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Peer reviewedKaplan, Jeffrey S. – English Journal, 1994
Details the concept of "breaking the rules" in the context of a high school English classroom. Describes how one English teacher abandoned regular reading materials to concentrate on Judy Blume's novel, "Forever." Considers the pros and cons of using this controversial text in high schools. (HB)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Course Content, English Curriculum, English Instruction
Peer reviewedPaddon, Anna R. – Journalism Educator, 1991
Explains that published parodies frequently give rise to copyright violation litigation. Reviews leading court decisions on the subject. Offers guidelines for using parody in entertainment, social commentary, or advertising. Describes a study unit on parody for a college magazine journalism class. (SG)
Descriptors: Copyrights, Course Content, Court Litigation, Freedom of Speech
Peer reviewedGatenby, Bev; McLaren, Margaret C. – Bulletin of the Association for Business Communication, 1993
Extends an earlier survey to members of the Association for Business Communication who do not live in the United States. Finds the percentage of respondents teaching international topics is approximately the same within and beyond the United States, but pedagogy and topics differ. (RS)
Descriptors: Business Communication, Communication Research, Course Content, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedKasper, Loretta Frances – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1994
Explores the relationship between content-based reading instruction and teaching English as a Second Language. Argues that using content-based materials in developmental ESL courses prepares students for other academic subjects. Provides steps for designing such a content-based course. (HB)
Descriptors: Content Area Reading, Course Content, English (Second Language), English Instruction
Peer reviewedSegall, Avner – Social Education, 2004
One rarely engages in a conversation about education without the terms "content" and "pedagogy" finding their way into it. Indeed, the two are inherent to almost everything done in education. Are content and pedagogy separate and separable entities or are they always already implicated in each other? Where does one begin and the other end? Who is…
Descriptors: Course Content, Teaching Methods, Social Studies, Textbooks
Peer reviewedHess, Diana E. – Social Education, 2005
Many teachers advocate teaching students to deliberate on controversial political issues as a powerful way of preparing them for political participation. Support for this approach recently came from a Civic Mission of the Schools report, which endorsed including political controversies in the curriculum. Specifically, it recommends that schools:…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Social Environment, Political Issues, Current Events
Waters, Lea; Johnston, Carol – Higher Education Research and Development, 2004
Recent calls have been made for a fundamental reorientation in higher education from a curriculum that simply transmits information (learner as receiver) to one that encourages students actively to construct their own knowledge and practice using new skills and concepts (learner as constructor). In response, the Case Analysis in Organisational…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Problem Based Learning, Course Content, Web Based Instruction
Oulton, Christopher; Day, Vanessa; Dillon, Justin; Grace, Marcus – Oxford Review of Education, 2004
Current conceptions of citizenship favour public involvement in dialogue on controversial issues such as GM food. 'Students with higher levels of civic knowledge are more likely to expect to participate in political and civic activities as adults' (Kerr et al., 2003, p. 4). Young people need to be aware of the nature of controversy and be able to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teacher Attitudes, Citizenship Education, Sustainable Development
Cannon, Patrick – College Teaching, 2006
Group discussion allows students to learn how to "talk to someone." Through group discussion, students can acquire or refine a broad range of attributes, from basic oratory skills to a more sophisticated development of communicative competence to embracing and valuing dialogic interchange and reflexivity. In this article, the author explains how…
Descriptors: Group Discussion, International Relations, Course Content, Teaching Methods
Welleford, E. Ayn; Parham, Iris A.; Coogle, Constance L.; Netting, F. Ellen – Educational Gerontology, 2004
In this paper, the design and development of a long-distance course on geriatric interdisciplinary teaming are presented. The focus is on the conceptualization of the course, followed by details surrounding developing a design team; designing curricular content; deciding delivery methods; scripting; overseeing and editing videos; and determining…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Geriatrics, Grading, Interdisciplinary Approach
Peer reviewedDavis, Keith M.; Atkins, Sally S. – Journal of Humanistic Counseling, Education and Development, 2004
The authors describe the creation and implementation of a graduate-level counseling course in ecotherapy. Specifically, the rationale for the course, the selection of students, and course content and activities are outlined. In the spring of 2001, the authors developed and offered a team-taught special topics course in ecotherapy in the…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Course Content, Counselor Training, Counselors
Bogenschneider, Karen – Family Relations, 2006
As newcomers on college campuses, family policy courses have the potential to benefit policymaking, fill a void in undergraduate and graduate education, strengthen families, and prepare students for lifelong political engagement during a pivotal period in their development. Yet, family policy has proven a challenging course to teach. Family policy…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Study, Graduate Study, Family Life Education, Family (Sociological Unit)
Veri, Maria J.; Barton, Kenny; Burgee, David; Davis, James A., Jr.; Eaton, Pamela; Frazier, Cathy; Gray, Stevie; Halsey, Christine; Thurman, Richard – Quest, 2006
This article illustrates the pedagogical value of employing student narrative writing assignments in the graduate sport management classroom and advocates for cultural studies and critical pedagogy approaches to teaching sport management. The article considers students' autobiographical narratives within a theoretical framework of cultural…
Descriptors: Writing Assignments, Critical Theory, Global Approach, Course Content
Comer, Debra R.; Holbrook, Robert L., Jr. – Journal of Management Education, 2005
The authors recommend that management educators add the works of Dr. Seuss to their repertoire of teaching tools. After describing why instructors should use Dr. Seuss's stories to foster understanding of concepts in management and organizational behavior, the authors describe a Seuss-based project at two levels that (a) helps students identify…
Descriptors: Service Learning, Course Content, Childrens Literature, Management Development
Walker, Richard – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2006
Teaching economic geography is not a matter of replicating textbook models. It requires engagement with the ever-changing global economy, which often puts the lie to existing theory. It demands that the teacher break down the economy into its major parts, in a way that students can grasp. This does not mean abandoning theory; on the contrary, it…
Descriptors: Human Geography, Geography Instruction, Course Content, Undergraduate Study

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