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Showing 1 to 15 of 32 results Save | Export
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Rodríguez-Hoyos, Carlos; Fueyo Gutiérrez, Aquilina – Digital Education Review, 2018
This article presents the results of research aimed at finding out how training in media education is being developing in Spanish Universities. From a methodological perspective, this work is part of what can be considered a mixed research paradigm. In the first phase, the content of 179 study guides from 83 Spanish universities was analysed using…
Descriptors: Journalism Education, Mixed Methods Research, Thematic Approach, Curriculum Guides
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Watson, Jacqueline – British Journal of Religious Education, 2010
The 2004 "National Framework for Religious Education" (NFRE) innovatively recommended that secular philosophies such as humanism, or secular worldviews, be included in locally agreed syllabuses for religious education (RE) in England. However, the NFRE is a non-statutory document, and Agreed Syllabus Conferences (ASCs) and Standing…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Religious Education, Humanism, Philosophy
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Park, Soonhye; Oliver, J. Steve – Journal of Science Teacher Education, 2009
This study examined how instructional challenges presented by gifted students shaped teachers' instructional strategies. This study is a qualitative research grounded in a social constructivist framework. The participants were three high school science teachers who were teaching identified gifted students in both heterogeneously- and…
Descriptors: Educational Strategies, Academically Gifted, Grouping (Instructional Purposes), Data Analysis
Erbe, W. Arthur – 1970
This study explores the problems of selection, developing, teaching, and evaluating a course that relates music, art, and literature. The specific unit presented deals with relating poetry to music and to painting with Yevgeny Yevtushenko as the central figure. The seven parts of the unit draw on Yevtushenko's poetry and life to develop the…
Descriptors: Course Content, Humanities Instruction, Interdisciplinary Approach, Secondary School Curriculum
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Chiappetta, Eugene L.; Fillman, David A. – School Science and Mathematics, 1998
Examines the problems of course content in a biology class at a large metropolitan high school in the Southwest that teaches students the major ideas of biology rather than specific topics, but uses specific topics to develop the major themes and unifying principles. (Author/CCM)
Descriptors: Biology, Course Content, Educational Change, High Schools
Reilly, Kevin – Community College Social Science Quarterly, 1975
An introductory history curriculum is described which is topical and question oriented, designed to encourage students to evaluate sweeping social changes instead of a strict chronology of events. A bibliography of recommended texts is included. (NHM)
Descriptors: Course Content, Course Descriptions, Curriculum Guides, History Instruction
Capey, A. C. – Use of English, 1970
Criticizes a thematic approach to English instruction advocated by J. R. Osgerby Yin English in a College of Education: A New Approach," The Use of English," vol. 21, no. 4 (Summer 1970), pp. 306-16, 321I on the basis that such an approach leads students away from an experience of the literature itself and into the realms of sociology…
Descriptors: College Instruction, Course Content, English Instruction, English Literature
Osgerby, J. R. – Use of English, 1970
Describes a British college of education's thematic approach to English based on a tutorial unit containing 6-8 students. (DD)
Descriptors: College Instruction, Course Content, English Instruction, English Literature
Fuller, James A. – Improving College and University Teaching, 1975
Approaches for making the study of poetry relevant to the interests and needs of college students are suggested with emphasis on discussion of ideas and content as opposed to form and structure. (JT)
Descriptors: College Instruction, College Students, Course Content, English Instruction
Smith, Ron – 1982
There are three general approaches to organizing a basic mythology course: geographical, conceptual/thematic, or a combination of the two. The geographical approach offers a wealth of material organized by focusing on one or several of the world's mythologies and offers the opportunity to find out more about the influences on the development of…
Descriptors: Course Content, Course Objectives, Course Organization, Cultural Awareness
Devine, Mary Elizabeth; Devlin, Francis P. – Freshman English News, 1977
Describes and outlines a teaching technique that can be adopted to a composition course which employs thematic reading. (MB)
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Course Content, English Instruction, Higher Education
Davies, J. K. – Didaskalos, 1975
This paper summarizes the present state of teaching Ancient History in British schools and sees it as fragmented and incomplete. A macrostructure for study of 16 major interpretive themes is suggested, to be supplemented by theme, and area studies and various specialized approaches. (CHK)
Descriptors: Ancient History, Area Studies, Course Content, Curriculum Development
Worby, Diana Z. – 1980
By using a thematic approach and by drawing on other disciplines for breadth, English teachers can "honorably seduce" career-oriented students into a love affair with literature and draw them back into the English curriculum. For example, a teacher's conversation with a student focusing on fathers and sons led the teacher to suggest that the…
Descriptors: Course Content, Course Descriptions, English Curriculum, English Instruction
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Waller, Robert A. – History Teacher, 1978
Focuses on the revisionist approach to teaching United States history at the secondary level and college level. Ten themes are offered as examples around which a meaningful survey course can be constructed. These include economic opportunity, political participation, population mobility, belief in reform, status for women, educational opportunity,…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Course Content, Higher Education, History Instruction
McClaren, Adrian W. – 1987
Students are faced with many subjects related to death in their everyday lives--war, euthanasia, disease, teenage suicide. A unit on death that focuses on literary and artistic conceptions of death, as well as historical trends concerning beliefs about death and burial, can help students express their feelings about death coherently and…
Descriptors: Course Content, Creativity, Death, Drama
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