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Garza, Nicholas F.; Finkenstaedt-Quinn, Solaire A.; Shultz, Ginger V.; Zimmerman, Steven C. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2022
Organic chemistry courses enroll students from many majors with diverse interests. Although instructors may strive to appeal to these interests by relating course content to real life, it is challenging to intrinsically appeal to students at the personal level, particularly in high enrollment courses like organic chemistry. When students identify…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, Science Instruction, Course Content, Teaching Methods
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Aaron Trocki – North American Chapter of the International Group for the Psychology of Mathematics Education, 2023
Student multimodal writing has gained attention in the teaching and learning of mathematics with the anticipation that these assignments will benefit student engagement and learning in a variety of ways. This study investigates students' perceptions of learning in a post-secondary calculus course, which contained four multimodal writing…
Descriptors: Calculus, Mathematics Instruction, Multimedia Materials, Teaching Methods
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Davis, Kirsten A.; Mogg, William A.; Callaghan, David P.; Birkett, Greg R.; Knight, David B.; O'Brien, Katherine R. – European Journal of Engineering Education, 2021
In this paper, we introduce 'Concept Questions,' a weekly writing assignment that has been incorporated into multiple upper-level engineering courses at a single university with the intent of enhancing students' conceptual understanding of the course content. To explore the influence of this activity on students in these courses, we compared…
Descriptors: Questioning Techniques, Writing Assignments, Course Content, Concept Formation
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Tatzl, Dietmar – Studies in Second Language Learning and Teaching, 2018
Empirical evaluations of practical teaching units integrating content and language in higher education are rare and deserve more attention. The current article aims to narrow this gap by providing an empirical study of an integrating content and language in higher education (ICLHE, Smit & Dafouz, 2012) teaching module. It investigates the…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Content Analysis, Course Content, Interdisciplinary Approach
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Goldstein, Gary; Fernald, Peter – College Teaching, 2009
Capstone courses emphasize students' experiences and learning, rather than course content. This emphasis is consistent with principles and practices fundamental to humanistic education. Here we describe a capstone course, "Internship," that includes five features consistent with humanistic education: (1) student-centered learning, (2) empathic…
Descriptors: Writing Assignments, Humanistic Education, Experiential Learning, Course Content
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Black, Katherine A. – Journal of College Teaching & Learning, 2008
To encourage students to think about and understand the considerable role gender plays in their lives, a writing assignment early in a gender course asks them to consider the impact of permanently becoming the other gender. Students' papers were examined for particular themes, which were used to illustrate course concepts and to spark class…
Descriptors: Writing Assignments, Course Content, Gender Differences, Sex Role
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Hegtvedt, Karen A. – Teaching Sociology, 1991
Describes an advanced undergraduate course introductory course designed to integrate two ways sociologists examine literature. Presents sociology of literature through reading fictional works, like Dickens'"Hard Times," that deal with sociological issues. Writing assignments provide opportunities to test ideas about authors, critics, and…
Descriptors: College Curriculum, Course Content, Course Descriptions, Curriculum Development
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Crone, James A. – Teaching Sociology, 2001
Presents a literature review that focuses on undergraduate discussion. Describes a teaching method in which undergraduate sociology students are assigned to create an open-ended question and write a one- to three-page answer every one- to two-weeks. Addresses the positive and negative aspects of the method. (CMK)
Descriptors: Course Content, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Higher Education, Literature Reviews
Kelly, Priscilla – 1993
As the semester progresses, students in an autobiographical writing class at Slippery Rock University (Pennsylvania) develop a new awareness of themselves and their own places in a larger universe as well as an appreciation of themselves as writers. Language theory supports what the instructor observes in her students' writing development. A…
Descriptors: Biographies, Course Content, Course Descriptions, Family Characteristics
Griffith, Kevin – 1992
An advanced composition curriculum was designed for a class of 20 juniors and seniors, and because of the constraints of a university grant with which it was associated, the majority of assignments had to be collaborative. The subject of investigation was composition. That is, the students were challenged to do what composition researchers and…
Descriptors: Classroom Research, Cooperative Learning, Course Content, Course Descriptions
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Hall, Kelley J. – Teaching Sociology, 2000
Addresses the use of fiction to teach undergraduate students about sociological theories and concepts. Discusses how "A Thousand Acres" (Jane Smiley) was used in a sociology of families course. Includes descriptions of the plot and themes in the book and the group work and paper assigned in conjunction with Smiley's novel. (CMK)
Descriptors: Child Abuse, Course Content, Family Life, Family Structure