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Cooke, Todd J.; Jensen, Jeffrey S.; Carleton, Karen L.; Hall, Kristi L.; Jardine, Hannah E.; Kent, Bretton W.; Redish, Edward F.; Shultz, Jeffrey W. – American Biology Teacher, 2023
Organismal biology (OrgBio) comprises the diversity, structures, and functions of all organisms from bacteria to humans. Arguably, OrgBio is often the most poorly taught and least conceptually rigorous section of the introductory biology sequence offered at most U.S. institutions of higher education. This article reports on the successful…
Descriptors: Group Activities, Active Learning, Learner Engagement, Introductory Courses
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Ronald L. Reyes; Junjun A. Villanueva – Journal of Chemical Education, 2024
In pursuit of active learning and fostering conceptual understanding, educators and researchers have tirelessly endeavored to reshape the perception of chemistry, transcending its apparent barriers of technical jargon, semantics, and symbolism. One innovative approach that aligns with this mission is the integration of narratives into chemical…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Chemistry, Science Instruction, Visualization
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Clerici-Arias, Marcelo – Journal of Economic Education, 2021
Team-based learning is a powerful collaborative learning technique that can be used effectively in a principles of economics course, although its implementation can be costly for instructors and students alike. The author suggests a series of strategies that can result in a much smoother transition to a fully collaborative classroom. The author…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Cooperative Learning, Introductory Courses, College Instruction
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Ward, Ann; Antoine, Aja; Cadge, Wendy – Learning and Teaching: The International Journal of Higher Education in the Social Sciences, 2021
This article describes one approach to flipping an introductory sociology course. To encourage students to practice 'doing' sociology, we designed a flipped classroom that included a 'pay to play' model, small group work and an emphasis on active learning during class time. With this course design, we linked in-class active learning with outside…
Descriptors: Flipped Classroom, Student Attitudes, Introductory Courses, Sociology
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Maya Autret; Autumn Bermea; Jacqueline Bible; Kristin Matera; Brad van Eeden-Moorefield – Family Science Review, 2024
This paper details the redesign and implementation of an introductory Family Science and Human Development (FSHD) undergraduate course. The redesign implemented a flipped classroom approach, grounded in constructivist theory and active learning methods. A flipped classroom approach shifts traditional lecture-based classwork to an…
Descriptors: Flipped Classroom, Introductory Courses, Family and Consumer Sciences, Undergraduate Study
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Craft, Erik; Linask, Maia – Journal of Economic Education, 2020
The authors of this article estimate the learning effects of the flipped classroom format using data from 16 sections of principles of microeconomics over a 4-year period. The experimental design is unique in that two treatment and two control sections were taught during the fall semester in four consecutive years. Further, the instructor switched…
Descriptors: Blended Learning, Microeconomics, Economics Education, Introductory Courses
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Muñiz, Marc N.; Altinis-Kiraz, Christine; Emenike, Mary E. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2022
Robust efforts to improve equity, access, and inclusion are necessary in STEM gateway courses at the undergraduate level. Here, we describe an ongoing course transformation of an extended general chemistry sequence at a large, flagship, research-intensive institution. This course enrolls a diverse group of students who have limited preparation in…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Access to Education, Inclusion, STEM Education
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McMahon, John – Journal of Political Science Education, 2021
Given the increasing prevalence of podcast listening, especially among young adults with college education, it is important to consider how student-produced podcasts can impact the student experience in the classroom, contribute to a more participatory course, and help achieve learning objectives. To engage these issues, this article reflects on…
Descriptors: Audio Equipment, Political Science, Introductory Courses, Assignments
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Wu, Nancy; Kubo, Tomohiro; Hall, Ariana O.; Zurcher, Danielle M.; Phadke, Sameer; Wallace, Rachel L.; McNeil, Anne J. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2020
Although teaching laboratories offer students the opportunity to act and think like chemists, in many cases students simply follow written procedures to generate predetermined outcomes. In recent years, there has been a movement toward inquiry-, problem-, and discovery-based learning. In a similar vein, the first-semester introductory organic…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, College Science, Introductory Courses, Laboratory Experiments
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Steven Sclarow; A. J. Raven; Mart Doyle – Journal of Information Systems Education, 2024
This paper presents field-tested improvements over an 11-year period of a large-scale "Introduction to Information Systems" core business school course and provides a framework for implementation. Engagement and learning in large-scale courses can prove challenging, especially when the class is a requirement within a business school's…
Descriptors: Learning Strategies, Information Systems, Large Group Instruction, Introductory Courses
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McDowell, Travis R.; Schmittzehe, Emmalou T.; Duerden, Amanda J.; Cernusca, Dan; Collier, Harvest; Woelk, Klaus – Journal of Science Education and Technology, 2019
A student-choice model course redesign was used to counteract a large increase in student enrollment, improve the quality of instruction, and preserve student success. This model is an instructional technique that allows students to choose how to engage in a course. Using this model in a first-semester college-level general chemistry course,…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Chemistry, Introductory Courses, College Science
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Broyer, Rebecca M.; Miller, Kenny; Ramachandran, Shalini; Fu, Sheree; Howell, Karen; Cutchin, Steven – Journal of Chemical Education, 2021
In recent years, immersive technology tools have burgeoned. After the release of the affordable Oculus Go headset and the Merge Cube, there has been increasing use of virtual, augmented, and extended reality (VR, AR, XR) in classrooms. Of significance to chemistry educators are the virtual lab simulations developed by Labster and HoloLab Champions…
Descriptors: Computer Simulation, Simulated Environment, Demonstrations (Educational), Equipment
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Cummiskey, Kevin; Adams, Bryan; Pleuss, James; Turner, Dusty; Clark, Nicholas; Watts, Krista – Journal of Statistics Education, 2020
Over the last two decades, statistics educators have made important changes to introductory courses. Current guidelines emphasize developing statistical thinking in students and exposing them to the entire investigative process in the context of interesting research questions and real data. As a result, many concepts (confounding, multivariable…
Descriptors: Statistics, Teaching Methods, Inferences, Guidelines
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Brown, Michael – Teaching in Higher Education, 2020
Despite their increasingly widespread adoption in post-secondary education, scholars and practitioners know very little about the impact of digital data displays on instructors' sense-making and academic planning. In this manuscript, I report the results of comparative case studies of five different introductory physics instructors at three…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Learning Analytics, Introductory Courses, Physics
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Lovell, Darrell; Khatri, Cassandra – Journal of Political Science Education, 2021
Simulation methodology has moved toward using different types of real-world scenario-based learning constructs to improve applied understanding of political science concepts and theories. This type of active learning has become popular in the upper divisions of undergraduate and graduate political science. This reflection addresses the variance in…
Descriptors: Political Science, Community Colleges, Introductory Courses, Simulation
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