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Roth, Michael S. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2013
The author's Coursera course, "The Modern and the Postmodern," might have been labeled "course least likely to become a massive open online course (MOOC.)" In many ways, it is an old-fashioned "great books" course, and in the 20 years the author has been teaching it, it has always relied heavily on student interaction in the classroom. Last summer…
Descriptors: Online Courses, Large Group Instruction, College Instruction, Philosophy
Berrett, Dan – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Many education experts who seek to define the value of a college degree seize on metrics that can be quantified in the short term. Some look at levels of student engagement, while others calculate gains on standardized tests of critical-thinking skills. Still others have started analyzing the salaries that recent graduates earn. A different sort…
Descriptors: Intelligence, Personality Traits, Values, College Instruction
Spitzer, Mark – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
In his epic poem "A Season in Hell," the surly French poet Arthur Rimbaud proposes that the Devil likes writing that lacks "descriptive" qualities. Rimbaud then makes a stand in favor of descriptive writing by offering "these hideous pages from [his] notes of the damned." The author would not go so far as to say that nondescriptive writing is evil…
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Descriptive Writing, Writing Instruction, College Instruction
Young, Jeffrey R. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Students are bringing the latest devices to campuses expecting to use them as learning tools, and colleges are trying to deliver. Some of the world's best-known universities tried some experiments with a new model of online learning, in which students watch short video lectures, take automatically graded quizzes, and use online communities to work…
Descriptors: College Instruction, Electronic Learning, Technology Uses in Education, Telecommunications
Labi, Aisha – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2013
This article profiles A.C. Grayling, a British intellectual who pioneers a new model for college. In his role as founder of the New College of the Humanities, Britain's newest and most controversial institution of higher education, A.C. Grayling could have chosen among several titles. The senior academic officer at most English higher-education…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Educational Change, Administrators
Berube, Michael – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2013
Graduate education in the humanities is in crisis. Every aspect, from the most specific details of the curriculum to the broadest questions about its purpose, is in crisis. It is a seamless garment of crisis: If one pulls on any one thread, the entire thing unravels. It is therefore exceptionally difficult to discuss any one aspect of graduate…
Descriptors: Time to Degree, College Faculty, Tenure, College Instruction
Porterfield, Daniel R. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2013
The past year has seen the meteoric rise of the MOOC, or massive open online course, which lets 100,000 strangers--or more--log on to free classes branded "Stanford" or "Harvard." "The New York Times" went so far as to call 2012 the "Year of the MOOC." Amid the cacophony of voices calling for colleges to cut costs and reduce student debt, many of…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Seminars, College Instruction, Small Group Instruction
Berrett, Dan – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
It may not have the gee-whiz factor of high-tech innovation, but changing expectations for what happens in class may prove to be a bigger advance in teaching. In this article, the author discusses a teaching technique called "flipping" and describes how "flipping" the classroom can improve the traditional lecture. As its name suggests, flipping…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Lecture Method, Expectation, Attitude Change
Fischer, Karin – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2013
American colleges have to be in India. After all, no other country in this century, save China, is likely to be as important geopolitically, financially, demographically, or culturally. Globally savvy students ought to study here. There are research opportunities for political scientists and public-health specialists, economists, and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, International Cooperation, Intercollegiate Cooperation, Partnerships in Education
Fischer, Karin – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Sun Yat-sen University's East-meets-West curriculum is distinctive, but its embrace of liberal education--education across disciplines, meant to provoke broad thinking--is far from unusual. At a time when China and its East Asian neighbors are trouncing U.S. students on international exams, educators in these countries are nonetheless adopting,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, College Curriculum, Liberal Arts, General Education
Laird, Ellen A. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2011
His father had been hacked to death in his own bed with an ax the previous November. His mother was similarly brutalized and left for dead with her husband but survived. On the last Monday of that August, after several months and many investigative twists, turns, and fumbles, there sat the son--the prime suspect--in Ellen Laird's literature class,…
Descriptors: College Instruction, Community Colleges, United States Literature, Fiction
Landecker, Heidi – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
Say "sentence diagramming" to people of a certain age, and one gets different reactions. Say it to most college students, and one gets a blank look. But not from the 24 students in Lucy Ferriss's "Constructing Thought," a half-credit course in the English department at Trinity College. They know how to diagram a sentence--and…
Descriptors: Sentence Structure, English Instruction, Competition, College Instruction
Edmundson, Mark – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
Edmundson states that if he could make one wish for the members of his profession, college and university professors of literature, he would wish that for one year, two, three, or five, they would give up readings. By "a reading," he means the application of an analytical vocabulary to describe and (usually) to judge a work of literary art.…
Descriptors: Literary Criticism, College Instruction, Literature, Literature Appreciation
Parry, Marc – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2012
Since MIT and Harvard started edX, their joint experiment with free online courses, the venture has attracted enormous attention for opening the ivory tower to the world. But in the process, the world will become part of an expensive and ambitious experiment testing some of the most interesting--and difficult--questions in digital education. Can…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Online Courses, Blended Learning, Video Games
Arin, Jennifer – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
Of all the reasons to use "The New Yorker" in a college writing class, the most compelling may be that its articles go beyond--well beyond--the five-paragraph model. Why, oh why, did that paradigm become such a fixture in composition courses? Students in the author's writing classes invariably suppose they can compose a quick introduction, add…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Essays, College Instruction, Periodicals
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