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Pryjmachuk, Steven; Gill, Anita; Wood, Patricia; Olleveant, Nicola; Keeley, Philip – Active Learning in Higher Education, 2012
This article describes the evaluation of an online study skills course unit designed, using evidence-based principles, to support undergraduate students. A mixed-methods approach was employed to establish the extent to which the unit was (a) fit for purpose and (b) effective. Data were obtained from an online survey (n = 63) conducted on entry to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Feedback (Response), Undergraduate Students, Study Skills
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Isaacs, Geoff – Medical Teacher, 1989
Literature on the efficiency of student note taking from lectures and the extent to which students learn as a direct or indirect result of taking notes is reviewed. Attention is also given to the relevance of research in this area to modern lecturing practice and to the problems of such research. (Author/MSE)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Educational Research, Higher Education, Instructional Effectiveness
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Evans, Robert C.; Omaha Boy, Nancy H. – Journal on Excellence in College Teaching, 1996
Reports on a two-year project in a biology course for nonmajors in which lectures were replaced with guided learning activities and weekly exams designed to help students gain the confidence to be independent learners, especially in science, assume responsibility for their own learning, improve study skills, and make more effective use of class…
Descriptors: Biology, Higher Education, Independent Study, Instructional Effectiveness
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Kiewra, Kenneth A.; And Others – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1988
Forty-four undergraduates received different types of notes for review of a lecture (complete text, linear outline, or matrix), or received no notes. Any form of notes increased performance over no notes, with matrix and outline notes producing higher recall and matrix notes producing greatest transfer. (SLD)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Higher Education, Instructional Effectiveness, Lecture Method
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McAdams, Charles R. III; Foster, Victoria A. – Journal of the Freshman Year Experience & Students in Transition, 1998
High-risk college freshmen (n=72), most African-Americans, who participated in a deliberate psychological education-based orientation course that addressed minority student needs and incorporated principles of student development, achieved significant increases in cognitive development, study skills, and course satisfaction. However, achievements…
Descriptors: Black Students, Cognitive Development, College Freshmen, College Instruction