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Smith, Hubert C. – Aviation/Space, 1982
Presents arguments why science and engineering majors need to take courses in the humanities and why humanities majors need science courses. Suggests that aerospace education serves as an excellent and dramatic example of the correct approach to technological development and cites a sample course. (DC)
Descriptors: Aerospace Education, Aerospace Technology, College Science, Engineering Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Keaveney, Madeline W. – Journal of Educational Thought, 1981
In light of declining enrollments and decreasing funding in colleges and universities, humanities curricula should be reorganized to overcome negative student attitudes toward humanities courses. Recounts the successful use of collaborative learning experiences in teaching poetry and suggests the development of interdisciplinary career-option…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Education Work Relationship, Humanities Instruction, Interdisciplinary Approach
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Galinsky, G. Karl – ADFL Bulletin, 1981
Credits classics programs with the earliest experiments in the interdisciplinary approach, showing how classics, as the study of all aspects of two important cultures, the Greek and the Roman, are particularly well-equipped to develop a diversified curriculum. Discusses current opportunities for maintaining this trend and developing outreach…
Descriptors: Classical Languages, Curriculum Development, Greek Civilization, Higher Education
Schulz, Max; Holzman, Michael – ADE Bulletin, 1981
Argues for a renewed integration of the humanities to ensure that the white-collar working class will be literate in the broadest sense of the word. (AEA)
Descriptors: English Curriculum, English Departments, Futures (of Society), Higher Education
MacPike, Loralee – Alternative Higher Education: The Journal of Nontraditional Studies, 1981
The Adult College Opportunity Program at California State College, San Bernardino, is described. Humanities core courses, which offer training in writing and thinking skills and practice applying those skills, are combined with a seminar series on adult development patterns and learning styles. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: Adult Learning, Adult Students, College Faculty, Higher Education
Benson, Ronald – Alternative Higher Education: The Journal of Nontraditional Studies, 1981
Humanities programs that involve citizens in discovering the relevance of the humanities to contemporary American experience are supported by the National Endowment for the Humanities through its state affiliates. State humanities agencies, catalysts in program design and delivery, and some programs are described. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: Adult Students, Agency Role, Higher Education, Humanism
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Vulgamore, Melvin L. – Liberal Education, 1981
The liberal arts college's role has always been education for intellectual excellence and technical competence, grounded in a sensitivity for the dimension of depth in human experience. As American culture becomes more urban and more secular, the liberal arts colleges must maintain their essential task of asking ultimate questions. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: Church Related Colleges, College Role, General Education, Higher Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Beckwith, Miriam M. – Community College Review, 1981
Drawing in many cases from documents in the ERIC junior colleges collection, cites examples of programs using four approaches to integrating the humanities into occupational curricula: interdisciplinary courses; specialized courses for targeted occupations, humanities modules in use and in production, and use of resource materials or people. (AYC)
Descriptors: College Curriculum, Community Colleges, Courses, Curriculum Enrichment
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Sergiovanni, Thomas J. – Educational Administration Quarterly, 1980
Examines how a social humanities (a mix of social science methods and the humanities) view of educational administration might take shape and provides an example of how such a view might be used to improve educational decision making. (Author/IRT)
Descriptors: Curriculum, Decision Making, Educational Administration, Educational Policy
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Reeves, W. J. – Science Education, 1980
Described is science content within an interdisciplinary core curriculum at the New School of Liberal Arts, Brooklyn College. The first two years of undergraduate work consist of art, literature, history, and science within a choice of five time periods. Also offered is a science and humanities course. (DS)
Descriptors: College Curriculum, College Science, Core Curriculum, Curriculum
Kirschner, Ann G. – ADE Bulletin, 1980
Among the results of a study of the employment of the 955 English doctorate recipients in 1978-79 were that 60 percent found full-time teaching positions, although only 46 percent of males and 35 percent of females received full-time, tenure-track positions; 12 percent found part-time teaching appointments or postdoctoral fellowships; and 16…
Descriptors: Doctoral Programs, Employment Opportunities, English Departments, Graduate Students
Toscano, Vincent L. – Improving College and University Teaching, 1981
The use of "The Adams Chronicles" series as a foundation for studying history is discussed. The programs were seen as providing an opportunity to create for the students an experience in historical study that would overcome barriers to understanding and enjoyment. (MLW)
Descriptors: Broadcast Television, College Curriculum, Course Objectives, Curriculum Development
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Graham, Peter – Liberal Education, 1980
To avoid becoming mere technicians of medicine, future physicians need to understand the human contexts of medical problems. Though courses in the medical humanities tend to range freely, the three disciplines most consistently drawn from are ethics, literature, and history. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: Ethics, General Education, Higher Education, History
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Snare, Gerald – Change, 1980
The decline of the liberal arts, as signaled by declining enrollments, fewer majors, and the ascendency of preprofessional education, is discussed. Business is seen to be retraining students in logical thinking, the principles of cause and effect, human communication, reading, and writing--all traditional liberal arts objectives. (MLW)
Descriptors: Academic Education, Cognitive Development, Education Work Relationship, General Education
Intercom, 1979
Explains how history lessons focusing on the individual in various situations can help make distant events and peoples more important and believable, and dispel stereotyped images. (CK)
Descriptors: Curriculum Guides, Educational Objectives, Elementary Secondary Education, Global Approach
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