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Kinsella, Timothy – Interdisciplinary Humanities, 1995
Describes instructional strategies and content for a course titled "Those Fabulous (?) Sixties." Discusses the course structure outlining four paradigms of social science research and action. Maintains that the course helps students know more about themselves, their values, and their relationships to society. (CFR)
Descriptors: Course Content, Course Descriptions, Curriculum Development, Educational Strategies
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Baker, Vaughan – Interdisciplinary Humanities, 1998
Discusses the tendency of universities to focus on the disciplinarity of the humanities as opposed to promoting interdisciplinary connections within the field. Argues for interdisciplinarity instead in order to reinvigorate university humanities programs and provide students with the knowledge they need. Warns against improperly practicing an…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational History, Educational Improvement, Higher Education
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Voeltz, Richard A. – Interdisciplinary Humanities, 1998
Reveals that through the use of the movie "Groundhog Day," students in humanities courses can grasp Friedrich Nietzsche's myth of eternal recurrence; the myth addresses the question of what if everything that occurred in one's life occurred again just as it happened before. Discusses the similarities between Nietzsche's myth and the…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Course Content, Educational Strategies, Films
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Phillips, Rebecca Wright – Interdisciplinary Humanities, 1995
Proposes that dance is a language with its own symbols, gestures, and aesthetics with the power to communicate complex ideas and thoughts. Outlines how discussion, analysis, and criticism can be crafted from three major elements of dance: (1) space; (2) time; and (3) energy. Asserts that students can learn to read dance as a visual text. (CFR)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Classroom Techniques, Communication (Thought Transfer), Curriculum Development
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Marashio, Paul – Interdisciplinary Humanities, 1995
Contends that appropriately designed questions are essential tools in disciplining students' thoughts and reasoning ability. Discusses classroom techniques for using questioning strategies in an interdisciplinary humanities seminar. Includes questioning scenarios for seeking information, interpretation, and speculation/hypothesizing. (CFR)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Cognitive Processes, Higher Education, Humanities Instruction
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Vincent, Tim – Interdisciplinary Humanities, 1996
Discusses materials that can be used to create an interdisciplinary course that aims to provide students with a greater understanding of contemporary corporate-centered mass culture and its impact on their lives. Offers detailed reviews of literary and media sources illustrating the major shifts in cultural perception since World War II. (DSK)
Descriptors: Corporations, Course Descriptions, High Schools, Higher Education
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Checkoway, Marjorie; And Others – Interdisciplinary Humanities, 1996
Maintains that a liberal education emphasizing the humanities provides teachers with a more expansive view of the world and the ability to adapt to changing paradigms. Outlines strategies, developed through a two-year project, for achieving this goal. Describes the project and includes a reading list. (MJP)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Educational Improvement, Educational Strategies, Higher Education
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Kersell, Nancy D. – Interdisciplinary Humanities, 1995
Maintains that, although many educators and students know about the Holocaust as a moral and historical catastrophe, the expanding canon of Holocaust literature also merits study. Asserts that a course devoted to the Holocaust and its depiction in literature represents another way of integrating studies within the humanities. (CFR)
Descriptors: Content Area Reading, Curriculum Development, Foreign Countries, Higher Education
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Phillips, Michael D. – Interdisciplinary Humanities, 1995
Summarizes an interdisciplinary course that uses humanities resources to illuminate social science concepts related to nationalism and multiculturalism. Combined fiction and nonfiction sources to discuss the determining factors of national and personal identity. Includes relevant examples, as well as a list of required texts, and student projects.…
Descriptors: Cultural Pluralism, Global Approach, Higher Education, Humanities
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Hodges, David H. – Interdisciplinary Humanities, 1995
Maintains that a difficulty in teaching humanities survey courses is coordinating data from the various disciplines of cultural history. Recommends the use of creation stories as "windows" on the cultures of the Egyptians, Mesopotamians, and the Hebrews. Provides an overview of each culture's creation stories and a bibliography of…
Descriptors: Course Content, Cultural Context, Curriculum Development, Higher Education
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Vincent, Tim; Reiland, Bob – Interdisciplinary Humanities, 1995
Illustrates the social construction of scientific knowledge by examining the modernist literary works of Chekhov, Ibsen, and Kafka. Demonstrates philosophical conflicts among the authors centering on the benefits and drawbacks of scientific inquiry and modernism. Students also read textbooks and treatises on the history of science. (MJP)
Descriptors: Bibliographies, Creative Teaching, Curriculum Enrichment, Holistic Approach