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Lim, Kenneth Y. T. – Educational Technology, 2010
This article considers some of the unique affordances that Multi-User Virtual Environments--in particular, Second Life--present to the design of learning environments. Drawing upon some preliminary experiences of acquainting teachers in several schools in Singapore with Second Life, specific attention is paid to the inherent spatiality of the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Technology, Virtual Classrooms, Geography
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Doering, Aaron; Henrickson, Jeni – Journal of Technology and Teacher Education, 2015
Self-directed, inquiry-based learning opportunities focused on transdisciplinary real-world problem solving have been shown to foster creativity in learners. What tools might we provide classroom teachers to scaffold them and their students through this creative process? This study examines an online informal learning environment and the role the…
Descriptors: Creativity, Inquiry, Independent Study, Informal Education
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Chatterjea, Kalyani – Review of International Geographical Education Online, 2012
Fieldwork is an essential component in Geography education. Learning through research in Geography involves generating substantial data and data manipulation. In order to make geographical inquiry a worthwhile learning experience, researchers require a seamless system that allows data collection and analysis without being distracted by the…
Descriptors: Telecommunications, Handheld Devices, Geography Instruction, Field Studies
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Lee, Jongwon; Bednarz, Robert – Journal of Geography, 2012
This article introduces the development and validation of the spatial thinking ability test (STAT). The STAT consists of sixteen multiple-choice questions of eight types. The STAT was validated by administering it to a sample of 532 junior high, high school, and university students. Factor analysis using principal components extraction was applied…
Descriptors: Evidence, Construct Validity, Factor Analysis, Spatial Ability
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Kidman, Gillian – International Research in Geographical and Environmental Education, 2012
This paper explores the occurrence of geographical inquiry in the Australian curriculum since Geography became a high school subject in 1911. In this historical overview, I reflect upon my own experiences of undertaking geographical inquiry during the 1970s and 1980s. Primary school geographical inquiry experiences can be virtually non-existent…
Descriptors: Geography Instruction, Inquiry, Active Learning, Educational History
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Strait, John – Journal of Geography, 2012
This article offers a pedagogical module that explores the geography of blues culture across the Mississippi Delta. By focusing on blues culture, rather than simply blues music itself, this project provides a forum for understanding the broader geographical conditions from which this musical form emerged. This module utilizes place-based…
Descriptors: Music, Geography Instruction, Human Geography, Rural Areas
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Patterson, Lynn M.; Slinger-Friedman, Vanessa – Journal of Geography, 2012
Numerous studies have shown both anecdotal and formal evidence of the benefits students obtain from doing writing activities in classes. Little formal discussion exists about how student writing in geography classes professionally affects faculty. In this article, focus shifts from student-derived benefits of writing in classes to faculty…
Descriptors: Geography Instruction, Writing Across the Curriculum, Undergraduate Students, College Faculty
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Wall, Glenda P.; Speake, Janet – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2012
The Bologna Declaration focuses on skill acquisition as a means of improving student employability and fieldwork is considered to be a pivotal teaching method for geography students to obtain such skills. This paper presents results from a major substantive survey of European geography academics and students which investigated their perspectives…
Descriptors: Employment Potential, Geography, Teaching Methods, Geography Instruction
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Sarno, Emilia – Review of International Geographical Education Online, 2011
In this paper some pathways of geographical analysis will be illustrated and discussed, seen from a didactic point of view. The geographical theme chosen is that of migration. Migratory phenomena and the problems associated with it have always been a classic theme of geography; today however, they are of a particular interest and will allow us to…
Descriptors: Geography Instruction, Citizenship Education, Teaching Methods, Migration Patterns
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Halocha, John – Review of International Geographical Education Online, 2011
This paper discusses some of the complex issues involved in how Europe is represented in a range of map formats. The reader is encouraged to consider these issues by accessing recommended websites in order to analyse how Europe is represented through their published contents. Simon Catling's theoretical work on children's worlds is then used to…
Descriptors: Maps, Geography Instruction, Concept Formation, Web Sites
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Jones, Kathryn; Daisey, Peggy – History Teacher, 2011
This article presents a story about eighty-six ninth-grade World History and Geography students who authored a "how-to" book, while pretending that they were experts who lived in the past and had to explain how to do something relating to that time period. These students attended a large high school in the Midwest; the school's…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Geography Instruction, World History, Content Area Writing
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Voiculescu, Sorina – International Research in Geographical and Environmental Education, 2011
The fall of communism in Central-Eastern Europe in 1989 brought major political, social, economic and cultural changes that reshaped the Romanian society as it transitioned from the totalitarian communist regime to a democratic one. The entire process of transition, eventuating in Romanian access to the European Union, brought important changes at…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Geography Instruction, Higher Education, College Faculty
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Yu, Jaehyung; Huynh, Niem Tu; McGehee, Thomas Lee – Journal of Geography, 2011
An innovative vertical integration model for recruiting to GIS education was introduced and tested following four driving forces: curriculum development, GIS presentations, institutional collaboration, and faculty training. Curriculum development was a useful approach to recruitment, student credit hour generation, and retention-rate improvement.…
Descriptors: Geographic Information Systems, Information Science, Models, High Schools
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Clark, Gordon; Gill, Nick; Walker, Marion; Whittle, Rebecca – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 2011
Does attending lectures improve student performance? Using novel attendance data, we examine statistically the relationships between attendance and performance for first-year and third-year students. The relationship is moderately positive: very high attendance is significantly associated with an improvement in performance over very low attenders…
Descriptors: Attendance, Correlation, Lecture Method, Academic Achievement
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Vitale, Philippe – International Studies in Sociology of Education, 2013
In the new millennium model of low definition curriculum, teachers have professional latitude to deliver prescribed disciplinary content through a range of pedagogical and assessment orientations. The rhetoric is that with carefully crafted practice, the goal of high quality/high equity learning outcomes can be achieved for all students. This…
Descriptors: Slavery, Foreign Countries, Educational Quality, Equal Education
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