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Cheryl A. Trahms Chapman; Melissa Diegnau – Journal of Education for Business, 2024
This article describes an interactive activity for the first week of an undergraduate Strategic Management (SM) or Business Policy and Strategy (BPS) course. This activity is designed to foster student engagement, which is critical to both the teaching of theory and the practice of strategy while reinforcing course learning objectives regarding…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Experiential Learning, Critical Thinking, Thinking Skills
Herring, Kristen D. – Communication Teacher, 2023
Intersectionality is core to contemporary feminist rhetorical criticism. It is also a complex concept with great potential for promoting social change by shifting discourses about identity in the public sphere. Therefore, communication scholars have a vested interest in teaching the basics of intersectional criticism to undergraduate and graduate…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Rhetorical Criticism, Feminism, Music
Yifeng Fan; Bahar Javadizadeh; Mariya Gavrilova Aguilar – Journal of Management Education, 2024
In the constantly evolving career landscape, knowledge about human resource management practices could prove very beneficial for undergraduate college students who want to construct protean careers. With its broad content coverage, the introductory HR course is best suited to teach students about key HR functions and practices instrumental to…
Descriptors: Human Resources, Courses, Personnel Management, Employment Practices
Ekaterina Yurasovskaya – PRIMUS, 2024
We describe a lecture-free problem-solving Mathematical Communication and Reasoning (MCR) course that helps students succeed in the Introduction to Advanced Mathematics course. The MCR course integrates elements from Uri Treisman's Emerging Scholars workshop model and Math Circles. In it students solve challenging problems and form a supportive…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, College Mathematics, Introductory Courses, Required Courses
Eileen Haase – Biomedical Engineering Education, 2021
Team projects and in-class interactions are the hallmark of a freshmen introductory course in biomedical engineering (BME). Our challenge was to continue team activities, mentoring, and the semester-long design project in a virtual environment after in-person classes ended due to the COVID-19 pandemic. This paper highlights some of the adaptations…
Descriptors: Teamwork, College Freshmen, Biomedicine, Engineering Education
Ostergaard, Lori – Composition Studies, 2015
WRT 329: Introduction to Writing Studies is a course in Oakland University's (OU) Writing and Rhetoric major program that provides students with a survey of composition studies as an academic discipline. It includes an examination of the history, theories, research, curricula, and pedagogies associated with composition studies in the university.…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Writing Instruction, Majors (Students), Course Descriptions
Osborn, J. R.; Barba, Evan; Henderson, Gretchen E.; Strong, Lisa M.; Kadish, Lesley H. – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2019
This article presents the Pilgrimage Model as a template for educators wishing to lead students on site-specific studies of engaged learning. During the 2015-2016 academic year, a group of Georgetown University students, faculty, and staff pursued the Pilgrimage Project, a year-long pedagogical experiment in interdisciplinary education and…
Descriptors: Program Descriptions, Interdisciplinary Approach, College Students, College Faculty
Rose, Marice – Art Education, 2012
This first written assignment of the semester for the author's undergraduate introductory art history class--an essay where students describe and reflect upon the significance of a family heirloom--is instrumental in meeting class objectives. The author's objectives in this class are for students: (1) to broaden their conception of what art is…
Descriptors: Art History, Undergraduate Students, Introductory Courses, Learner Engagement
Schmind, Kendra K.; Blankenship, Erin E.; Kerby. April T.; Green, Jennifer L.; Smith, Wendy M. – Journal of Statistics Education, 2014
The statistical preparation of in-service teachers, particularly middle school teachers, has been an area of concern for several years. This paper discusses the creation and delivery of an introductory statistics course as part of a master's degree program for in-service mathematics teachers. The initial course development took place before the…
Descriptors: Mathematics Teachers, Middle School Teachers, Inservice Teacher Education, Educational Development
Fiegel, Gregg L. – European Journal of Engineering Education, 2013
The article describes the process of incorporating a set of learning outcomes into a geotechnical engineering course. The outcomes were developed using Bloom's taxonomy and define the knowledge, skills, and abilities the students are expected to achieve upon completion of the course. Each outcome begins with an action-oriented verb corresponding…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Engineering Education, Behavioral Objectives, Program Descriptions
Greenwood, Nancy A. – Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc., 2011
The Introduction to Sociology course is usually the first contact that students have with the discipline of sociology. This course can determine whether students take other sociology courses or learn to use sociology in their lives as adults and citizens. "First Contact" identifies important issues facing instructors in introducing students to the…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Sociology, Teaching Methods, Guides
Parish, Thomas S.; Swenka, Jobyna J. – Education, 2007
What is "General Psychology?" Is it just one course that could be an elective, part of a minor, or part of a student's major? Or could "General Psychology" literally be the "corner stone" or "foundation block" upon which all the other psychology courses, taken afterwards, add to like bricks upon a "foundation block?" This paper will seek to…
Descriptors: Psychology, Etiology, Introductory Courses, Course Descriptions

Khoon, Koh Aik; Othman, Mazlan – College Student Journal, 2004
Three aspects of an introductory course in physics are discussed in this article. They are the texts, the course proper and the laboratory. Together they form an integral part of the entire course. The laboratory, although a subject of much contention, has an important role to play in enhancing and complementing the lectures. The course should be…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Introductory Courses, Physics, Textbooks
Poulin, Karen L. – Counseling Psychologist, 2007
Qualitative research has become increasingly perceived as well suited to the advancement of counseling psychology, yet opportunities for formal training in qualitative inquiry remain inconsistently available within and across graduate programs. For the potential contribution of this approach to counseling psychology to be realized, graduate…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Graduate Study, Counseling Psychology, Teaching Methods
Hertzog, Jodie; Williams, Renee – Teaching Sociology, 2007
Introducing students to sensitive social issues like intimate violence in lower level courses can spark their sociological imaginations motivating them to do further research in order to gain reflective knowledge about such topics. In order to promote two course objectives: (1) recognizing and applying sociological concepts and theories, and (2)…
Descriptors: Social Attitudes, Course Objectives, Marketing, Sociology