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Curriculum Review, 1980
To show a variety of possible instructional options, the consumer education programs of seven high schools are briefly described. Six of the descriptions concern specific course offerings, the seventh cites a teacher's resource center for consumer education in Philadelphia. Addresses and contact persons are listed. (SJL)
Descriptors: Consumer Education, Course Descriptions, High Schools, Resource Centers
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Brenneman, Mark – Business Education Forum, 1980
The National Micrographics Association has prepared a general "micrographics in office administration" course syllabus. It can be used as a guideline in determining learning objectives, course content and course resource material. (Author/JOW)
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Microreproduction, Office Management, Office Occupations Education
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Bodin, Wesley J.; Dilzer, Robert J., Jr. – Social Education, 1981
Describes current secondary school courses about religions which are incorporated into the social studies curriculum. Course titles include Religion in Human Culture, Religions of Man, Great Religions, Comparative Religions, History of Religions, and the Bible as Literature. (KC)
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Religious Education, Secondary Education, Social Studies
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Magel, Kenneth I.; Hamblen, John W. – AEDS Journal, 1979
Describes a course that uses a network of microcomputers to teach students machine language and assembler programing. The course is intended to teach what the computer can do and what its limitations are, understandings that are often obscured when students work in high-level programing languages. (Author/IRT)
Descriptors: Computer Science Education, Course Descriptions, Higher Education, Microcomputers
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Roberts, J. L.; And Others – Journal of Chemical Education, 1996
Describes a laboratory course that introduces students to chemistry using examples commonly encountered in the supermarket and on the dinner table. Acquaints students with simple chemical tasks that can be practiced at home, including the making of wine, ale, soap, cheese, and yogurt, and introduces them to the small-scale production of…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Course Descriptions, Higher Education, Laboratory Experiments
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Kincanon, Eric – Physics Teacher, 1996
Presents a course, Physics and Time, that centers on a few topics that students with limited mathematics training and no previous science can explore in depth. Discusses concepts of time, measuring time, arrows of time, and linearity versus nonlinearity. (JRH)
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Higher Education, Physics, Scientific Concepts
Smith, Clifton – Australian Science Teachers' Journal, 2001
Describes the development of a security science degree as the emerging applied science of the protection of individuals and assets. Proposes the themes of physical, electronic, information security and facility management as scientific applications for the course. (Author/MM)
Descriptors: Computer Security, Course Descriptions, Higher Education, Science Education
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Dossey-Newby, Paula; Krull, Amy C. – Educational Gerontology, 2005
This study examines the comparability of sociology of aging courses, a core component in many undergraduate multidisciplinary gerontology minor programs. A content analysis of syllabi in the 5th edition of Teaching Sociology of Aging and the Life Course (Harris, 2000) was undertaken to determine the presence of 7 core sociological concepts. Among…
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Course Content, Gerontology, Content Analysis
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Pimbblet, Kevin A.; Newman, John C. – Physics Education, 2003
Cosmology education has become an integral part of modern physics courses. Directed by National Curricula, major UK examination boards have developed syllabi that contain explicit statements about the model of the Big Bang and the strong observational evidence that supports it. This work examines the similarities and differences in these…
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Physics, Astronomy, Foreign Countries
Howard, Jennifer – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2005
Syllabi from some 20 colleges and universities were reviewed with prominent English and literature departments and a discussion was held with a number of professors who teach literary theory. It is suggested that devolution and fragmentation of theory might be a survival strategy, an adaptation to the new realties of academic institutions.
Descriptors: English Departments, Course Descriptions, Literary Criticism, Literature
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Newton, Thomas A.; Tracy, Henry J.; Prudente, Caryn – Journal of Chemical Education, 2006
The development, implementation, evolution, and evaluation of a research-based laboratory course which was created as an alternative to more traditional laboratory instruction is described. The course was able to engage the students in devising and executing their own experiments, the satisfaction of determining the outcomes of those experiments,…
Descriptors: Science Laboratories, Organic Chemistry, Course Descriptions, Science Instruction
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Wooden, Shannon R. – CEA Forum, 2007
Mary Elizabeth Braddon's novels and stories exemplify some of the main issues surrounding women's texts and their place in literature: aesthetic value, intellectual challenge, universality, and contemporary popularity. Her work, it may be argued, betrays occasional aesthetic imperfections; however, she produced a tremendous amount of published…
Descriptors: Victorian Literature, English Literature, Nineteenth Century Literature, Feminism
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Baumgartner, Erin – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2007
Although the majority of the teaching faculty at U.S. universities is composed of people who are scientific experts, research has found that most scientists do not have information about effective teaching methods (DeHaan 2005). Traditional lecture-style college science teaching does not reflect knowledge about best teaching practices based upon…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Teacher Effectiveness, Professional Development, Graduate Students
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Cowling, Jeremy David – English for Specific Purposes, 2007
This paper gives a detailed description of the needs analysis (NA) stage in the development of a set of English language intensive courses at a large Japanese industrial firm. The case study highlights the NA practices of using multiple sources and multiple methods in the data gathering stage and uses triangulation in order to validate results.…
Descriptors: English for Special Purposes, Foreign Countries, Industry, Intensive Language Courses
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Brown, Sherri; Melear, Claudia – Journal of Science Teacher Education, 2007
To promote the use of scientific inquiry methods in K-12 classrooms, departments of teacher education must provide science teachers with experiences using such methods. To comply with state and national mandates, an apprenticeship course was designed to afford preservice secondary science teachers opportunities to engage in an authentic, extended,…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Preservice Teachers, Secondary Education, Apprenticeships
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