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Esbensen, Barbara Juster – 1975
The primary purpose of this book is to offer suggestions and writing examples for use in teaching children to write poetry. Each of the 15 chapters deals with a particular subject that could be useful in introducing poetry writing to students. The chapters discuss such topics as developing word consciousness in children, writing cinquains and…
Descriptors: Child Language, Children, Creative Writing, Elementary Education
Freitag, Richard Alan – 1974
The objective of this study was the development of a teaching model based on the concept and use of (non-simulation) games in the mathematics classroom. The game model was defined according to the organization described by Joyce and Weil. Six games were used in the study; each televised game session was preceded by a pre-test and followed by a…
Descriptors: Curriculum, Doctoral Dissertations, Experiential Learning, Games
Bleakley, Lou Ann – 1974
This study is concerned with the concept of rhetorical stance: the interrelationships among speaker, content, and audience in a communication situation. It is hypothesized that when the rhetorical stance model is applied to the secondary English curriculum, the teaching of literature will improve. This hypothesis is confirmed by evidence gained in…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Educational Theories, English Curriculum, English Instruction
Falcione, Raymond L. – 1975
This paper outlines an instructional paradigm which can be utilized in any learning environment and discusses four instructional strategies which can be implemented in the teaching of organizational communication within a given instructional system. The instructional system, as defined in this paper, is a collection of people and things that has…
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Guidelines, Higher Education, Instructional Systems
Cummins, H. W.; Yacuk, Lorne G. – 1971
After four years of using simulation in the study of international relations, the authors have found it to be a potentially powerful research and teaching device. In this report they examine advantages, such as the ability it gives the researcher to manipulate experimental variables, and disadvantages associated specifically with the use of…
Descriptors: International Education, International Relations, Learning Activities, Models
Rippey, Robert – Irish Journal of Education, 1968
Eight classes (140 students) in 10th- and 11th-grade were taught English composition using either an "errorless" or a "dialectical" method, each involving a model paragraph. The progress of the students was examined using the STEP and Composition Rating Scales before and after the instruction. Significant changes in the students' scores occurred…
Descriptors: Behavioral Objectives, English Instruction, Models, Retention (Psychology)
Tallmadge, G. Kasten; And Others – 1968
Two separate subject matter areas, which were felt to represent two distinct types of learning situations, were selected for investigation, namely, a kind of logico-mathematical procedure--the transportation technique, and a visual form discrimination task--aircraft recognition. Two separate courses were developed for each subject matter area. One…
Descriptors: Cost Effectiveness, Course Content, Discrimination Learning, Individual Differences
Sieber, Joan E.; And Others – 1970
This study explores the efficacy of two methods of teaching students, modeling and concept formation, to express warranted uncertainty in classroom discussions and in written work. The subjects were fifth graders from a lower middle class background who were divided into four groups: (1) a control group, (2) a group that observed a model express…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Classroom Techniques, Concept Formation, Concept Teaching
Wurtele, Zivia S. – 1967
The utilization of computer programed mathematical models for educational planning has a brief but rapidly accelerating history. This paper describes and, to some extent, evaluates several of these models. It also discusses some of the theoretical problems associated with their formulation and implementation. Models surveyed are of: (1) the…
Descriptors: Classification, Computer Programs, Cost Effectiveness, Educational Planning
Frayer, Dorothy A. – 1973
Three aspects of concept teaching might be guided by the conceptual learning and development model. First, by assessing the characteristics of cognitive style, classificatory skills, and logical reasoning ability, the student's readiness to attain concepts under various circumstances can be determined. Secondly, the model points to optimal methods…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation, Concept Teaching, Educational Strategies
Barasch, Frances K. – 1974
After an Open Admissions (OA) policy was established at Baruch college in New York City, heavy emphasis was placed on remedial English. This emphasis was unfortunate for creative students since it reduced all writing courses to a "utilitarian," pre-college level. OA students also need to develop their perceptions, imaginations, and…
Descriptors: College Students, Creative Writing, Creativity, English Instruction
Logan, Nelson Stanley – 1970
The paper contains a model of a technique for increasing the quality of educational and instructional opportunity for all students. This model is developed around the flexible or modularly scheduled secondary school. Also included is a procedure containing a computer program, with which the administrator can develop the master schedule of the…
Descriptors: Computer Oriented Programs, Curriculum Development, Educational Improvement, Flexible Scheduling
Litchen, Ruth E. – 1965
Suggestions for implementing group discussion techniques in elementary and secondary classrooms are given in this tip sheet for teachers which is one of a series. The need and nature of discussion as a necessary force in the democratic way of life is stressed. General information is provided on how discussion aids the individual; the purposes of…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Elementary Education, Group Discussion
Armstrong, R. H. R., Ed.; Taylor, John L.
The two major purposes of this book are to be an introduction to the development of instructional simulation systems in higher education and to provide a useful compendium of experimental simulation experience for those wishing to consider and utilize these and related techniques at the university level. Each paper attempts either to present a…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Educational Games, Game Theory, Games
Weingarten, Kenneth; And Others – 1971
Lecturing is a poor method of giving instruction for Army tasks, since it is suitable for only a small segment of learners and a small number of tasks. The APSTRAT (derived from "aptitude" and "strategies") model is designed to train men at many levels of aptitude and with wide differences in educational backgrounds for a…
Descriptors: Instructional Systems, Job Training, Military Training, Models

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