mid-size liberal arts institution in Southern New Jersey. Degree seekers must complete required course work in both liberal studies and core, specialized areas, such as business, health sciences, hospitality, education, social and behavioral sciences, or organizational leadership. Stockton emphasizes Essential Learning…
Descriptors: Portfolios (Background Materials), Electronic Publishing, Undergraduate Students, Student Evaluation
Kindelan, Nancy – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2010
The pedagogy of performing arts courses in theatre, film, music, and dance programs found in most liberal arts curricula is clearly experiential insofar as the making of art involves active engagement in classroom activities or events that are staged or filmed. But because many educators outside the arts perceive performing arts programs as solely…
Descriptors: Theater Arts, Experiential Learning, Active Learning, Intentional Learning
Kenedy, Robert; Monty, Vivienne – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2008
There are multiple stages to developing critical skills when both the librarian and faculty member are partners in the process. One of the first actions is for both the librarian and the faculty member to be in the library class to help students with information literacy. A teaching dynamic becomes evident, and the students understand the…
Descriptors: Computer Uses in Education, Research Skills, Information Literacy, Librarians

Oberman, Cerise – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 1984
The use of search strategy as a conceptual framework for teaching research techniques has long been a central concept of library instruction. It involves teaching analysis of research questions, understanding of structural differences in knowledge across disciplines, and evaluation of information. (MSE)
Descriptors: Academic Libraries, Classroom Techniques, Higher Education, Information Utilization

Peters, Calvin B. – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 1990
This author proposes supplemental instruction as a valid practice in any course, for any students, because each course has its idiosyncracies that are best addressed by the instructor. Particular skills to focus supplemental instruction sessions on include text-reading, note-taking, studying, and examination-taking skills. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: College Instruction, Course Descriptions, Educational Change, Higher Education

Martin, Deanna C.; Blanc, Robert A. – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 1994
The evolution and design of a supplemental instruction program for seriously underprepared students, primarily athletes, is chronicled. The resulting program used videotaped lectures of an outstanding teacher in combination with preview and review exercises. Results indicate that the method can help high-risk students master difficult content and…
Descriptors: Athletes, Classroom Techniques, College Instruction, High Risk Students

Gillespie, Frank – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 1998
The basis for development of most instructional technology applications has been the process of systematic instructional design. However, the traditional model of systematic instructional design may not be appropriate for new technological tools. New options, including online instruction, suggest that the focus should now be on helping learners…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, College Faculty, College Instruction, Educational Change

Bridges, Edwin M.; Hallinger, Philip – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 1996
Leadership education is intended to teach strategies for getting results through others. A Stanford University (California) graduate program for prospective public school principals uses complex problem-based learning projects in which students are required to develop a solution and a mode for presenting it as they would in an actual school…
Descriptors: Administrator Education, Classroom Techniques, College Instruction, Communication Skills
Laff, Ned Scott – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2005
This chapter argues that liberal learning can be transformative and foster students' intellectual and ethical development only if we consider its development underpinnings and pedagogic strategies that illustrate that the skills of academic inquiry are the skills of personal development. (Contains 1 note.)
Descriptors: Liberal Arts, Student Development, Cognitive Development, Ethics