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Sabina Sestigiani; Ekaterina Pechenkina – College Teaching, 2024
This qualitative study explores challenges and benefits of introducing theater techniques into Higher Education (HE) undergraduate intermediate Italian language classrooms. Drawing on student surveys and reflective essays, the study offers original insights into how collaborative, performance-based activities can result in greater student…
Descriptors: Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction, Teaching Methods, Theater Arts
Defining Critical Thinking across Disciplines: An Analysis of Community College Faculty Perspectives
Thonney, Teresa; Montgomery, Joseph C. – College Teaching, 2019
Although faculty agree that critical thinking is an important learning outcome for college courses, experts disagree on how to define and conceptualize critical thinking. Some researchers see it as a general skill, similar to reading or mathematics. Others see it as highly specific to each academic discipline, with critical thinking in one…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, College Faculty, Teacher Attitudes, College Students
Walker, Alicia; Bush, Amy; Sanchagrin, Ken; Holland, Jonathon – College Teaching, 2017
This study examined possible ways to increase student engagement in small sections of a large, introductory-level, required university course. Research shows that cooperative group learning boosts achievement through fostering better interpersonal relationships between students. Cooperative group learning is an evidence-based instructional…
Descriptors: Pilot Projects, Comparative Analysis, Academic Achievement, Teaching Methods
Reynolds, Heather L.; Kearns, Katherine Dowell – College Teaching, 2017
Backward course design is a compelling strategy for achieving results-based, student-centered learning. The backward course-design approach is first to identify student-learning outcomes, then the means of assessing the outcomes, and lastly the classroom activities that would support the learning outcomes. With demonstrated success at improving…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Performance Based Assessment, Outcomes of Education, Elementary Secondary Education
Wagener, Bastien – College Teaching, 2016
In French universities, only one out of two students is successful in his/her first year. The drastic changes in the organization of work and the greater emphasis put on self-regulated learning (relying on metacognition) can largely explain these low success rates. In this regard, techniques have been developed to help students improve monitoring…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Academic Achievement, Metacognition, Foreign Countries
Zimmermann, Laura K. – College Teaching, 2013
Interest in the use of technology in the classroom continues to grow. The current study included 100 students who registered for a 200 level child development class at a private university in Northern Virginia. Students were from 4 different sections taught by the same professor in different semesters. Two of the sections used a textbook. The…
Descriptors: Computer Simulation, Teaching Methods, Educational Technology, Child Development
Peterson, Christina Hamme – College Teaching, 2012
Group-based learning is common practice in university classrooms. Despite the frequent student complaint of social loafing from teammates, methods for teaching students how to address teamwork issues are rarely incorporated into group assignments. Students are instructed on their final product, rather than their group process. In this article, an…
Descriptors: Emotional Intelligence, Summative Evaluation, Group Dynamics, Teaching Methods
Walter, Mark I.; Walter, Jamie L. – College Teaching, 2010
Courses in a wide variety of disciplines emphasize that what we think important, and are therefore likely to remember, is not the result of the objective situation but rather the result of our individual biases and interpretations. This article presents a classroom exercise that aids students in grasping the interpretive nature of historical…
Descriptors: Control Groups, Human Services, Questionnaires, Psychology
McCrickerd, Jennifer – College Teaching, 2012
Many believe college instructors resist new teaching practices. In this article, the author develops a hypothesis to understand resistant faculty members, focusing on their likely educational experiences and on insights from psychology. Using Dweck's conception of self-theories and Fischer's conception of dynamic skill-theory, she defends the…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Teaching Methods, Resistance to Change, Educational Experience
Kucsera, John V.; Zimmaro, Dawn M. – College Teaching, 2010
The present study investigated differences in the effectiveness of instructors from a variety of departments who taught the same course in both intensive and traditional formats within the same year, while controlling for many confounding variables. Results indicated that intensive courses did not significantly differ from traditional courses in…
Descriptors: Class Size, Student Evaluation, Student Evaluation of Teacher Performance, Instructional Effectiveness
Cisero, Cheryl A. – College Teaching, 2006
This study investigated whether a reflective journal writing assignment would improve students' course performance. A total of 166 students from undergraduate sections of a course taught by the same instructor over three semesters completed the assignment as part of their requirements. Students (N = 317) from five previous semesters of the same…
Descriptors: Journal Writing, Writing Assignments, Undergraduate Students, Comparative Analysis

Borresen, C. Robert – College Teaching, 1990
The use of cooperative education as a technique for increasing both test performance and interest in a course of introductory statistics was studied. The hypothesis was that students in voluntary groups would perform better than students in assigned groups and that group learning would be more effective than individual learning. (MLW)
Descriptors: College Instruction, Comparative Analysis, Cooperative Education, Higher Education

Michalak, Stanley J., Jr. – College Teaching, 1989
To gather evidence in support of the relationship between writing and learning, a controlled experiment in a course in foreign policy analysis was introduced. The students who wrote more did not receive higher grades than those who had the traditional lecture format. (MLW)
Descriptors: College Instruction, Comparative Analysis, Foreign Policy, Higher Education