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Peer reviewedMcCartan, Anne-Marie – Inquiry, 1999
Explores which faculty in the Virginia Community College System faculty are using technology for instruction, and how and why this technology is being used, and discusses the faculty work issues that are related to the use of technology, including teaching, training, time, technical support, and terms (and conditions of employment). (VWC)
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Computer Uses in Education, Educational Technology, Faculty Development
Peer reviewedNaquin, Debbie – Inquiry, 2000
Examines key factors influencing how faculty have integrated technology into classrooms at the Loudoun campus of Northern Virginia Community College. Reveals potential barriers impeding this effort. Finds significant differences between the perceptions of full- and part-time faculty in terms of developing a comfort level with technology and having…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Computer Attitudes, Computer Uses in Education, Educational Technology
Peer reviewedSmith, Elizabeth A. – Inquiry, 2000
Asserts that with the growth of the Internet, e-mail, synchronous chat, and videoconferencing, students in rural (and urban) areas have virtually endless access to culture and language from their school or home. Describes the utilization of technology as a means of cultural exchange between Southwest Virginia Community College and the University…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Computer Mediated Communication, Computer Uses in Education, Educational Technology
Brotton, Joyce D. – Inquiry, 2005
Hybrid courses offer students a chance to know each other in both structured and unstructured situations, which is often difficult in a totally online distance course. The hybrid method also allows for elasticity in scheduling that is not possible in a strictly on-campus course. The on-campus sessions and face-to-face meeting features of hybrid…
Descriptors: Distance Education, Blended Learning, Computer Uses in Education, College Faculty
Carwile, Julie – Inquiry, 2007
A learning model describes how learning occurs, and two major classifications of models are objectivism and constructivism. A. D. Carswell (2001) notes that "within an objectivist schema, the instructor identifies the course objectives required of students and then systematically arranges the content to reach those goals." Constructivism, on the…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Online Courses, Teaching Methods, Educational Technology
Peer reviewedHibbison, Eric – Inquiry, 1997
Discusses the creation of multimedia lessons on computer for three poetry units, and offers suggestions for developing such lessons. Describes purposes, methods, and conclusions from two years of working with an authoring software called Toolbook, and an ancillary software for doing multimedia lessons more economically than in the multimedia…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Computer Uses in Education, Courseware, Educational Innovation
Peer reviewedPereira-Ford, Clara V. – Inquiry, 1998
Describes one professor's experience in researching the use of multimedia tools for teaching principles of economics. Provides a list of resources consulted, including universities and colleges, books, software, laserdiscs and VHS tapes, Web sites, and journal sources. Found the students generally to be receptive to the introduction of new tools…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Community Colleges, Computer Uses in Education, Economics Education
Smith, Nora N. – Inquiry, 2003
In this age of rapid technological and economic change, life-long learning is becoming a way of life. The average age of students will become greater. Participation in learning activities by learners 18 and over increased from 38 percent in 1991 to 50 percent in 1999 (U.S. Department of Education, NCES, 1999). As the population seeks more…
Descriptors: Adult Educators, Lifelong Learning, Nontraditional Students, Distance Education


