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Showing 1 to 15 of 28 results Save | Export
Gunder, Angela; Vignare, Karen; Adams, Susan; McGuire, Abby; Rafferty, Jennifer Paloma – Online Learning Consortium, 2021
High-quality digital learning experiences are built on the foundational principles of providing equitable, inclusive, accessible learning environments for all students. In addition, high-quality digital learning experiences are well-organized and thoughtfully designed. These experiences rely on instructional design principles and strategies to…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Learning Experience, College Instruction, Minority Group Students
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Cohen, Alexander – Journal on Excellence in College Teaching, 2016
This case study explores a novel form of classroom simulation that differs from published examples in two important respects. First, it is ongoing. While most simulations represent a single learning episode embedded within a course, the ongoing simulation is a continuous set of interrelated events and decisions that accompany learning throughout…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Case Studies, Simulation, Educational Strategies
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Teodorescu, Raluca E.; Bennhold, Cornelius; Feldman, Gerald; Medsker, Larry – European Journal of Physics Education, 2014
We present the most recent steps undertaken to reform the introductory algebra-based course at The George Washington University. The reform sought to help students improve their problem-solving performance. Our pedagogy relies on didactic constructs such as the" GW-ACCESS problem-solving protocol," "instructional sequences" and…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Science Course Improvement Projects, Science Curriculum, Curriculum Development
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Hai-Jew, Shalin – EDUCAUSE Quarterly, 2010
A well-designed curriculum for online learning nurtures both student learning and student retention. While ideally value will be designed into an online curriculum from the start, the reality is that, across the spectrum of e-learning, there is a wide range of quality. Consequently, virtually every online course can benefit from periodic…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Instructional Design, Online Courses, Curriculum Development
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Mitchell, Erik – Education for Information, 2013
This study uses formal and informal student feedback as a source for understanding the impact of experimental course elements. Responses were used to develop a codebook, which was then applied to the entire dataset. The results inform our understanding of student's conceptions of professional identity, learning styles and curriculum design.…
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Feedback (Response), Student Reaction, Professional Identity
Christie, Christie A. Linskens – Multicultural Education, 2009
Most of the literature on multicultural education deals with students in grade and high school, or at the college or university level. The literature is sparse as to how one could implement multicultural education at the professional level, and most of the articles that address "multicultural education" and "law school" merely analyze the "Bakke"…
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Multicultural Education, Law Schools, Course Organization
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Allen, Deborah; Tanner, Kimberly – CBE - Life Sciences Education, 2007
This article discusses a systematic approach to designing significant learning experiences, often referred to as the "backward design process," which has been popularized by Wiggins and McTighe (1998) and is included as a central feature of L. Dee Fink's model for integrated course design (Fink, 2003). The process is referred to as backward…
Descriptors: Units of Study, Instructional Design, Integrated Curriculum, Science Curriculum
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Hardre, Patricia – AACE Journal, 2004
Effective systematic design of instruction for teaching technology can be achieved by starting with end goals and working backward to building assessments, content, and context. This is so that instruction functions as a bridge from what learners know and can do, to what they need to know and do, to achieve the goals of instruction. This approach…
Descriptors: Instructional Design, Technology Education, Technological Literacy, Teaching Methods
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Jinks, Jerry L. – Journal of Environmental Education, 1975
Presented is an environmental education model based on an interdisciplinary curricular structure. The model consists of three two-dimensional matrices organizing objectives, strategies, and content. Each matrix lists environmental concepts along one axis and the disciplines along the other. One interpretation of the model is presented as a…
Descriptors: Course Content, Course Organization, Curriculum Design, Curriculum Development
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Knickerbocker, Joan L. – Journal of Reading, 1988
Presents a five-phase model for college reading improvement courses using literature to provide variety and motivation and to aid in developing a vehicle for developing analytic skills. (NH)
Descriptors: Course Organization, Critical Thinking, Curriculum Design, Educational Strategies
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Rouyer, Alwyn R. – College Teaching, 1995
A University of Idaho introductory course in political science describes basic concepts, institutions, and processes of politics and relate their importance to students' daily lives. The course is comparative in organization and structured to promote critical and analytical thinking about politics. (MSE)
Descriptors: Assignments, College Instruction, Comparative Analysis, Course Content
Lovell-Troy, Larry; Eickmann, Paul – 1992
This is a workbook that assists college faculty to design their own courses. The process is organized in a series of stages each of which is given a chapter: gathering, planning, implementing, teaching and evaluating. The first chapter on gathering describes the process for collecting as much information about the course as possible by describing…
Descriptors: College Instruction, Course Content, Course Descriptions, Course Evaluation
Nakamura, Yoshihiro – 1985
Many teachers feel that the primary goal of language education is the development of communicative rather than linguistic competence. This shift in focus has affected syllabus design. However, no single syllabus appears satisfactory by itself. The grammatical syllabus is effective to instill in learners automatic production of accurate structural…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Communicative Competence (Languages), Course Content, Course Objectives
Marlier, John – 1987
A college course in Organizational Communication typically involves the study of how people act within organizations, and why. Instructors should design a course which provides a realistically complex and extensive experiential simulation of organizational social dynamics over time, while still providing adequate theoretical input to facilitate a…
Descriptors: Class Organization, Classroom Environment, Course Organization, Curriculum Design
Marani, John S. – 1998
This discussion of second language instruction through subject-area content reviews trends and literature in the field. Content-based language instruction is defined and distinguished from other forms of language instruction. Three major types of college-level content-based language instruction are described: sheltered instruction, taught by a…
Descriptors: College Instruction, Course Content, Course Organization, Curriculum Design
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