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Borroff, Marie – ADE Bulletin, 1982
Urges English teachers to combine the experiential and intellectual dimensions of the student encounter with prose or poetry, yet recognizes this effort as a demanding and exhausting one. (AEA)
Descriptors: Discovery Learning, English Instruction, Higher Education, Learning Experience
Berthoff, Ann E. – 1979
This paper addresses the issue of learning to write and the need for defining a means of teaching the process of composing. Following a description of what kind of process writing is not, the composing process is presented as a continuum of making meaning out of a chaos of images, half-truths, remembrances, and syntactic fragments. The discovery…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Discovery Learning, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education
Segal, Morley; Fishel, Jeff – 1986
The teaching of politics and administration has much to gain from incorporating the experimental outlook of the field of Human Resources Development (HRD). Typically, instructors focus on the five goals in political science education (informational, analytical, synthetic, normative, and applied) separately, hoping that integration will occur…
Descriptors: Administration, Discovery Learning, Educational Innovation, Experimental Teaching
Mac Lennan, Thomas G. – 1977
A growing body of research indicates that formal discovery, or heuristic, procedures can enhance the composing process of sophisticated university students. Other studies suggest that below-average and average students can benefit from a similar approach. Specifically, the introduction of a model based on tagmemic heuristic theory in an adult…
Descriptors: Discovery Learning, Higher Education, Learning Processes, Student Attitudes
Scandura, Joseph M.; And Others – 1975
This study is one of several conducted by the authors in their investigation of the use of "higher order rules" in the solution of problems. The focus of the current experiment was determination of the compatibility of identified rules with the knowledge of average teenagers, and of the extent to which instruction in higher order rules…
Descriptors: College Mathematics, Discovery Learning, Generalization, Geometry
Denenberg, Stewart A. – 1988
This paper describes part of a course for college freshmen entitled "Computation, Reasoning, and Problem Solving," which uses the LOGO programming language to integrate computer programming skills, collaborative problem solving skills, and writing skills. Discussion of the computer programming component includes two of the LOGO problem…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Freshmen, Discovery Learning, Higher Education
Petrick, Joanne F. – 1980
A four-part heuristic model seeks to enhance teacher and student-writer awareness of the significance of the self as writer. The questions in the heuristic examine the relationships between the self and the self as writer, between the self and the subject matter, between the self and the audience, and between the self and the form of the…
Descriptors: College Students, Discovery Learning, Higher Education, Inquiry
Norton, Robert F.; And Others – 1977
In this study, which involved 87 freshman English students at Brigham Young University, the variety of practice items and the strategy of Practice (convergent or divergent) were systematically varied, in order to assess their effects on a rule-finding task. The task was presented in an expository fashion, using both rules and practice, and in a…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Discovery Learning, Educational Research, Higher Education
Hochman, Will – 1993
Richard Hugo's thinking about teaching creative writing can enhance the composition classroom: he offered both practical pointers about writing and advice about self-discovery for all writers. His pedagogy was directed at the most common elements in all writers--their humanity and their relationships to language, ideas, and feelings. "The…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Discovery Learning, Higher Education, Language Role
Swanson, Judy H. – 1990
The effectiveness of three tutorial strategies was evaluated by experimentally manipulating the strategies used in a 2 X 3 factorial design. Two tutors taught 48 college undergraduates a basic optics lesson about "how lenses work," using three instructional methods which varied the amount of tutor control. In the lecture condition, tutors assumed…
Descriptors: College Students, Comparative Analysis, Discovery Learning, Higher Education
Rosenberg, Roberta K.; Gordon, Douglas K. – 1988
The Community-Based Report provides students in business communications classes with an authentic context for thinking and writing. Students are required to investigate and produce written and oral solutions to a problem experienced by a local corporation, business, governmental or not-for-profit organization. Students develop their own cases,…
Descriptors: Business Communication, Business Education, Discovery Learning, Higher Education
Bollen, Sharon Kesterson – 1981
This paper introduces an artistic model of planning and problem solving. The model is based on a case study of processes engaged in by a college art student during the course of producing a senior thesis in batik (a wax-resist fabric dyeing process). Based on the premise that knowledge of the creative process is essential to understanding the…
Descriptors: Art Products, Case Studies, Creative Thinking, Data Analysis
Byer, John L. – 1996
Students' interest and involvement in social studies may be increased by motivating them to write about important topics which relate to their own life experiences. This article presents a general approach to writing instruction which may heighten students' curiosity to discover important topics in social studies as a relevant outgrowth of their…
Descriptors: Active Learning, College Instruction, College Students, Discovery Learning
Sullivan, Jerry L. – 1985
An answer to aliteracy involves literary inquiry in which teachers teach students how to ask their own questions in working through a piece of literature. Three approaches to such literary study are improvisational, interpretive, and intellectual inquiry. A literary schema that students can use as an instrument to get started on their road to the…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Discovery Learning, Higher Education, Literature Appreciation
DeGeorge, James M. – 1979
Heuristic models help writers recall information, sometimes revealing unique combinations of information in ways not conceived previously. This makes heuristics a valuable technique for helping beginning writers generate writing ideas. Observing that all culture is communication, Edward Hall has organized Primary Message Systems (PMS), a framework…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Discovery Learning, Divergent Thinking, Higher Education