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Lesnick, Henry – TESOL Journal, 1992
Examines the need for more effective Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS) education programs among English-as-a-Second-Language (ESL) students, considers the value of content-rich instruction in students' acquisition of English literacy skills, and describes a program of AIDS education integrated into the ESL curriculum in a high-risk area.…
Descriptors: Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome, Curriculum Design, English (Second Language), Literacy
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McLeod, Wilson – Journal of Legal Education, 1993
It is proposed that traditional labor law retain its current place in the legal curriculum, despite its limited applicability, but with emphasis on its theoretical importance rather than its technicalities. Traditional labor law is found to provide more rigorous inquiry into the nature of law than broader "employment law." (MSE)
Descriptors: College Curriculum, Course Content, Curriculum Design, Employment
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Nollendorfs, Valters – Unterrichtspraxis, 1994
Discusses the state of German instruction in America, and suggests that the traditional literary focus will need modified to accommodate the demands of a diversified and increasingly interdisciplinary curriculum. (Contains 22 references.) (JL)
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Educational Change, Educational Trends, Futures (of Society)
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Anderson, Albert A. – Studies in Higher Education, 1991
A curriculum model integrating rather than isolating academic disciplines, while preserving uniqueness in each, is discussed. Seven "clustering" rules are outlined, illustrated by a successful application at Babson College (Massachusetts). Although the model is useful for diverse academic subjects, it is especially valuable in combining…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Curriculum Design, Experimental Programs, Higher Education
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Takaki, Ronald – Liberal Education, 1991
Higher education can resist the need to open the U.S. mind to greater cultural diversity by ignoring the changing ethnic composition of student bodies and larger society, or realize this opportunity to revitalize the social sciences and humanities with a new sense of purpose and more inclusive definition of knowledge. (MSE)
Descriptors: College Curriculum, Core Curriculum, Cultural Pluralism, Curriculum Design
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Stone, Howard L.; And Others – Medical Teacher, 1991
A 10-year review of the effect that an alternative curriculum design has had on the medical student preferred learning styles and academic achievements is presented. The most important similarities and differences that have been found are discussed. (KR)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Cognitive Style, Curriculum Design, Higher Education
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Rose, Norman S. – Educational Forum, 1991
Waskom's paradigm of human development is based on natural design and mathematical proportion. Its properties encompass purposes of life and learning, natural sense urges and personality traits, characteristics of natural stages of human life, and parenting, teaching, and community support. (SK)
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Curriculum Design, Developmental Stages, Educational Theories
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Vilkinas, Tricia; Cartan, Greg – Higher Education Research and Development, 1990
A survey of 251 postsecondary students enrolled in management education revealed that the students preferred a student-centered and problem-based curriculum and felt their current curricula did not correspond to that model. Results are detailed and the questionnaires used are appended. (Author/MSE)
Descriptors: Business Administration Education, Curriculum Design, Postsecondary Education, Problem Solving
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Hardy, I. Trotter – Journal of Legal Education, 1991
Response to criticism of law students' legal research skills makes three observations: (1) the legal research curriculum may be adequate already; (2) the faculty reward structure favors research and works against teaching; and (3) law school administrators will not change the legal research curriculum until they feel pressure to do so. (MSE)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Curriculum Design, Curriculum Development, Educational Quality
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Imwinkelried, Edward J. – Journal of Legal Education, 1991
Although statutes, not common law, have become the dominant source of law in the United States, the time and intellectual energy most law schools devote to legislation and interpretation is inadequate. Teachers of evidence courses are uniquely positioned to change this through creative instructional use of the Federal Rules of Evidence. (MSE)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Course Content, Curriculum Design, Educational Strategies
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Tanford, J. Alexander – Journal of Legal Education, 1991
A course devoted to trial law and procedure would be useful in the law school curriculum. It is a meaningful contribution to law students' core education, and there are educational costs in not teaching it. Simply adding a trial law component to existing advocacy courses would not serve the purpose. (MSE)
Descriptors: Advocacy, Course Content, Court Litigation, Curriculum Design
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Bruce, Kim B. – Education and Computing, 1991
Describes a model for the design of undergraduate curricula in the discipline of computing that was developed by the ACM/IEEE (Association for Computing Machinery/Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers) Computer Society Joint Curriculum Task Force. Institutional settings and structures in which computing degrees are awarded are…
Descriptors: Computer Science Education, Curriculum Design, Curriculum Development, Degree Requirements
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Doll, William E., Jr. – Journal of Curriculum and Supervision, 1993
Today's curriculum frames, based on the Tyler/Taylor rationale, competency-based instruction, or Madeline Hunter's model, are not constructed to welcome paradox and eclecticism, indeterminacy, self-organization, or satire and play. Postmodernism demands a fundamental questioning of old ways and an exploration of new values. Copy-model and…
Descriptors: Criteria, Curriculum Design, Educational Change, Educational Philosophy
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Wilson, Christopher; Marcus, David K. – Teaching of Psychology, 1992
Reports on the use of PlayDoh clay in a college neuroanatomy class. Describes how students constructed a PlayDoh model of a sheep's brain subsequent to performing a standard dissection procedure. Maintains that students learned from the procedure and recommended the use of the technique in future classes. (CFR)
Descriptors: Anatomy, Curriculum Design, Dissection, Higher Education
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Schlene, Vickie J. – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 1993
Presents an annotated bibliography of eight items from the ERIC database about teaching economics in the elementary grades. (CFR)
Descriptors: Annotated Bibliographies, Citizenship Education, Curriculum Design, Economics Education
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