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Randall, Robin R. – Educational Facility Planner, 2012
Outdoors opens up endless possibilities. Every place and space people experience offers an opportunity to learn. Accepted educational research first theorized by social scientist and author, Howard Gardner, shows that learners have nine multiple intelligences--visual, logical, intrapersonal, musical, body-kinesthetic, linguistic, interpersonal,…
Descriptors: Outdoor Education, Educational Opportunities, Educational Environment, Multiple Intelligences
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Freeman, Greta G.; Wash, Pamela D. – Journal on Excellence in College Teaching, 2013
Teaching in the digital age has become increasingly challenging for college and university faculty. Application, relevance, and active engagement rather than traditional PowerPoint slide show lectures are what our technology-savvy, socially networked students crave and need to keep their attention and interest levels high. Using a combination of…
Descriptors: College Faculty, College Students, Brain, Learner Engagement
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Riordan, Diane A. – Journal of Teaching in International Business, 2006
Prior researchers have described how individuals prefer to learn with different types of activities. Vincent and others (2002) have reported that business students prefer kinesthetic and interpersonal modes of learning and prescribe their use in the international business curriculum. Based on their findings, this paper presents a compendium of…
Descriptors: Business Administration Education, Accounting, College Students, Student Projects
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Moran, Seana; Kornhaber, Mindy; Gardner, Howard – Educational Leadership, 2006
Education policymakers often go astray when they attempt to integrate multiple intelligences theory into schools, according to the originator of the theory, Howard Gardner, and his colleagues. The greatest potential of a multiple intelligences approach to education grows from the concept of a profile of intelligences. Each learner's intelligence…
Descriptors: Multiple Intelligences, Theories, Teaching Methods, Learning Activities
Beard, Colin; Wilson, John – Horizons, 2002
A model presents experiential learning as a combination lock. Outdoor environmental elements, activities, senses, emotions, forms of intelligence, and ways of learning are grouped into six "tumblers" that can be arranged into combinations that best help learners interact with the external environment through their senses, thus generating…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Educational Environment, Educational Strategies, Emotional Experience
Cromwell, Ronald R.; Croskery, Beverly – 1994
Inservice training sessions were provided for teachers from elementary to high school level on the topic of Howard Gardner's theory of multiple intelligences and its application to instruction and curriculum. In the training, participants experience, plan, and reflect on the intelligences and their uses in their lives and their classrooms. The…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Change, Elementary Secondary Education, Experiential Learning
Savitz, Fred – 1999
Classic theories in pedagogy such as those of John Dewey and Jean Piaget establish the foundation upon which preservice students in a social studies methods course build new knowledge about the teaching/learning paradigm. The constructivist philosophy emanating from these theories provides the rationale for a technique designed to enable students…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Constructivism (Learning), Creative Teaching, Experiential Learning
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Martin, W. Michael; And Others – Journal of School Leadership, 1997
Examines the progress of problem-based learning in the University of Colorado (Denver)'s educational administration program, stressing the roles of multiple design innovations, multiple intelligences, and constructivist approaches. Program developers learned five major lessons: clarifying roles, linking assessments with standards, defining the…
Descriptors: Administrator Education, Constructivism (Learning), Educational Administration, Elementary Secondary Education
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Perkins, David – Educational Leadership, 1999
Although most constructivist classrooms feature active, social, and creative learning, different kinds of knowledge (inert, ritual, conceptually difficult, and foreign) invite varied constructivist responses, not one standard approach. Constructivism is pragmatic and should be viewed as a toolbox for problems of learning; teachers should use…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Classroom Techniques, Constructivism (Learning), Cooperative Learning
Sanders, Steve; Akey, Theresa; Boyd, Pam; Kamen, Michael; Salisbury-Glennon, Jill; Gorrell, Jeffrey – 1999
This paper describes one model of school reconstruction, which includes a professional development school, being implemented at Celebration School in Celebration, Florida. The description highlights the educational practices and daily learning experiences of students at Celebration. The narrative provides a picture of the philosophical foundation…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Educational Environment, Educational Innovation, Educational Practices