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Gray, Tara; Madson, Laura – College Teaching, 2007
Twenty years of research shows that using interactive techniques more often can make a class more effective. For example, a study of six thousand physics students compared classes using passive lecture to classes using interactive techniques that allowed for discussion among students and between the professor and students. The study showed that…
Descriptors: Lecture Method, Student Motivation, Student Participation, Interaction
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Straits, William – College Teaching, 2007
Whereas often emphasized in teaching children, the role of caring has been largely ignored in postsecondary education. This study shares college students' perspectives of instructor caring within a large biology lecture course. Within this context caring was perceived as both learning centered, which emphasizes content mastery and higher-order…
Descriptors: Lecture Method, Student Attitudes, Teaching Methods, Postsecondary Education
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Kraft, Robert G. – College Teaching, 1985
Evidence suggests that the usual classroom practices don't work and must be replaced by something more active and involving. Group-inquiry, an untraditional approach to the classroom, is described. Small groups examine central problems of the subjects under study, then a consensus is reported to the class. (MLW)
Descriptors: College Instruction, College Students, Group Dynamics, Group Experience
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Frederick, Peter J. – College Teaching, 1986
Techniques for providing variety and effectiveness within the lecture format are described, including the oral essay, participatory lecture, problem-solving approach, alternating mini-lectures and discussions, modeling analytical skills, debate, simulation and role-playing, and the affective/emotional media lecture. (MSE)
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Audiovisual Aids, Classroom Communication, Classroom Techniques
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Schwebel, David C.; Schwebel, Milton – College Teaching, 2002
Lectures remain the primary method of instruction in higher education despite several limitations: Students typically lose interest during hour-long lectures, lectures lead to rote learning by some students, and lectures do not lead to development of higher-level conceptual thinking skills. As an alternative to a lecture on the topic, an active…
Descriptors: Rote Learning, Nonverbal Communication, Lecture Method, Thinking Skills