NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Showing all 5 results Save | Export
Handleman, Chester – Community College Social Science Quarterly, 1976
Reports on a study which shows that, at the community college level, the lecture method is still the most valuable single teaching technique. (DC)
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Conventional Instruction, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Lecture Method
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Handleman, Chester – Educational Horizons, 1979
The author contends that limiting instructional innovation and upgrading academic standards will benefit both high-risk and traditional community college students. He presents results from instructor surveys and studies favoring the more traditional teaching, grading, and testing methods and includes suggestions for improving study skills and…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Conventional Instruction, High Risk Students, Instructional Improvement
Handleman, Chester – 1977
Schools and educators are being called to task so that students will be able to achieve academically and gain basic skills. While few people argue with the need for gradual, reasonable, and proven changes in curricula, the massive infusion of innovative curricula and teaching methods often intended to maximize affective learning may have had a…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Standards, Basic Skills, Cognitive Development
Handleman, Chester – 1975
The need for two-year colleges to accommodate heterogeneous student bodies, including many underprepared and disadvantaged students, has resulted in the implementation of innovative teaching-learning approaches. In order to ascertain faculty attitudes toward innovative curriculum and instruction, 74 social science and English/foreign language…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Standards, Administrative Policy, Basic Skills
Handleman, Chester – 1977
Reports from the popular media indicate that the public is demanding a return to the teaching of basic skills, instead of supporting educational innovations which emphasize affective rather than cognitive objectives. Concerned with declining academic achievement at all levels of education and with the inadequate job skills of high school…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Failure, Academic Standards, Admission Criteria