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Lamm, Richard D. – Academic Questions, 2004
Direct and honest speech has its place, and that place seems not to be at the University of Denver, at least when the speech concerns discrepancies in minority achievement. Richard Lamm's credentials as a scholar and former political leader carried little weight with the chancellor and other administrators at the U of D who adamantly refused to…
Descriptors: Freedom of Speech, Academic Freedom, Racial Discrimination, Academic Achievement
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Abbott, William; Nantz, Kathryn – History Teacher, 2001
If a person teaches a history course required of business or other non-history majors he or she may be confronted with student complaints that the subject is boring and of no use to them in the pursuit of their professional objectives. Because they do not know how to deal with history course material and are used to much smaller, denser reading…
Descriptors: Majors (Students), United States History, Social Sciences, Course Content
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Clark, Susan G. – Journal of Cases in Educational Leadership, 2004
This case addresses the events that unfolded after a high school teacher displayed a Confederate flag in the classroom as a visual aid to instruction on the causes and effects of the Civil War. Although the curriculum specifically required students to learn the meaning and use of symbols and provided for the use of the flag, and the principals…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Secondary School Teachers, United States History, War
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Whiting, Vicki R.; de Janasz, Suzanne C. – Journal of Management Education, 2004
Mentoring has transformed from traditional master-apprentice relationships into multiple developmental relationships that extend beyond functional, organizational, and geographic boundaries. The Internet provides one mechanism for proteges to identify mentors to help navigate career opportunities. The online mentor activity presented here requires…
Descriptors: Mentors, Course Content, Internet, Employment Opportunities
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Sheridan, Rick – EDUCAUSE Quarterly, 2006
Teaching an online course can be exciting, yet time-consuming to the point of infringing on an instructor's other responsibilities and personal time. Faculty typically put many hours into designing and administering an online course, especially the first semester it is offered. The author has heard many horror stories about the massive time…
Descriptors: Online Courses, Teaching Methods, Teacher Responsibility, Faculty Workload
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Gibbs, William J.; Olexa, Vladimir; Bernas, Ronan S. – Educational Technology & Society, 2006
Most colleges and universities have adopted course management systems (e.g., Blackboard, WebCT). Worldwide faculty and students use them for class communications and discussions. The discussion tools provided by course management systems, while powerful, often do not offer adequate capabilities to appraise communication patterns, online behaviors,…
Descriptors: Course Content, Management Systems, Web Based Instruction, Computer Mediated Communication
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Hamill, Shelley D.; Chepko, Stevie – American Journal of Sexuality Education, 2005
When does abstinence end and sexual activity begin? In previous generations, the continuum of sexual activity was well-defined in the old baseball analogy. Teens, parents, and teachers knew what going to first, second, or third base involved. For the current generation of young people, sex and abstinence are not so well-defined. As parents and…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Sexuality, Sex Education, Definitions
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White, John – British Journal of Religious Education, 2004
Britain is an increasingly secular society, yet religious education is a compulsory school subject. Is its compulsory status justifiable? Religious education was made compulsory in 1944 partly so as to support the moral values underlying democracy. This civic justification faded after the war, but even today one official justification of religious…
Descriptors: Ethical Instruction, Democracy, Criticism, Moral Values
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Koltay, Tibor – Education for Information, 2006
After providing background to Continuing Professional Education (CPE) of librarians in Hungary, this article outlines the content of a course that seeks to make Hungarian librarians familiar with free Internet resources that are usable for library technical services and reference. One of the most important topics covered in the course is the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Internet, Information Sources, Reference Services
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Dori, Yehudit J.; Tal, Revital T.; Tsaushu, Masha – Science Education, 2003
Teaching nonscience majors topics in biotechnology through case studies is the focus of this research. Our "Biotechnology, Environment, and Related Issues" module, developed within the "Science for All" framework, is aimed at elevating the level of students' scientific and technological literacy and their higher order thinking…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Biotechnology, Technological Literacy, Thinking Skills
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Waite, Cally L. – History of Education Quarterly, 2004
This paper examines the issues on whether Brown really desegregate school. Study shows that many cases of large number of segregated schools still exist today. This was the complexity of addressing this issue that makes teaching Brown a challenge. The 1954 Supreme Court decision--Brown v. Board of Education was the basis of their study for the…
Descriptors: School Desegregation, Educational History, Desegregation Litigation, Whites
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Bowman, Barbara – Young Children, 2006
In this article (the edited keynote address to the NAEYC 15th National Institute for Early Childhood Professional Development in June) Bowman defines the four different kinds of standards-for programs, content, learning or performance, and professional development-and explains her beliefs about them. Regarding content and learning standards,…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Professional Development, Early Childhood Education, Standards
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Abraham, John – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2004
As the evidence of the benefits of multidisciplinary education accumulates many schools and instructors are finding ways of hybridizing courses to include substantial components of what are otherwise distinct sciences. Often, such course development is done with an eye toward industry, which requires a workforce capable of synthesizing varied…
Descriptors: Sciences, Industry, Biology, Engineering
National Assessment Governing Board, 2009
This framework identifies the main ideas, major events, key individuals, and unifying themes of American history as a basis for preparing the 2010 assessment. The framework recognizes that U.S. history includes powerful ideas, common and diverse traditions, economic developments, technological and scientific innovations, philosophical debates,…
Descriptors: United States History, Democracy, National Competency Tests, History Instruction
ACT, Inc., 2007
End-of-course examinations are only as good as the assumptions used in designing them. What is a course's "essential" content? And what does it mean to master it? The end-of-course examinations developed by ACT are derived from assumptions that offer unique and challenging answers to these questions. This brief explains the process used to develop…
Descriptors: Test Content, Course Objectives, Test Construction, Readiness
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