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Goralnik, Lissy; Marcus, Sonia – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2020
Through literature review, anecdote, and empirical case study, this chapter explores the role of contemplative practice--yoga, meditation, reflection, breathwork--in the sustainability classroom as a way to increase both learner resilience and learner capacity to engage the challenging content of socio-ecological resilience.
Descriptors: Resilience (Psychology), Case Studies, Metacognition, Sustainability
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Hufford, Don – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2014
This chapter is designed to provide a stimulus for reflective thinking. The intent is to encourage teachers to reflect upon--even question--a teaching methodology that recognizes and builds upon the learning potential inherent in a cacophony of voices, paradoxical worldviews, and divergent ways of personal being. A pedagogical possibility is…
Descriptors: Reflective Teaching, Teaching Methods, Classroom Environment, Student Participation
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Poutiatine, Michael I.; Conners, Dennis A. – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2012
In professional practice contexts, the technical questions are rarely the ones that prove most difficult. Rather, the real questions that arise from complex and ambiguous contexts, and that require learners, teachers, and leaders to examine deeply held beliefs about selfhood, integrity, ethics, and justice, often prove to be the most challenging.…
Descriptors: Transformative Learning, Leadership Training, Integrity, Ethics
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Hao, Richie Neil – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2011
Informed by Rosenberg's (2003) concept of nonviolent communication, the author's pedagogical perspective encourages educators to criticize institutional and classroom practices that ideologically place underserved students at disadvantaged positions. At the same time, this perspective urges teachers to be self-reflective of their actions through…
Descriptors: First Generation College Students, Altruism, Teaching Methods, Teacher Role
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Wright, Tarah S. A. – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2009
In this article, the author explores internationalization efforts through the lens of global sustainability and examines the role of universities in educating for sustainable development through their research, their teaching (and pedagogies), and by acting as models in their own physical operations. Rather than suggesting that sustainability…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Sustainable Development, Global Approach, Role of Education
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Fong, Mary – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2009
Spiritualism can exist in a secular educational institution. In this autoethnography, the author shares the spiritual challenge she had with students in her initial years of teaching as an assistant professor. She discusses her spiritual pedagogical approach, which she integrates into her teaching strategies to touch the minds, hearts, and spirits…
Descriptors: Teacher Role, Teaching Methods, Mentors, Teacher Student Relationship
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Gabelnick, Faith; MacGregor, Jean; Matthews, Roberta S.; Smith, Barbara Leigh – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 1990
Examines how the structure of learning communities shapes the teaching/learning task, and describes the kind of pedagogical adjustments that learning communities demand of students and faculty. Notes that the structure creates avenues for intellectual and pedagogical exploration; the attitude of shared inquiry and mutual, responsible community can…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, College Environment, College Faculty, College Instruction
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Walker, Charles J. – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 1991
Classroom assessment techniques were used in a large survey college course in psychology to monitor student performance and collect other forms of student feedback. As a result, student-teacher role relations changed, the teacher adopted the role of learning coach and reduced lecture content, and the classroom environment was enlivened. (MSE)
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Classroom Research, Classroom Techniques, Course Content
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Engstrom, Cathy McHugh – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2008
The pedagogical assumptions and teaching practices of learning community models reflect exemplary conditions for learning, so using these models with unprepared students seems desirable and worthy of investigation. This chapter describes the key role of faculty in creating active, integrative learning experiences for students in basic skills…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Teacher Role, Community Colleges, College Students
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Enerson, Diane M. – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2001
Proposes the metaphor of teaching as mentoring, suggesting that faculty use their understanding of mentoring and its role within the academy as an opportunity for renewal and change, a way to reflect on daily activities in the classroom and in larger institutional contexts. (EV)
Descriptors: College Instruction, Higher Education, Mentors, Teacher Role
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Kenedy, Robert; Monty, Vivienne – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2008
There are multiple stages to developing critical skills when both the librarian and faculty member are partners in the process. One of the first actions is for both the librarian and the faculty member to be in the library class to help students with information literacy. A teaching dynamic becomes evident, and the students understand the…
Descriptors: Computer Uses in Education, Research Skills, Information Literacy, Librarians
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Elton, Lewis – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2006
We now have pedagogical methods that can be successful--that is, effective--with most students at the undergraduate stage; one very promising method is problem-based or inquiry-based learning. (Contains 4 notes.)
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Problem Based Learning, Research and Development, Theory Practice Relationship
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Braxton, John M.; Jones, Willis A.; Hirschy, Amy S.; Hartley, Harold V., III – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2008
Active learning, which entails any class activity that "involves students doing things and thinking about the things that they are doing," stands as an important pedagogical practice. Discussion, the types of questions faculty ask students in class, role playing, cooperative learning, debates, and the types of questions faculty ask on examinations…
Descriptors: Social Integration, Private Colleges, Role Playing, Cooperative Learning
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Gerlach, Jeanne Marcum – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 1994
The nature of collaborative learning is examined, including some discussion of the role of the instructor. A collaborative learning situation in a women's studies course is described as an example of integration of the approach into content area instruction. (MSE)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, College Instruction, Cooperative Learning, Educational Principles
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Muhtaseb, Ahlam – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2007
In this chapter, critical race and expectancy violation theories are used to deconstruct students' resistance to a female faculty member of color, a Muslim Arab American who wears the traditional Islamic cover. The author provides a narrative of her teaching experience and some techniques she has used to face such resistance.
Descriptors: Teaching Experience, Women Faculty, College Faculty, Arabs
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