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Jacobs, George M. – Online Submission, 2010
The purpose of this paper is to introduce and explain a cooperative learning technique, Academic Controversy (Johnson, Johnson, & Smith, 1996), also known as Cooperative Controversy, Structured Controversy and Structured Academic Controversy, that has potential for use in education and other areas, and has support in both research and theory.…
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Teaching Methods, Educational Principles, Debate
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Jacobs, George – Intercultural Education, 2010
The purpose of this paper is to introduce and explain a cooperative learning technique, Academic Controversy, also known as Cooperative Controversy, Structured Controversy and Structured Academic Controversy. This technique has potential for use in intercultural education and has support in both research and theory. Briefly, the technique involves…
Descriptors: Multicultural Education, Cooperative Learning, Teaching Methods, Classroom Techniques
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Nyland, C.; Forbes-Mewett, H.; Marginson, S. – Higher Education Research and Development, 2010
In 2009 international student safety became an issue of immediate concern to Australian international education exporters following a series of demonstrations by Indian students and interventions by concerned foreign governments. With these developments the "industry" became fixated on how best to secure Australia's share of the…
Descriptors: Foreign Students, International Education, Safety, Foreign Countries
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Tormey, Roland – Irish Educational Studies, 2010
Educational disadvantage is an essentially contested, political concept. At the same time there is a "phoney consensus" surrounding the issue, i.e., policy debates on the topic often fail to reflect this contestation. This lack of awareness of the political context to the debate is evident in relation to the targets and measures set for…
Descriptors: Political Influences, Educational Policy, Educationally Disadvantaged, Politics of Education
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Trede, Franziska Veronika – Higher Education Research and Development, 2010
The diversity of fieldwork education models and practices ranges from mandatory to voluntary, from graded to ungraded, from paid to unpaid spectrums and they vary in length from less than a week to up to one year. Colleagues who work in the same university but in different schools, faculties or campuses are often so busy working within their…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Field Studies, Clinical Experience, Models
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Bredo, Eric – Educational Theory, 2009
In "Moderating the Debate: Rationality and the Promise of American Education," Michael Feuer raises concerns about the consequences of basing educational policy on the model of rational choice drawn from economics. Policy making would be better and more realistic, he suggests, if it were based on a newer procedural model drawn from cognitive…
Descriptors: Criticism, Cognitive Psychology, Educational Policy, Economics
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Kerdeman, Deborah – Educational Theory, 2009
In "Moderating the Debate: Rationality and the Promise of American Education," Michael Feuer counsels reformers to "satisfice": moderate their expectations and accept that flawed reforms can be good enough. Implicit in Feuer's view of satisficing is the assumption that moderating expectations entails eschewing ideals and replacing optimal goals…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Foundations of Education, Educational Theories, Debate
Terego, Alex – Principal Leadership, 2009
The argument now raging in academic circles pits those who espouse teaching 21st century skills against those who believe that schools should be teaching explicit and well-sequenced content. This debate has largely been framed as an either-or proposition. In this author's view, portraying this debate as one between two mutually exclusive sides…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Higher Education, Educational Principles, Conflict
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Chang, Pei-Fen; Wang, Dau-Chung – European Journal of Engineering Education, 2011
In May 2008, the worst earthquake in more than three decades struck southwest China, killing more than 80,000 people. The complexity of this earthquake makes it an ideal case study to clarify the intertwined issues of ethics in engineering and to help cultivate critical thinking skills. This paper first explores the need to encourage engineering…
Descriptors: Ethical Instruction, Cultural Education, Problem Based Learning, Engineering
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Anderson, Susannah; Mezuk, Briana – Journal of Adolescence, 2012
This study investigates the relationship between participating in a high school debate program on college-readiness in the Chicago Public School district over a 10-year period. At-risk school students were identified using an index including 8th grade achievement, poverty status, and enrollment in special education. Regression analyses were used…
Descriptors: At Risk Students, Program Effectiveness, Adolescents, Public Schools
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Panayotidis, E. Lisa; Stortz, Paul – History of Education, 2010
In 1898, students at the University of Toronto founded "Torontonensis", the university's first yearbook. Fashioned as a remembrance of university, from its inception the yearbook was fraught with conflict and contestation particularly around how male students were represented and how their college experiences were made, and not made,…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Yearbooks, Conflict, College Students
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Fischer, Anke; Marshall, Keith – Journal of Rural Studies, 2010
There is a long-standing debate in Scotland over the use of upland areas, as initiatives to restore the native Caledonian pine forest are vying with traditional moorland management for shooting. Our study set out to improve our understanding of argumentation processes with regard to these issues. We conducted semi-structured interviews with a wide…
Descriptors: Environmental Research, Environmental Education, Interviews, Biodiversity
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Vehmas, Simo – International Journal of Inclusive Education, 2010
This paper attempts to illuminate a central concept and idea in special education discourse, namely, "special needs". It analyses philosophically what needs are and on what grounds they are defined as "special" or "exceptional". It also discusses whether sorting needs into ordinary and special is discriminatory. It is argued that individualistic…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Special Needs Students, Concept Formation, Educational Philosophy
Thompson, David C.; Wood, R. Craig; Crampton, Faith E. – Eye on Education, 2008
For future principals and others enrolled in courses on School Finance, this book explains and demonstrates the relationship between money and student achievement. New to this edition: (1) Includes updated information on the ever-changing landscape of school finance; (2) Co-author Faith E. Crampton has joined the author team, applying the…
Descriptors: Educational Finance, Correlation, Academic Achievement, Debate
Young, Jeffrey R. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Competitive debate has traditionally served as a laboratory for the democratic process and an important training ground for future policy makers. In recent years, a growing number of teams have played the game out of traditional bounds. They have turned events into commentaries on debate itself, in performances that bear little resemblance to the…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Debate, College Students, Administrators
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