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Taylor, Shay – Odyssey: New Directions in Deaf Education, 2015
For many educators, working with students who were deaf or hard of hearing was the need to have "access." Access to technology was the tool of choice for providing integration that has come to be so much more than gadgets. It is intercurricular--math software incorporates reading, science websites support language skills. It is…
Descriptors: Deafness, Partial Hearing, Access to Computers, Critical Thinking
Mack, Nancy – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 2013
Many teachers have had a favorable response to their experimentation with digital feedback on students' writing. Students much preferred a simpler system of highlighting and commenting in color. After experimentation the author found that this color-coded system was more effective for them and less time-consuming for her. Of course, any system…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Experimental Programs, Evaluation Methods, Intermode Differences
Raymond, Chad; Usherwood, Simon – Journal of Political Science Education, 2013
Simulations are employed widely as teaching tools in political science, yet evidence of their pedagogical effectiveness, in comparison to other methods of instruction, is mixed. The assessment of learning outcomes is often a secondary concern in simulation design, and the qualitative and quantitative methods used to evaluate outcomes are…
Descriptors: Political Science, Simulation, Teaching Methods, Outcome Measures
Osborn, Don R. – Journal of Instructional Psychology, 2010
Web-based tutorials offer an opportunity to provide automated individualized feedback to help students develop, for example, the ability to identify independent and dependent variables and the ability to discriminate between experimental and predictor variables. Doing so enables them to distinguish between the relatively clear-cut causal…
Descriptors: Tutorial Programs, Internet, Web Based Instruction, Integrated Learning Systems