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Showing 1 to 15 of 25 results Save | Export
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Jacqueline Corcoran; Malitta Engstrom; Kate Ledwith; Gerard Jefferies; Tamara J. Cadet – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2025
Competency-based education in social work (CSWE, 2022) demands active learning methods that demonstrate professional competencies and practice behaviors. Role-plays and simulations are methods that link learning in the classroom with practice. This article explores role-play and simulation variants: basic role-play, real play, student-scripted…
Descriptors: Role Playing, Simulation, Social Work, Competency Based Education
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Hendrickson, Petra – Journal of Political Science Education, 2021
What is the impact of active learning techniques on student excitement, interest, and self-efficacy in a course? An American Foreign Policy and National Security course was designed around the utilization of a number of active learning techniques, including simulations, a debate, and counterfactual analysis. Students in the course were surveyed…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Student Attitudes, Student Interests, Self Efficacy
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Spitha, Natalia; Doolittle, Pamela S.; Buchberger, Amanda R.; Pazicni, Samuel – Journal of Chemical Education, 2021
The Beer-Lambert law is a core spectroscopic relationship widely used across the undergraduate chemistry curriculum and beyond. The derivation of this model is a common topic for upper-level chemistry courses. But, due to its abstract nature, this derivation can often seem like a mathematical exercise detached from the molecular origins of…
Descriptors: Inquiry, Active Learning, Science Instruction, Spectroscopy
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Darryl Cochrane – Student Success, 2025
This practice report describes the application of scenario-based learning to improve awareness of interpersonal skills in sport and exercise students. Thirty second-year undergraduate students over two consecutive academic years engaged in three scenario-based learning activities that simulated client interviews and consultations. The consensus…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, College Athletics, Exercise
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Boffelli, Albachiara; Kalchschmidt, Matteo; Shtub, Avraham – Higher Education Studies, 2021
The University of Bergamo switched from regular classes to online classes due to the COVID-19 pandemic during March 2020, without leaving to the students the chance to meet their teachers in the traditional setting even once. As such, this context represents a unique opportunity to compare the traditional courses, held in the years before, with…
Descriptors: Simulation, Training Methods, Active Learning, Distance Education
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Kempston, Tanya; Thomas, Nicholas – Journal of Political Science Education, 2021
To develop a simulation is to construct a new reality, one where students can safely engage with the course materials, so as to achieve the intended learning outcomes. While there are a wide range of studies that review the utility of simulations in the classroom, the construction of the alternate reality--the pseudo-reality--is a less discussed…
Descriptors: Simulation, Educational Environment, Role Playing, Nonprint Media
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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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Liu, Dan; Duan, Zhuojan – Physics Teacher, 2021
Equilibrium is an essential concept in undergraduate physics curriculum as it integrates Newton's laws and torque. The importance also comes from its wide applications in mechanics and biomechanics. Simulations of Back and Arms are developed mainly for the undergraduates who major in physical therapy and health sciences. They are implemented as…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Scientific Principles, Biomechanics, Mechanics (Physics)
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Naujoks, Daniel – Journal of Political Science Education, 2021
This essay introduces and analyzes a one-class role-play simulation during which students engage in stakeholder negotiations on how to respond to a large flow of refugees between two fictional African countries. Participants acquire an in-depth knowledge of arguments regarding granting and restricting refugees' freedom of movement and civil and…
Descriptors: Refugees, Emergency Shelters, International Relations, Teaching Methods
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Fischer, Beth A. – Journal of Political Science Education, 2019
Stories can be employed in a variety of ways in college classrooms--such as in case studies, simulations, and problem-based learning (PBL) activities. Sometimes these stories are historically accurate, while in other instances they are fictional. What might be the benefits and challenges of using fictional narratives? This article draws upon data…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Teaching Methods, Problem Based Learning, College Students
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Steagall, Jeffrey W.; Jares, Timothy E.; Gallo, Andres – Journal of Teaching in International Business, 2012
"If free trade is a no-brainer, why isn't trade free?" Students often express such sentiments at the conclusion of a typical international trade course, during which they have learned that free trade is optimal, but that countries continue to restrict trade substantially. This article describes a simulation of a round of trade…
Descriptors: Economics Education, Business Administration Education, International Trade, Simulation
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Jenkins, Shannon – PS: Political Science and Politics, 2010
Both service learning and simulations have been shown to positively impact student outcomes, but they are not often used together. This article examines how to effectively combine these active learning styles to reap the benefits of both. After examining a case in which the two were combined and the impact this approach had on student evaluations…
Descriptors: Service Learning, Simulation, Active Learning, Student Evaluation
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Lewis, John L. – Teaching in Higher Education, 2011
Designing for the needs of people with impairments has rarely been a significant feature of urban planning theory and education. Given the role of urban planners as shapers of the built environment and public policy, the prevalence of negative and misinformed attitudes among planners toward impaired populations has been highlighted as requiring…
Descriptors: Urban Planning, Student Attitudes, Active Learning, Public Policy
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Levintova, Ekaterina; Johnson, Terri; Scheberle, Denise; Vonck, Kevin – Journal of Political Science Education, 2011
Globalization, global citizenship, and political engagement have become such buzzwords and cliches that we often lose the sense of their meaning. Global citizenship in particular is an elusive concept to operationalize. This article proposes to look at three dimensions of global citizenship: legal (rights and obligations), psychological…
Descriptors: Assignments, Political Science, Introductory Courses, Citizenship
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Zitter, Ilya; de Bruijn, Elly; Simons, Robert-Jan; ten Cate, Olle – Interactive Learning Environments, 2012
We study project-based, technology-enhanced learning environments in higher education, which should produce, by means of specific mechanisms, learning outcomes in terms of transferable knowledge and learning-, thinking-, collaboration- and regulation-skills. Our focus is on the role of objects from professional practice serving as boundary objects…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Technology, Instructional Design, Computer Mediated Communication
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