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Saqr, Mohammed; Jovanovic, Jelena; Viberg, Olga; Gaševic, Dragan – Studies in Higher Education, 2022
Predictors of student academic success do not always replicate well across different learning designs, subject areas, or educational institutions. This suggests that characteristics of a particular discipline and learning design have to be carefully considered when creating predictive models in order to scale up learning analytics. This study…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Learning Analytics, Predictor Variables, Correlation
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Quinlan, Kathleen M. – Studies in Higher Education, 2019
Lecturing is often touted as a means to inspire students' interest, despite evidence that most lectures fail to do so. This study examines triggers of students' situational interest during lectures. Students (N = 706) in 12 different individual one hour first year lectures in a UK university were surveyed at the end of the lecture. They described…
Descriptors: Student Interests, College Students, Lecture Method, Student Attitudes
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Senior, Carl; Howard, Christopher; Reddy, Peter; Clark, Robin; Lim, Ming – Studies in Higher Education, 2012
A student-centred approach to teaching has been conceptualized as a key driver in higher education to facilitate understanding of concepts and improve attainment. The occurrence of student study team behaviours is diagnostic of this approach to teaching. However, the extent to which team behaviours are performed outside the parameters of formal…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Emotional Intelligence, Academic Achievement, Lecture Method
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Fisher, Andrew – Studies in Higher Education, 2010
This article has four aims. The first is to characterize the key features of speech-act theory, and, in particular, to show that there is a genuine distinction between the sound uttered when someone is speaking (locution), the effect the speech has (perlocution) and the very "act" of speaking (the illocution). Secondly, it aims to…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Speech Communication, Student Experience, Foreign Countries
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Harding, C. M.; And Others – Studies in Higher Education, 1981
A study of the effectiveness of tape-slide teaching at the University of Exeter is described. Tape-slides were produced for a pilot comparison with the lecture method in the first year; in the second year, updated versions of the tape-slide sequences were used in a main trial comparison. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: College Students, Comparative Analysis, Foreign Countries, Higher Education
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Startup, Richard – Studies in Higher Education, 1977
This empirical study is an examination of what staff are doing in their classes, the difficulties they encounter, and the way in which they judge their effectiveness. (Author/LBH)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Comparative Analysis, Higher Education, Lecture Method
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Black, P. J. – Studies in Higher Education, 1976
Two relationships must be explored: (1) that between scholarship and teaching and (2) that between research in teaching and the engineering of teaching design. Consideration is given to dialogue in lectures, student reactions to lectures, skill sessions, and tutorials. (LBH)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Educational Objectives, Foreign Countries, Higher Education
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Fanghanel, Joelle – Studies in Higher Education, 2004
In response to policy developments in higher education in the UK, the Institute for Learning and Teaching in Higher Education (ILTHE--now merged in the Higher Education Academy) was established in 1999 to provide a national framework for teaching and learning at tertiary level. This article considers the training environment of novice lecturers…
Descriptors: Higher Education, College Faculty, Teacher Education, Foreign Countries
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Brown, G. A. – Studies in Higher Education, 1982
The development, evaluation and underlying rationale of a two-day course on explaining and lecturing is described. It is argued that since lecturing is the major method of teaching in universities it is important to help lecturers improve their technique and make them aware of their strengths and weaknesses. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Course Evaluation, Faculty Development, Higher Education
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Willcoxson, Lesley – Studies in Higher Education, 1998
A study examined the relationship between the way 15 faculty members like to learn and the way they like to teach, and the reasons for their teaching strategies. It also compared teachers' and their students' perceptions of their teaching. Results suggest little enthusiasm for lecturing as a teaching/learning method, but few attempts by academics…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, College Faculty, Comparative Analysis, Higher Education
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Jackson, M. W.; Prosser, M. T. – Studies in Higher Education, 1989
The results of a three-year project introducing small-group experiential learning techniques into a traditionally structured first-year lecture course are presented. Ways to introduce the techniques into large classes with no increase in resources are discussed. (MSE)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Class Size, College Instruction, Comparative Analysis
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Liow, Susan Rickard; And Others – Studies in Higher Education, 1993
A study investigated perceptions of National University of Singapore faculty (n=18) and students (n=151) in psychology, building, and estate management of the importance of specific educational objectives and the effectiveness of teaching methods in meeting them. Results indicate discrepancies between faculty and student attitudes and some…
Descriptors: Architecture, College Faculty, College Students, Comparative Analysis
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Goldfinch, Judy – Studies in Higher Education, 1996
A study compared the effectiveness of two methods (medium-size class instruction and large lectures with tutorial sessions) for teaching mathematics and statistics to first-year business students. Students and teachers overwhelmingly preferred the medium-size class method, which produced higher exam scores but had no significant effect on…
Descriptors: Business Administration Education, Class Size, Classroom Environment, College Faculty