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Violanti, Michelle T. – Communication Teacher, 2021
When we spend the first class period focusing on the syllabus and letting students leave early, we miss an opportunity to expose them to the course content. What happens to those who drop that day? By spending the first day illustrating expectancy violations theory, both instructors and students can explicate anticipated behaviors and use them to…
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Course Content, Expectation, Classroom Communication
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Singh, Jasvir Kaur Nachatar – Asia Pacific Education Review, 2021
In previous studies, scholars have noted that challenges experienced by international students have an impact on their academic success. However, limited research has been conducted on how international students overcome the challenges they face in non-Western countries, such as Malaysia. This paper aims to fills this gap by investigating…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Resilience (Psychology), Foreign Students, Graduate Students
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Li, Shuzhan; Luo, Wenjing – CATESOL Journal, 2017
Translanguaging is a rapidly developing concept in bilingual education. Working from the theoretical background of dynamic bilingualism, a translanguaging lens posits that bilingual learners draw on a holistic linguistic repertoire to make sense of the world and to communicate effectively with texts. What is relatively underdeveloped is the…
Descriptors: High School Students, Bilingual Students, Bilingualism, Bilingual Education
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Marcum, Tanya M.; Perry, Sandra J. – Journal of Legal Studies Education, 2015
In this article, the authors describe how they tried a new approach to the traditional undergraduate law course that can change the daily classroom experience into one that both students and professor anticipate and enjoy and can move the students from passive to active learning: flipping the class for the Legal Environment of Business course. The…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Law Related Education, Undergraduate Students, Teaching Methods
Mart, Cagri Tugrul – Online Submission, 2011
Motivation, one of the leading problems in education, is an ongoing issue for teachers. Motivation is important because it highly contributes to achievement. Teachers have to be certain that their students are being motivated in order to develop a positive outcome. This article suggests some strategies to sustain students' classroom motivation.
Descriptors: Student Motivation, Classroom Techniques, Classroom Environment, Teacher Role
Cuby Richardson, Crystal – ProQuest LLC, 2013
The purpose of this case study was to investigate the empowering instructional practices of three technology-using teachers in an elementary school populated by low-income African American students. The participants, from Ladson ES, had been teaching a variety of grade levels and had between six and ten years of experience. Over the course of six…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Educational Technology, Technology Uses in Education, Elementary School Teachers
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Whitin, Phyllis – Language Arts, 2007
This study describes one kindergarten classroom in which informational books and other nonfiction resources were used in the context of a long-term scientific study. Children became proficient in locating information and interpreting content-specific textual features in the process of making sense of their scientific observations and sharing them…
Descriptors: Kindergarten, Emergent Literacy, Reading Instruction, Inquiry
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Spencer, Brenda H.; Angus, Kathryn Bartle – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 1998
Describes one approach (group presentations) that has been particularly successful in developing both the skills and the disposition toward critical reading. Describes creating the classroom environment, as well as three presentations (one small-group and two large-group) in which students participate over the course of the semester that are…
Descriptors: Assignments, Class Activities, Classroom Environment, Cooperative Learning
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Sanders, Robert – CALICO Journal, 2006
Language production of Spanish students using synchronous CMC (chat) during class time was compared with that of students meeting outside of class. The study included about 100 participants enrolled in 10 sections of a first-quarter Spanish course at a US university. Students in the control group spent 30 minutes of their weekly class time in…
Descriptors: Experimental Groups, Control Groups, Computer Mediated Communication, Synchronous Communication
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Lancy, David F.; And Others – College Teaching, 1994
A large introductory anthropology course at Utah State University was organized to promote collaboration among and between students and faculty. Students were divided into and worked in "clans" for the entire term. A study of the course suggests that learning and a sense of community resulted directly from this organization. (MSE)
Descriptors: Anthropology, Assignments, Classroom Environment, College Faculty
McCoy, Leah P., Ed. – 1998
This collection of papers includes: "Teaching Approaches in Social Studies" (Lisa N. Andries); "Teacher Assigned and Student Generated Writing Topics" (Robert L. Barr, Jr.); "Environmental Knowledge and Concern among High School Students" (Kristin Redington Bennett); "The Use of Primary Sources in the Social…
Descriptors: Ability Grouping, Adolescent Literature, Biology, Cheating