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Stack, Steven – Social Science Quarterly, 1990
Examining National Center for Health statistics, questions whether fictional television accounts of teenage suicide affect the teenage suicide rate. Assesses four films about teenage suicide, nationally televised in 1984 and 1985. Accounts for holiday and temporal effects, television new stories, and large city influences. Finds that the films did…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Fiction, Films
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Brandhorst, Allan R. – Social Studies, 1992
Addresses the importance of teaching young people about foreign policy issues. Discusses state sovereignty and interpersonal and international conflict. Describes a reflective teaching approach in which a problem is identified, defined, and explored by probing questions. Suggests identifying value assumptions and alternatives, predicting…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Decision Making, Foreign Policy, Secondary Education
Stiehm, Judith – Teaching Political Science, 1976
Discussion of "Sex, Power, and Politics" course at the University of Southern California in which the videotaping of class sessions is used to reduce classroom controversy while studying controversy. (ND)
Descriptors: Conflict, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Higher Education, Instructional Innovation
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Zins, Daniel L. – College English, 1985
Suggests strongly that teachers of English should help students become more skillful at analyzing the messages on war they receive, so they can confront the nuclear predicament and begin developing alternatives. (CRH)
Descriptors: College English, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Disarmament, Educational History
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Darden, Joseph S., Jr. – Journal of School Health, 1981
Beginning in the late 1960s, the sexual revolution resulted in new lifestyles, drug cultures, out-of-wedlock pregnancies, and a higher incidence of venereal disease. Many schools initiated sex education programs aimed at developing an understanding of interpersonal relationships, human development, and responsible personal behavior. (FG)
Descriptors: Adolescents, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Family Life Education, Health Education
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Sears, Alan – History and Social Science Teacher, 1989
Suggests steps for approaching discussion of controversial issues in the classroom, using the scandal of Canadian Olympian sprinter Ben Johnson as an example. Recommends the reflective inquiry approach, which necessitates framing the problem in relationship to student age, and with attention to the information available about the problem. (LS)
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Current Events, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Elementary Secondary Education
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Engle, Shirley H. – Social Studies, 1989
Outlines a method for modifying the current social studies curriculum so it can be taught from an issue-centered approach. States that conventional courses in history and geography would be organized around the study of a select number of important issues and illustrates the way these classes would be taught using this approach. (SLM)
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Critical Thinking, Curriculum Development, Decision Making
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Fredericks, Marcel; Miller, Steven I. – Teaching Sociology, 1993
Argues that the behavioral or "human" sciences are fundamentally different in scope and intent from the natural sciences. Describes the use of controversial topics in undergraduate courses and provides a four-step process. Recommends using Karl Popper's falsification theory to help students think critically about issues. (CFR)
Descriptors: Anthropology, Behavioral Sciences, Cognitive Processes, Controversial Issues (Course Content)
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Evans, Ronald W. – Social Studies Review, 1998
Proposes an alternative way of addressing the California Framework through an issues-centered approach to teaching social studies. Describes issues-centered education as instruction infused with reflection on problematic questions related to social issues. Discusses ways of implementing issues-centered social studies curricula and note resources…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Critical Thinking, Decision Making
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Lamorey, Suzanne; Leigh, James – Remedial and Special Education, 1996
Special education teachers (n=121) in both self-contained and resource programs expressed their opinions about contemporary issues education (such as substance abuse, teenage pregnancy, sexually transmitted disease, suicide, delinquency, and child abuse). Responses are analyzed using a typology. Implications for educating students to reduce their…
Descriptors: At Risk Persons, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Curriculum, Disabilities
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Reis, Pedro; Galvao, Cecilia – International Journal of Science Education, 2004
This article discusses the results of a mainly qualitative study into possible impacts of recent controversial socio-scientific issues on a group of Portuguese secondary school students regarding their conceptions about scientists. The 86 participants: (1) answered a questionnaire with open-ended questions; and (2) wrote a science fiction story…
Descriptors: Scientists, Secondary School Students, Science Fiction, Foreign Countries
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Hanegan, Nikki L.; Price, Laura; Peterson, Jeremy – Science & Education, 2008
This study examines how student practice of scientific argumentation using socioscientific bioethics issues affects both teacher expectations of students' general performance and student confidence in their own work. When teachers use bioethical issues in the classroom students can gain not only biology content knowledge but also important…
Descriptors: Ethics, Student Attitudes, Self Efficacy, Decision Making
Mitchell, Greg – 2000
As the United States enters the 21st century, the rich diversity of its people may be its greatest promise and its greatest challenge. The country still struggles with a legacy of racial discrimination and ethnic disparity, even if their forms are subtler today. This book is designed to promote public deliberation that can help individuals find…
Descriptors: Citizenship Education, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Ethnic Groups, Ethnic Relations
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Gross, Richard E. – Social Studies, 1989
Contends that the problems approach is new to most teachers and is at odds with the dominant curricular trend that includes reliance on textbooks and content-oriented courses. Concludes that there is a formidable set of forces opposing the implementation of such a curriculum. (SLM)
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Critical Thinking, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Elementary Secondary Education
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McBride, Robert, Jr. – Social Education, 1999
Endorses the television series entitled "Culture Shock" that views controversial art as an artifact suggesting that the arts, and controversies surrounding them, can help viewers think critically about the issues of past and present societies. Focuses on "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn," the painting "Olympia,"…
Descriptors: Art, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Critical Thinking, Critical Viewing
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