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Junisbai, Barbara – Journal of Political Science Education, 2014
Political science faculty have access to a wealth of innovative pedagogies thanks to a comprehensive literature on teaching and learning in the discipline and related fields. Yet, from among the hundreds of documented possibilities, how does one go about deciding which to incorporate into a given course? Few articles have much to say in response…
Descriptors: Student Centered Curriculum, Curriculum Design, Course Content, Teaching Methods
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Phillips, Amy Criniti – CEA Forum, 2009
During the fourth year of Amy Phillips' teaching assistantship in the spring semester of 2008, she was asked to teach a 300-level advanced writing course in which she was given the creative freedom to design the syllabus, choose the textbooks, craft all assignments, and organize the course content. However, there was one stipulation: the course,…
Descriptors: Course Content, Writing (Composition), Teaching Methods, Writing Skills
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Henderson, Bruce B. – Teaching of Psychology, 2000
Describes a writing project, based on the reader's guide, that helps students get an overview of the literature on a psychology topic. Highlights the five components of the reader's guide (content outline, theorists and contributors, central concepts, hot topics, and major resources). Addresses the role of the assignment and student reactions.…
Descriptors: Course Content, Educational Strategies, Higher Education, Literature Reviews
Reid, E. Shelley – Composition Studies, 2004
This article describes the increasing pressures on those who teach graduate seminars in composition pedagogy to cover a broad range of texts, topics, and techniques. It argues that in response, pedagogy instructors may need to deliberately (re)design their courses in order to continue to help new writing instructors engage in inquiry and…
Descriptors: Writing Assignments, Writing Workshops, Writing Instruction, Graduate Study
Bizzell, Patricia – 1994
Beginning with the premise that writing cannot be separated from the subject written about, composition teachers should address themselves to what their students are learning in the process of writing. Some writing courses introduce students to great books but those books are usually written only by white men. Others open students to multicultural…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, College Curriculum, Course Content, Course Objectives
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
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Grauerholz, Liz – Teaching Sociology, 1999
Provides suggestions for creating a writing-intensive course. Focuses on meeting course goals or objectives with student writing, describing the different types of writing assignments and discussing the mixture of assignments, amount of writing, and ensuring success. Includes a syllabus for a writing-intensive undergraduate sociology course. (CMK)
Descriptors: Course Content, Curriculum Development, Educational Objectives, Educational Practices
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