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Peer reviewedColander, David – Journal of Economic Education, 1999
Summarizes four reasons for abandoning Keynesian economics and explains why the reasons should be disregarded. Argues that parts of Keynesian economics are worth preserving and teaching to students. (CMK)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Economic Factors, Economics, Economics Education
Peer reviewedReep, Diana C. – Business Communication Quarterly, 2000
Describes the author's approach to a MBA writing course functioning to connect the writing and oral presentation assignments to the students' current jobs. Notes that most international students lack an understanding of American business practices. Develops the assignments around what the students do know. Notes three assignments including a…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Business Administration Education, Business Communication, Higher Education
Peer reviewedFoster, John – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 1999
States that the received understanding of interdisciplinarity in environmental higher education depends on the environmental agenda that privileges positivistic assumptions associated with the physical and biological sciences. Contends that paradisciplinarity should be the aim in environmental higher education. (CMK)
Descriptors: Biological Sciences, Environmental Education, Geography, Heuristics
Weinberger, Armin; Fischer, Fischer – Computers and Education, 2006
Computer-supported collaborative learning (CSCL) is often based on written argumentative discourse of learners, who discuss their perspectives on a problem with the goal to acquire knowledge. Lately, CSCL research focuses on the facilitation of specific processes of argumentative knowledge construction, e.g., with computer-supported collaboration…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Educational Research, Persuasive Discourse, Cooperative Learning
Hirsch, L.; Saeedi, M.; Cornillon, J.; Litosseliti, L. – Journal of Computer Assisted Learning, 2004
This paper presents a structured environment for Computer-Supported Collaborative Argumentation, which we call the Argumentative Learning Experience (ALEX). The system aims to improve understanding of argumentation and to widen and deepen the space of debate among 16-18-year-old students. To use ALEX users make arguments by selecting and…
Descriptors: Learning Experience, Persuasive Discourse, High School Students, Adolescents
Elks, Martin A. – Mental Retardation: A Journal of Practices, Policy and Perspectives, 2005
"The Kallikak Family" is a pre-eminent text in the history of mental retardation and psychology in which Goddard (1912) claimed he proved the heritability of feeble-mindedness and the necessity of institutionalization. The book contains 14 photographs, some of which have been retouched. These photographs were interpreted in this paper within the…
Descriptors: History, Mental Retardation, Psychology, Photography
Seok, Bongrae – Cognitive Science, 2006
Since the publication of Fodor's (1983) The Modularity of Mind, there have been quite a few discussions of cognitive modularity among cognitive scientists. Generally, in those discussions, modularity means a property of specialized cognitive processes or a domain-specific body of information. In actuality, scholars understand modularity in many…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Concept Formation, Debate, Discourse Analysis
Peer reviewedWalker, Felicia R. – College Student Journal, 2005
While engaging in learning about roles of evidence, rules of procedure and case law, undergraduate mock trial students must also learn how to effectively communicate their evidence to the fact-finder. In mock trial, as in real courtroom trials in the United States legal system, communication skills and the ability to persuade are essential. This…
Descriptors: Persuasive Discourse, Logical Thinking, Competition, Law Related Education
Peer reviewedGreco, Joseph A. – Science Teacher, 2005
In recent years, forensic science has gained popularity thanks in part to high-profile court cases and television programs. Although the cost of forensic equipment and supplies may initially seem too expensive for the typical high school classroom, the author developed an activity that incorporates forensics into her 10th-grade biology curriculum…
Descriptors: Victims of Crime, Technology, Persuasive Discourse, Data Analysis
Meadmore, Daphne; Meadmore, Peter – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2004
This paper examines how prominent private schools in Australia are performing in a market context according to the tenets of performativity. From a discourse analysis of promotional materials that include prospectuses, advertisements, and school publications, it considers the "value-addedness" that these schools purport to offer. In this…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Private Schools, Accountability, Reputation
Bullock, Heather E.; Fernald, Julian L. – Psychology of Women Quarterly, 2003
Drawing on a communications model of persuasion (Hovland, Janis, & Kelley, 1953), this study examined the effect of target appearance on feminists' and nonfeminists' perceptions of a speaker delivering a feminist or an antifeminist message. One hundred three college women watched one of four videotaped speeches that varied by content (profeminist…
Descriptors: Feminism, Models, Persuasive Discourse, Physical Characteristics
Gibson, David R. – Social Psychology Quarterly, 2005
Speaking involves "linearizing" a message into a string of words. This process leaves us vulnerable to being interrupted in such a way that the aborted turn is a misrepresentation of the intended message. Further, because we linearize our messages in standard ways, we are recurrently vulnerable to interruptions at particular…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), English Instruction, Universities, Psychologists
Budd, John M. – Library Quarterly, 2006
Criticisms of library and information science (LIS) research abound and most focus on method, in the broad sense. This article examines the discourse on LIS from the standpoint of rhetoric and argument. Rhetorical and argumentative strategies are used in almost all formal communication, and these strategies themselves communicate purpose and point…
Descriptors: Information Science Education, Persuasive Discourse, Information Science, Library Research
Malis, Rachel S.; Roloff, Michael E. – Human Communication Research, 2006
Serial arguing has been linked to relational difficulties. We extend this research by looking at the relationship between demand/withdraw patterns enacted during argumentative episodes and aversive reactions after the episode has ended in romantic relationships ("N" = 219). We found that individuals who initiated the first confrontation often…
Descriptors: Well Being, Interpersonal Relationship, Conflict, Anxiety
Chajut, Eran; Lev, Shlomo; Algom, Daniel – Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 2005
The Stroop effect is psychology's classic measure gauging the selectivity of attention to individual attributes of complex stimuli. The emotional Stroop effect gauges the influence on behavior of threat and emotional stimuli. The former taps central/executive processes abstracted from particular stimulus contexts, whereas the latter taps automatic…
Descriptors: Stimuli, Visual Learning, Measures (Individuals), Visual Discrimination

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