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Bright, George W. – Teaching Children Mathematics, 1996
Discusses planning instruction on the basis of children's thinking. First, individualize instruction by adjusting the value of the numbers used for individual children. Second, base problem presentation on the types of thinking prevalent in the class. Third, conduct some instruction in small groups. Fourth, suggest alternative strategies. Finally,…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Instructional Improvement, Learning Processes, Mathematics Instruction
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Erchick, Diana B. – School Science and Mathematics, 2002
Introduces The Square Thing, a lesson that engages and invites student development of problem solving and reasoning skills, understanding through connections within the content, and mathematics voice. Describes components for successful pedagogy and benefits for students experiencing this and similar mathematics pedagogies. (Author/MM)
Descriptors: Analytic Geometry, Mathematics Activities, Mathematics Instruction, Problem Solving
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Wakeley, Dawn M.; de Grys, Hans – Journal of Chemical Education, 2000
Explains the concept of mole and presents a teaching approach in which students can experiment with atoms and develop an understanding of mass ratios. Presents 10 examples of chemistry problems involving moles and unit conversations. (YDS)
Descriptors: Chemistry, Concept Formation, High Schools, Misconceptions
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Mottonen, Merja; Tapanainen, Paivi; Nuutinen, Matti; Rantala, Heikki; Vainionpaa, Leena; Uhari, Matti – Medical Teacher, 2001
Evidence-based medicine--the process of using research findings systematically as the basis for clinical decisions--can be taught using problem-solving teaching methods. Evaluates whether it was possible to motivate students to use the original literature by giving them selected patient problems to solve. (Author/ASK)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Literature Reviews, Medical Education, Problem Solving
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Rompelman, Otto – European Journal of Engineering Education, 2000
Explains the evolution of the objectives of engineering education from knowledge to skills which is referred to as a 'paradigm shift'. Reviews the relationship between the demands and the educational objectives, and discusses the implications for assessment and the relationship between educational methods and assessment. (Author/YDS)
Descriptors: Educational Change, Engineering Education, Evaluation, Higher Education
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Lyle, Kenneth S.; Robinson, William R. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2001
Reviews the problem solving approach in chemistry and explains effective instructional methods for teaching problem solving. (YDS)
Descriptors: Chemistry, Epistemology, Higher Education, Learning Processes
Stover, Lynne Farrell – School Library Media Activities Monthly, 2005
An acronym, a word formed from the first letters of other words, is often used to name products or organizations. For example, when Hermione Granger, a very clever student at Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry, is enraged over the wizarding world's treatment of house-elves, she creates an organization to help put an end to this injustice.…
Descriptors: Memory, Teaching Methods, Language Skills, Problem Solving
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Drennon, Christine – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2005
How, where and why GIS is taught has been debated heavily in the geography literature. This article is a contribution to that debate, because it offers a new perspective from which to teach GIS: problem-based learning. In a problem-based learning classroom, theoretical foundations and the real world of problems are understood as constitutive of…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Information Systems, Problem Based Learning, Geography
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Broomhead, Paul – Music Educators Journal, 2005
This article discusses the benefits of constructivism for both teachers and students. The author believes that teachers can increase student engagement in expressive performance learning without giving up performance quality.
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Grade 8, Singing, Problem Solving
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Herbst, Patricio G. – Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 2006
Two questions are asked that concern the work of teaching high school geometry with problems and engaging students in building a reasoned conjecture: What kinds of negotiation are needed in order to engage students in such activity? How do those negotiations impact the mathematical activity in which students participate? A teacher's work is…
Descriptors: Geometric Concepts, Geometry, High Schools, Mathematics Instruction
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Barbosa, Heloiza R.; Marques, Marilis V.; Torres, Bayardo B. – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2005
The metabolic versatility of bacteria is a source of learning difficulty for students in classical microbiology courses. To facilitate the learning process, the authors developed an advance organizer. It consists of a set of six diagrams of metabolic pathways describing the basic living requirements of several types of bacteria: energy, carbon…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Microbiology, Learning Problems, Advance Organizers
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Conderman, Greg; Strobel, Debra – Intervention in School and Clinic, 2006
Many students with disabilities require specialized instructional interventions and frequent progress monitoring in reading. The guided repeated oral reading technique promotes oral reading fluency while providing a reliable data-based monitoring system. This article emphasizes the importance of problem-solving when using this reading approach.
Descriptors: Reading Instruction, Disabilities, Reading Fluency, Intervention
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Munakata, Mika – Mathematics Teacher, 2005
The complexities involved in writing mathematics problems and a cooperative learning activity that gives students the challenge of writing mathematical logic problems for their peers is discussed. Making students construct mathematics problems taps into several important skills in mathematics and students are asked to consider what it means to…
Descriptors: Mathematics Skills, Mathematical Logic, Cooperative Learning, Mathematics Instruction
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Boerst, Timothy A. – Teaching Children Mathematics, 2005
The new Grade-Level Content Expectations (GLCEs) are addressed meaningfully through the well-organized district curriculum and text materials that embody the coherence called for in the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics' (NTCM) "Principles and Standards." The GLCEs helped to fine-tune the direction of exploratory lessons and…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Mathematics Teachers, Mathematics Instruction, Mathematics Curriculum
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Lehti, Sirpa; Lehtinen, Erno – Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 2005
The purpose of this research was to look for possible benefits and drawbacks of the use of computer-supported simulation in the teaching and learning of experimental research methodology and statistics. In the study three research methodology groups were compared. The results show that there were significant differences in favour of the…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Speech Communication, Research Methodology, Problem Based Learning
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