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McKenzie, Jamie – Phi Delta Kappan, 1998
Shows how schools can help students navigate the Internet's complex, often disorganized information landscape and decide about important issues affecting their lives and times. Students must become "infotectives" adept at framing essential questions, planning a cyberspace voyage, collecting pertinent information, changing course, exploiting…
Descriptors: Computer Networks, Data Collection, Discovery Learning, Elementary Secondary Education
Duwell, Mary J.; Bennett, Ellen – Understanding Our Gifted, 2000
This article discusses how laptop computers can be used in gifted education to create learner-centered environments, promote independent inquiry, stimulate creativity, risk taking, and development of passions, encourage complexity of ideas and higher level thinking, offer a variety of grouping options, and provide for flexibility and mobility.…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Uses in Education, Discovery Learning, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedO'Hagin, Isabel B. – General Music Today, 1998
Investigates the effects of the discovery approach to movement-based instruction on children's level of musicality. Finds that the students with the highest musicality were girls, demonstrated reflective movements and a personal sense of style while moving, and made sense of the music by organizing, categorizing, and developing movement ideas.…
Descriptors: Aural Learning, Child Behavior, Creativity, Dance
Peer reviewedDuck, Lloyd – Educational Leadership, 2000
To enhance effectiveness, teachers should analyze memories of successful learning experiences and teachers, share enthusiasm about their subject with students, blend plans for professional and personal growth, choose appropriate teaching and classroom-management styles, develop portfolios charting progress, participate in support groups, and build…
Descriptors: Beginning Teachers, Classroom Techniques, Discovery Learning, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedHolzl, Reinhard – International Journal of Computers for Mathematical Learning, 2001
Uses of Dynamic Geometry Software (DGS) are often limited purely to a verifying role. Presents a case study that emerged from a project in which DGS formed an integral part of the pedagogical arrangement. The study demonstrates how the contrasting power of DGS might be utilized in a guided discovery setting. (Contains 17 references.) (Author/ASK)
Descriptors: Case Studies, Computer Software, Computer Uses in Education, Discovery Learning
Peer reviewedLatham, Gloria – Australian Journal of Early Childhood, 1996
Children's natural propensity for wonder is important to learning. Educators play a vital role in keeping that sense of wonder alive; educators must not merely supply explanations, but must move young children toward solving their own problems through active exploration, discovery, and reflection--processes that are pertinent to our responses in…
Descriptors: Childhood Attitudes, Cognitive Development, Creative Thinking, Curiosity
Borgia, Eileen – Scholastic Early Childhood Today, 1996
Offers guidelines for creating and implementing an age-appropriate project that fits children's needs, interests, and surroundings. Using the example of a supermarket project, outlines the four stages of a project's development--preliminary planning, getting started, investigation and discovery, and wrapping up the project. Gives tips on learning…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Discovery Learning, Early Childhood Education, Experiential Learning
Stoskopf, Alan – Phi Delta Kappan, 2001
Inquiry-based teaching and assessment approaches are superior to standardized tests for measuring students' progress. Historical thinking skills employed in Leopold von Ranke's 19th-century seminars have been refined to consider point of view, credibility of evidence, historical context, causality, and multiple perspectives--benchmarks of…
Descriptors: Discovery Learning, Elementary Secondary Education, History Instruction, Inquiry
Starnes, Bobby Ann – Active Learner: A Foxfire Journal for Teachers, 1999
Presents the 1999 winners of the Foxfire Exemplary Classrooms Awards. The winners were diverse in grade level, urban and rural settings, years of experience with the Foxfire core practices, and ideas about how to implement the Foxfire approach. Activities and experiences from each winning classroom are highlighted. Criteria for winning an award…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Awards, Class Activities, Classroom Techniques
Harvey, Barbara Z.; Sirna, Richard T.; Houlihan, Margaret B. – American School Board Journal, 1998
Students at a St. Louis middle school experimenting with hands-on learning methods have scored consistently higher on the Stanford Achievement Tests than those in other district schools. A hands-on learning environment requires a thematic, integrated curriculum; creative, self-motivated teachers; and a supportive, facilitative principal. (MLH)
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Creativity, Discovery Learning, Educational Environment
Peer reviewedTownend, M. Stewart – Teaching in Higher Education, 2001
Describes an approach to engineering mathematics instruction that uses case studies, not as illustrations of applications after a mathematical topic has been discussed, but in a fully integrated, central role as vehicles for whole group discussion from which students discover the necessary mathematics, which is subsequently taught. Discusses…
Descriptors: Case Method (Teaching Technique), Case Studies, College Instruction, College Mathematics
Zhang, Jianwei; Chen, Qi; Sun, Yanquing; Reid, David J. – Journal of Computer Assisted Learning, 2004
Learning support studies involving simulation-based scientific discovery learning have tended to adopt an ad hoc strategies-oriented approach in which the support strategies are typically pre-specified according to learners' difficulties in particular activities. This article proposes a more integrated approach, a triple scheme for learning…
Descriptors: Grade 8, Discovery Processes, Discovery Learning, Simulation
Chrisman, Kent – Science and Children, 2005
Young children are born scientists, exploring everything in their world around them. Yet, many teachers still find it hard to integrate science into the daily schedule. However, open-ended science or discovery centers are a perfect way for teachers to help students develop science processes and build literacy skills while they integrate science…
Descriptors: Science Education, Problem Solving, Learning Centers (Classroom), Discovery Learning
Witham, Shelly Anne; Krockover, Gerald H.; Burgess, Wilella; Bayley, Bill – Science Teacher, 2004
Forensics can serve as the perfect vehicle for science exploration and learning. As part of a professional development workshop, teachers participated in various forensic activities. This article describes an archaeological dig simulation that provides the catalyst for an inquiry-based activity. In this activity, teachers make crime scene…
Descriptors: Inferences, Thinking Skills, Crime, Science Activities
Lee, Kevin M.; Nicoll, Gayle; Brooks, David W. – Journal of Science Education and Technology, 2004
This paper compares two protocols for web-based instruction using simulations in an introductory physics class. The Inquiry protocol allowed students to control input parameters while the Worked Example protocol did not. Students in the Worked Example group performed significantly higher on a common assessment. The ramifications of this study are…
Descriptors: Web Based Instruction, Physics, Comparative Analysis, Inquiry

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