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Juuso Henrik Nieminen; Eeva Haataja; Peter J. Cobb – Teaching in Higher Education, 2025
This study examines how authentic assessment could nurture students' epistemic agency: their sense of agency in using, evaluating and producing knowledge. Authentic assessment commonly emphasises 'realism' and 'employability skills'. As important as these ideas are, this approach to authentic assessment neglects the key academic value of…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Performance Based Assessment, Epistemology, Realism
Lomer, Sylvie; Palmer, Elizabeth – Teaching in Higher Education, 2023
This paper analyses student perceptions of Active Blended Learning (ABL) during the transition to an institutional pedagogy at the University of Northampton. In focus groups with 227 student participants across all four faculties, we explored factors mediating student engagement with ABL. Students expressed a preference for face to face teaching…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Active Learning, Blended Learning, Foreign Countries
Lee, Wincy Wing Sze; Yang, Min – Teaching in Higher Education, 2023
This paper examines undergraduate students' perceptions of when and how active learning and engagement were supported by group-based collaborative learning. Collaborative learning is a prevalent constructivist approach that has been promoted for its capability of assisting students' shared knowledge construction. Existing research has,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Student Attitudes, Active Learning
Nind, Melanie; Holmes, Michelle; Insenga, Michela; Lewthwaite, Sarah; Sutton, Cordelia – Teaching in Higher Education, 2020
This paper addresses the perspectives of students of social science research methods from a UK study of their holistic experience of learning during two years of their postgraduate research training/ early careers as researchers. Unusually the ten participants span diverse institutions and disciplines and three became co-authors. The study used a…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Doctoral Students, Researchers, Research Methodology
Steen-Utheim, Anna Therese; Foldnes, Njål – Teaching in Higher Education, 2018
The flipped classroom is gaining acceptance in higher education as an alternative to more traditional methods of teaching. In the current study, twelve students in a Norwegian higher education institution were in-depth interviewed about their learning experiences in a two-semester long mathematics course. The first semester was taught using…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Qualitative Research, Learner Engagement, Blended Learning
Macfarlane, Bruce – Teaching in Higher Education, 2016
Active learning and group-based processes in higher education are central to student engagement strategies. Forms of assessment regarded as evidencing student engagement, including attendance, class participation grading and group-based projects, have become commonplace in the university curriculum on an international basis. Whilst the literature…
Descriptors: Learner Engagement, Student Rights, Academic Achievement, Student Attitudes
Hauke, Elizabeth – Teaching in Higher Education, 2019
This article argues that knowledge is not a passive product of learning that can be possessed, but rather that it represents an active engagement with ideas, arguments and the world in which they reside. This engagement requires a state of 'knowing' -- a complex, integrative, reciprocal process that unites the knower with the to-be-known.…
Descriptors: Higher Education, STEM Education, Critical Thinking, Undergraduate Students
Lomer, Sylvie; Anthony-Okeke, Loretta – Teaching in Higher Education, 2019
In the context of increasing international mobility in higher education, educators experience multiple challenges in the classroom. In the UK, policy discourses often frame international students as desirable resources. However, international students are frequently problematised as in academic deficit. Cultural reasons are posited for different…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Blended Learning, Student Mobility, Barriers
Almarghani, Eman M.; Mijatovic, Ivana – Teaching in Higher Education, 2017
The passive role of students in their learning and education and the absence of student engagement in higher education institutions (HEIs) are quite common in many higher education institutions in developing countries. The main objective of the research presented in this paper is to explore the influential factors on student engagement in HEIs in…
Descriptors: Learner Engagement, Undergraduate Students, Teaching Methods, Foreign Countries
Altay, Burçak – Teaching in Higher Education, 2014
This article initially demonstrates the parallels between the learner-centered approach in education and the user-centered approach in design disciplines. Afterward, a course on human factors that applies learner-centered methods to teach user-centered design is introduced. The focus is on three tasks to identify the application of theoretical and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Disabilities, Accessibility (for Disabled)
Stevens, Rachel – Teaching in Higher Education, 2015
Role-play is viewed by scholars as an effective active learning strategy: it encourages participation among passive learners, adds dynamism to the classroom and promotes the retention of material. But what do students think of role-play? This study surveyed 144 students after a role-play activity in a history course and asked them to identify what…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Role Playing, Learner Engagement, Active Learning
Ni Raghallaigh, M.; Cunniffe, R. – Teaching in Higher Education, 2013
This article explores the experiences of students who participated in a series of seminars that employed active learning methodologies. The study on which the article is based involved two parts. First, students completed a questionnaire after each seminar, resulting in 468 questionnaires. Second, nine students participated in a focus group where…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Learner Engagement, Safety, Social Work
Lewis, John L. – Teaching in Higher Education, 2011
Designing for the needs of people with impairments has rarely been a significant feature of urban planning theory and education. Given the role of urban planners as shapers of the built environment and public policy, the prevalence of negative and misinformed attitudes among planners toward impaired populations has been highlighted as requiring…
Descriptors: Urban Planning, Student Attitudes, Active Learning, Public Policy
Burke, Lisa A.; Ray, Ruth – Teaching in Higher Education, 2008
Evidence suggests that college students' concentration levels are limited and hard to maintain. Even though relevant in higher education, scant empirical research exists on interventions to "re-set" their concentration during a college lecture. Using a within-subjects design, four active learning interventions are administered across two…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Active Learning, Intervention, Student Attitudes
Smith, Holly – Teaching in Higher Education, 2008
The author, a programme leader for a Post Graduate Certificate in Learning and Teaching in Higher Education (PGCLTHE), hears a complaint from her colleagues that undergraduate students require "spoon-feeding". Accepting structuralism's argument that language does things, not just describe them, the author examines "spoon-feeding" in more depth.…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Independent Study, Figurative Language, Teaching Experience
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