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Medaille, Ann; Usinger, Janet – College Teaching, 2019
Quiet students are sometimes misunderstood in the college classroom. Students may be quiet for reasons related to personality traits, learned behaviors, or situational factors, but regardless, their silences may be misinterpreted by their instructors as a lack of engagement in their courses. In fact, quiet students are often very engaged in the…
Descriptors: College Students, Student Characteristics, Student Participation, Student Behavior
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Yazedjian, Ani; Kolkhorst, Brittany Boyle – College Teaching, 2007
This study examines student perceptions regarding the effectiveness of small-group work in a large lecture class. The article considers and illustrates from students' perspectives the ways in which small-group activities could enhance comprehension of course material, reduce anonymity associated with large lecture classes, and promote student…
Descriptors: Small Group Instruction, Group Activities, Lecture Method, Cooperative Learning
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Pebworth, Michael; Cooper, Georgeanne – College Teaching, 1997
A brainstorming variation used with discussion sections of a large class has students write ideas on Post-It notes, which can then be prioritized, categorized, sequenced, and grouped as needed, easily and quickly. The technique is useful for building thesis-writing skills, stimulating creation of a visual body of evidence, and encouraging…
Descriptors: Brainstorming, Classroom Techniques, College Instruction, Discussion (Teaching Technique)
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Glidden, Jock; Kurfiss, Joanne Gainen – College Teaching, 1990
In a method called "cooperative controversy," students team up to study controversial subjects, then synthesize their findings. In a philosophy course, small-groups work on a specific philosophical problem. Group work was as effective as traditional lecture in three cases and more effective in two cases. (MLW)
Descriptors: College Instruction, Cooperative Learning, Group Discussion, Higher Education
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Borresen, C. Robert – College Teaching, 1990
The use of cooperative education as a technique for increasing both test performance and interest in a course of introductory statistics was studied. The hypothesis was that students in voluntary groups would perform better than students in assigned groups and that group learning would be more effective than individual learning. (MLW)
Descriptors: College Instruction, Comparative Analysis, Cooperative Education, Higher Education
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Brookfield, Stephen D.; Preskill, Stephen – College Teaching, 1999
Suggests five activities for the college classroom to stimulate discussion when students report results of small- group discussions to the class as a whole. The activities "newsprint dialogue," rotating small-group stations, "snowballing,""cocktail party," and "jigsaw" stress maximum student participation, interaction, and intellectual engagement.…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, College Instruction, Group Discussion, Higher Education
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Gilstrap, Robert L. – College Teaching, 1986
Teachers Teaching Writing, a new series of videotapes, that presents outstanding teachers in their own classrooms is described. The complete writing process is traced from beginning to end in such a way as to make sense to the viewer and be true to the principles of effective composition instruction. (MLW)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Inservice Teacher Education, Master Teachers, Small Group Instruction
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Windschitl, Mark – College Teaching, 1999
Describes and evaluates a technique used in two science lecture courses (biochemistry and introductory meteorology), in which lectures were interspersed with frequent, brief discussions within spontaneously formed small groups. Some differences were found in the ways the two professors managed the technique, but both felt in-class participation…
Descriptors: Biochemistry, Classroom Techniques, College Instruction, Comparative Analysis
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Metheny, Dixie; Metheny, William – College Teaching, 1997
A cooperative learning approach in business administration courses is described, including projects and activities for three course types: management science; operations management; and mathematics education. Adaptation of the activities for specific classes is discussed, and student response to the method in one institution is examined. The…
Descriptors: Business Administration Education, Class Activities, Classroom Techniques, College Instruction
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Conrad, Janice Marchut; Conrad, Peter L. – College Teaching, 1993
Successful small group science teaching techniques at the State University of New York (Plattsburgh) are described, including use of small groups for problem-solving, discussion, and research projects. Majors and nonmajors appeared to profit from this approach, and further use of small groups with diverse populations and large classes is planned.…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, College Instruction, Elective Courses, Grouping (Instructional Purposes)
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Sheridan, Jean; And Others – College Teaching, 1989
In order to encourage instructors interested in collaborative classroom approaches, the College of Continuing Education at the University of Rhode Island sponsored a series of workshops and informal discussions. A telephone survey of faculty was undertaken to learn the ways they were using collaborative approaches in their courses. (MLW)
Descriptors: Adult Students, College Faculty, College Instruction, Continuing Education
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Stearns, Susan A. – College Teaching, 1994
A four-step approach to teaching complex concepts at the college level involves a sequence of lecture, an individual assignment, small group discussion, and larger group discussion instruction. The last three steps focus on case study applications. The method is adaptable to different teaching situations and promotes expansion of student…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Classroom Techniques, College Instruction, Concept Formation
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Felder, Richard M.; Brent, Rebecca – College Teaching, 1996
Common faculty concerns about implementing student-centered learning are discussed, and useful techniques for addressing them are offered. Issues include budgeting in-class activity time, losing control of the class, uncompleted assignments, student understanding of open-ended problems, student dislike or abuse of group work, and helping at-risk…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Classroom Techniques, College Faculty, College Instruction
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Geske, Joel – College Teaching, 1992
Techniques developed to improve student participation and student evaluation in a large-group college course in advertising include role playing in talk-show-style discussions of controversial issues, breaks in lectures to play a trivia game, a three-minute writing assignment, teacher movement among students, and changes in testing policies and…
Descriptors: Advertising, Business Administration Education, Class Size, Classroom Communication