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Peer reviewedHalsey, John – Teaching Sociology, 1990
Argues that offering part of the sociology curriculum abroad enables an instructor to take advantage of the students' marginal position in foreign countries. States that the students' marginality helps achieve three goals: engaging students' interest, dealing with their ethnocentricity, and using experiential learning. Describes the State…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Ethnocentrism, Experiential Learning, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedBohan, Janis S. – Teaching of Psychology, 1990
Contends that recent historiographic scholarship underscores the need for new approaches to the history of psychology. Introduces the content of an advanced undergraduate seminar based on materials in social constructionism and contextual history. Illustrates its application to the history of psychology through a contextual look at the place of…
Descriptors: Cognitive Psychology, Course Content, Higher Education, Historiography
Peer reviewedCrozier, William; Gaffield, Chad – Historical Methods, 1990
The Lower Manhattan Project, a computer-assisted undergraduate course in U.S. history, enhances student appreciation of the historical process through research and writing. Focuses on the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries emphasizing massive immigration, rapid industrialization, and the growth of cities. Includes a reading list and…
Descriptors: Audiovisual Aids, Class Activities, Computer Assisted Instruction, Curriculum Development
Peer reviewedSegal, Edwin S. – Anthropology and Education Quarterly, 1990
Describes an approach to teaching undergraduate anthropology focused on anthropological modes of thought rather than accumulation of exotic data. Central technique is use of a journal focused on relating classroom material to students' daily lives. Aim is to teach students to be participant-observers in their own cultures. (Author/JS)
Descriptors: Anthropology, Course Organization, Cultural Education, Discovery Processes
Peer reviewedLapoint, Elwyn C. – Anthropology and Education Quarterly, 1990
Discusses the design of an undergraduate survey course in anthropological linguistics that both acquaints students with language structure and traces the cross-fertilizing relationships that bind it to other specialties within anthropology. Considers utilizing the holistic approach which views language and culture as forming a continuum of coded…
Descriptors: Anthropological Linguistics, Anthropology, Course Organization, Cross Cultural Studies
Peer reviewedTritt, Donald G. – Teaching of Psychology, 1993
Describes a college-level course in health psychology. Recommends a course divided between lectures and a class-designed research project. Reports that course evaluations by the students indicated that the students enjoyed the course design and assignments. (CFR)
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Course Content, Course Descriptions, Curriculum Design
Peer reviewedMcGrane, Bernard – Teaching Sociology, 1993
Describes a student project on television viewing for a introductory college sociology course. Includes 4 specific activities such as watching a news program for 10 minutes without sound or watching television for 30 minutes without turning it on. Reports on student attitudes toward the activity and discusses the role of television in society.…
Descriptors: College Curriculum, Course Content, Curriculum Design, Educational Strategies
Peer reviewedHanda, Sudhanshu; Gordon, Peter-John – Economics of Education Review, 1999
Critically analyzes the University of West Indies' admissions policy of increasing the share of undergraduate part-time students. Data on student grades in first-year social-science courses shows that part-time students are significantly more likely to fail these courses, due to lower motivation and greater time constraints. (10 references) (MLH)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Admission Criteria, Developing Nations, Educational Policy
Peer reviewedKuo, Raymond; Ghosh, Sumit – College and University, 1997
Presents a model of the admissions process for a bachelor's degree engineering program at Brown University. The study used key nonfinancial-aid related criteria to develop student profiles and then correlated admissions decisions with applicant profiles to test admissions officer bias. Results indicated that admissions officer bias plays a strong…
Descriptors: Admission (School), Admission Criteria, Admissions Officers, Bachelors Degrees
Peer reviewedJohnson, Al – College and University, 1997
Argues that assessment, outcomes measurement, and prediction of attrition are separate but highly interrelated phenomena, with none meaningfully understood without reference to the other two. Suggests that the assessment process be the initial exercise, followed by periodic outcomes measurement used in conjunction with the assessment data to…
Descriptors: College Attendance, College Outcomes Assessment, College Students, Dropout Research
Peer reviewedBarker, Philip – Innovations in Education and Training International, 1999
Describes some of the ways in which in-house Web-based networks, or intranets, can be used, possibly in conjunction with the Internet, to facilitate new ways of supporting student-managed, autonomous learning activities. Presents a case study of an undergraduate course at the University of Teesside (United Kingdom), and discusses future…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Foreign Countries, Futures (of Society), Higher Education
Peer reviewedHaas, Peter J.; Robinson, Maynard G. – Nonprofit Management and Leadership, 1998
Extraordinary nonprofit-sector expansion has produced organizations with complex missions and operations, and requiring managers with adequate preparation. A survey of nonprofit chief executive officers found that while no single degree program was preferred, respondents liked the idea of specialized nonprofit degrees and management certificates.…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, Administrator Education, Administrator Qualifications, Business Administration Education
Peer reviewedNikolova Eddins, Stefka G.; Williams, Douglas F. – Journal on Excellence in College Teaching, 1997
Research-based learning (RBL) is a model for merging research and undergraduate education. To link RBL with a curriculum across the institution, the authors used discipline-specific RBL strands, each of which is a set of interconnected course options that couple out-of-class research experiences with an established curriculum. Student learning is…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, College Instruction, Cooperative Learning, Curriculum Design
Peer reviewedOosterhof, Albert – Journal of Computing in Higher Education, 2000
Describes a method whereby college instructors can efficiently create individualized e-mail messages to students. The technique combines the mail merge capability of Microsoft Word and Excel with an e-mail client. Examples are from successful use in two courses: large-enrollment statistics course taught by lecture and a graduate-level course in…
Descriptors: Computer Uses in Education, Course Organization, Distance Education, Electronic Mail
Modarresi, Shahpar; Burke, James C. – College and University, 2000
A survey of 98 institutions in six states compared how doctoral and non-doctoral public campuses reacted to reduced state funding in the early 1990s. Univariate and multivariate analysis found both types of campuses coped incrementally rather than fundamentally. Few adopted long- range plans, and most relied on raising tuition and fees and…
Descriptors: Doctoral Programs, Educational Finance, Educational Policy, Financial Problems

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