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Showing 1 to 15 of 30 results Save | Export
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Blaire L. Speck; Lisa K. Karr; Doug A. Golick; Lena M. Luck – NACTA Journal, 2023
Courses that are typically hands-on, like equine science, may be more challenging online, but there is a higher demand for online offerings. With an increase in students taking online equine courses, a review of teaching methods was conducted to determine students' preferred teaching tools in online equine courses. The survey was sent out to…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Animals, Online Courses, Learning Processes
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Rousell, David – Journal of Environmental Education, 2021
This paper develops a cosmopolitical approach to multi-species inquiry in environmental education and its associated research. Drawing on Isabelle Stengers' concepts of "etho-ecology" and an "ecology of practices", the paper explores ethical and political questions of what it means to think-with nonhuman animals as sentient…
Descriptors: Parks, Environmental Education, Inquiry, Ecology
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Ferreira, Maria Eduarda; Pitarma, Rui – Journal of Teacher Education for Sustainability, 2021
Deforestation is a global issue. Education has a fundamental role to play in this context. In this regard, the direction and effectiveness of educational practices should focus on the empowerment of students in ecocentric environmental attitudes. A key point in education for environmental sustainability is pedagogical approaches focused on the…
Descriptors: Forestry, Environmental Education, Student Attitudes, Critical Thinking
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Grauerholz, Liz; Weinzimmer, Julianne; Kidder, Erin N.; Owens Duffy, Nicole – Teaching Sociology, 2020
The topic of human-animal studies (HAS) remains largely ignored within the sociology classroom. While a few sociologists have encouraged teaching about animals, none has assessed whether incorporating nonhuman animals into the curriculum is effective. In this study, three instructors at two universities incorporated animal-related materials in…
Descriptors: Animals, Sociology, Teaching Methods, College Students
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Soja, Constance M. – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2018
In an introductory geology course on vertebrate fossils, a new object-based classroom exercise was designed to enhance students' appreciation for evidence of evolution as a "tinkering" process, specifically in modern organisms with which everyone is familiar. During the dissection of a popular college late-night snack (barbeque-style…
Descriptors: Geology, Teaching Methods, Paleontology, Laboratory Procedures
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Widiana, Rina; Susanti, Diana; Susanti, Silvi; Sumarmin, Ramadhan – Journal of Biological Education Indonesia (Jurnal Pendidikan Biologi Indonesia), 2019
The effectiveness of animal physiology practical book based on guided inquiry model is the essential factor to achievement student understanding a about animal physiology concepts. The purpose of this study was to observe the effectiveness of animal physiology practical book based on guided inquiry model in Padang State University. The variables…
Descriptors: Animals, Physiology, Textbooks, Inquiry
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Romesburg, H. Charles – American Biology Teacher, 2019
A classroom exercise is described in which college students take part in creating and supporting an evolutionary hypothesis that explains effort grunting. The exercise holds their interest throughout and readies them to understand hypotheses of animal and plant evolution. It informs them about the dependence of cultural evolution upon biological…
Descriptors: Evolution, Genetics, Science Instruction, Biology
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Bietzk, Edward; Weller, Renate; Simons, Victoria; Channon, Sarah B. – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2019
Development of new methods for anatomy teaching is increasingly important as we look to modernize and supplement traditional teaching methods. In this study, a life-sized equine model, "Geoff," was painted with surface and deep anatomical structures with the aim of improving students' ability to convert theoretical knowledge into…
Descriptors: Veterinary Medical Education, College Students, Medical Students, Anatomy
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Kaisarevic, Sonja N.; Andric, Silvana A.; Kostic, Tatjana S. – Advances in Physiology Education, 2017
In response to the Bologna Declaration and contemporary trends in Animal Physiology education, the Animal Physiology course at the Faculty of Sciences, University of Novi Sad, Serbia, has evolved over a 12-year period (2001-2012): from a classical two-semester course toward a one-semester course utilizing computer simulations of animal…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Science Instruction, Animals, Physiology
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Stewart, Alistair James – Journal of Environmental Education, 2018
This article enacts Deleuze and Guattari's (1987) concept "assemblage" to craft a riverScape pedagogy that is informed by, and responsive to, the Murray Cod, the river, and its circumstances. The Murray Cod, the largest fish species in Australia's Murray-Darling Basin, has diverse cultural meanings. Cod are at once a creation being of…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Natural Resources, Water, Earth Science
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Foster, Holly Ann; Robinson, Courtney L.; Thomas, James W.; Knight-Crenshaw, LuAnn – Journal of Cases in Educational Leadership, 2020
This case study is designed for use in graduate courses in student affairs and higher education administration. This case presents some of the challenges that higher education professionals face concerning policies and laws as they relate to student mental illness and emotional support animals. Requests for emotional support animals are becoming…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Case Method (Teaching Technique), Animals, Students with Disabilities
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Nakagawa, Yoshifumi – Journal of Environmental Education, 2018
Environmental education as a theory and practice of ecopedagogical simulation positively acknowledges various accidental happenings in the learner's experience. By working with and on the accidents, the learner is encouraged to imagine the real object that escapes his/her experience and thus cannot be and should not be reduced into human…
Descriptors: Tourism, Environmental Education, Ecology, Teaching Methods
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Mustola, Marleena – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2019
The hierarchical human-centric paradigm has been criticized by various movements of posthuman philosophy because this paradigm forgets and dismisses nonhuman beings and entities: animals, nature, objects, and technology. When I developed a course called 'Education and Adaptations of Animal Studies' for university students in 2015, I learned two…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, College Students, Animals, Ethics
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Dolby, Nadine – Honors in Practice, 2017
The role of higher education is not only to prepare students for a career: it should assist and support them as they begin an adult life, which includes contributing to society and a community, participating in a democracy, forming relationships, clarifying their values and beliefs, and finding meaning and direction in the world. However, as…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Honors Curriculum, Student Participation, Social Responsibility
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Basso, Paulo José; Tazinafo, Lucas Favaretto; Silva, Mauro Ferreira; Rocha, Maria José Alves – Advances in Physiology Education, 2014
We developed an alternative approach to teach diabetes mellitus in our practical classes, replacing laboratory animals. We used custom rats made of cloth, which have a ventral zipper that allows stuffing with glass marbles to reach different weights. Three mock rats per group were placed into metabolic cages with real food and water and with test…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Diabetes, Simulation, Metabolism
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