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Benton, Peter – Oxford Review of Education, 1999
Provides results from surveys with secondary school teachers conducted in 1982 and 1998 at the same Local Education Authority. Reports on the teachers' attitudes to poetry, specifically the reading, writing, and discussion of poetry. States that the second survey follows considerable change in the teaching of English and poetry. (CMK)
Descriptors: Discussion (Teaching Technique), English Instruction, Foreign Countries, Literature
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Chandler, Sally – Feminist Teacher: A Journal of the Practices, Theories, and Scholarship of Feminist Teaching, 2004
In this essay, the author theorizes and illustrates how engaging students in reflective talk can help them change their minds. The essay specifically addresses how patterns for reflective talk can support both the sustained, nonevaluative exploration of difficult material and the self-scrutiny necessary for acknowledging the implication in…
Descriptors: Reflective Teaching, College Students, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Thinking Skills
Hill, Peter – Teaching Music, 2004
Classroom music lessons are not usually a forum for addressing philosophical issues, but they can be. Through music and visual media, music teachers can discuss music with middle and high school students in a way that expands how they think about music and their environment. In other words, music teachers can open up space in their music classroom…
Descriptors: Films, War, National Standards, Music
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Ketch, Ann – Reading Teacher, 2005
Conversation is a basis for critical thinking. It is the thread that ties together cognitive strategies and provides students with the practice that becomes the foundation for reading, writing, and thinking. In recent years, proficient reader research has yielded information about what good readers do as they comprehend text. This article provides…
Descriptors: Speech Communication, Reading Comprehension, Thinking Skills, Group Discussion
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Lopus, Jane S. – Social Education, 2005
This article discusses two twentieth-century stock market crashes: the crash of 1929 and the crash of 1987. When this material is presented to students, they see important parallels between the two historical events. But despite remarkable similarities in the severity and many other aspects of the two crashes, the crash of 1929 was followed by the…
Descriptors: Government Role, Economics Education, Money Management, United States History
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Larson, Bruce E. – Social Education, 2005
Over the past four years, the author has attempted to compare students' participation patterns during electronic threaded discussions and face-to-face classroom discussions. Most recently, he considered the interactions of 40 students in two world history classes at a public high school. These students regularly engaged in classroom discussions…
Descriptors: High School Students, Student Participation, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Questioning Techniques
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Yoder, Holly – Science Scope, 2005
In the introductory assignment, each randomly assigned group spends about 10 to 15 minutes at each station. The author incorporates as much sensory stimulation in the activity as possible. At the first station, students view a PowerPoint show from a geology class the author participated in at the Grand Canyon. At station two, students look at a…
Descriptors: Discussion (Teaching Technique), Geology, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods
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Smith, Michael W.; Connolly, William – Communication Education, 2005
In this study we investigated the impact of a teacher's interpretive authority on the content and conduct of discussions of poetry in two ninth-grade classes. Three authority conditions were examined: a condition in which the teacher taught a poem he had written, a condition in which the teacher taught a poem he had taught many times previously,…
Descriptors: Poetry, Educational Strategies, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Grade 9
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Howard, Tyrone C. – Theory and Research in Social Education, 2004
The examination of race and racism has been largely absent from much of social studies research and theory. Despite the growing racial and ethnic diversity in the nation's schools, many social studies teachers lack a theoretical framework to help students learn about, analyze, and discuss the role that race and racism have played historically in…
Descriptors: Race, History, Racial Relations, Racial Attitudes
Richardson, Will – Technology & Learning, 2006
This article takes a look at tech guru Will Richardson's new book, "Blogs, Wikis, Podcasts, and Other Powerful Web Tools for Classrooms." Whether it's blogs or wikis or RSS, all roads now point to a Web where little is done in isolation. The biggest, most sweeping change in the people's relationship with the Internet may not be as much the ability…
Descriptors: Computer Mediated Communication, Educational Technology, Educational Principles, Social Environment
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Huang, Grace Hui-Chen – Education, 2006
"Informal Forum," grounded in constructivism has been developed to foster active learning and deep understanding. Learning is an interdependent process, and is most effective when students construct their own meaning of knowledge. If one believes in the value of constructivist learning, it is important to teach how we preach in higher education.…
Descriptors: Peer Teaching, Child Development, Active Learning, Constructivism (Learning)
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Aukerman, Maren – Educational Leadership, 2006
How should a teacher respond when a student makes off-base guesses about meaning in a literary text because that learner is trying to genuinely understand the story rather than find the "right" meaning? Aukerman argues that when teachers jump in to correct students' interpretations, they short-circuit students' processes of reading and thinking.…
Descriptors: Grade 5, Thinking Skills, Critical Thinking, Reading Comprehension
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Levin, Andrew R.; Pargas, Roy P. – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2005
A particularly innovative use of laptops is to enhance the music appreciation experience. Group listening and discussion, in combination with a new Web-based application, lead to deeper understanding of classical music. ["Appreciating Music: An Active Approach" was written with Joshua Austin.]
Descriptors: Classical Music, Music Appreciation, Computer Uses in Education, Computers
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Isbell, Linda M.; Tyler, James M. – Teaching of Psychology, 2003
Research on minimal groups demonstrates that arbitrarily creating 2 groups leads to the development of in-group favoritism. Experiments using the minimal groups paradigm show students how easily in-group biases can be created simply by categorizing others. This article describes an in-class activity that demonstrates the power of categorization.…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Models, Classification, Bias
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Leahy, Siobhan; Lyon, Christine; Thompson, Marnie; Wiliam, Dylan – Educational Leadership, 2005
Assessment for learning, as opposed to assessment of learning, requires educators to make a major shift--from quality control in learning to quality assurance, from assessing at the end of teaching to assessing while learning is still taking place. Five nonnegotiable strategies define the territory of assessment for learning: clarifying and…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Student Evaluation, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Questioning Techniques
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