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Henderson, Karla; Fox, Karen – 1994
This paper discusses 10 reasons why outdoor education research needs more and better methods and measures. These reasons encompass the following areas of discussion: (1) the researcher's theories and values influence the research methods and measures chosen; (2) measurement must be relevant to the phenomenon measured, and multilevel phenomena may…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Experimenter Characteristics, Holistic Approach, Outdoor Education
Vinson, Beth M. – 1992
Recent insights on how the brain functions suggest that people learn in holistic contexts, and that the brain does not work well when presented with isolated pieces of knowledge. A lesson for teaching third graders about letter writing illustrates how such insights can be useful in the language arts classroom. The goal of this letter-writing…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Grade 3, Holistic Approach, Lesson Plans
Quigley, Kathleen M. – 1994
Within the context of school improvement and school reform, it is important to examine Howard Gardner's theory of multiple intelligences (MI theory). His work has far-reaching implications for curriculum development and classroom implementation. Gardner believes that the culture defines intelligence too narrowly. He sought to broaden the scope of…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Holistic Approach, Holistic Evaluation, Integrated Activities
Buzzee, Linda L. – 1993
This paper describes coaching golf as an art and a science that requires the effective integration of the golfer's mind and body. In typical coaching situations it is presumed that the coach's task is to provide the student with a knowledge of the rules, swing mechanics, and course management skills. A coach's task includes much more, however. The…
Descriptors: Athletes, Athletic Coaches, College Students, Golf
Horwood, Bert – 1993
For education to make a lasting difference in people's lives, it must touch all dimensions of being human in ways that are integrated or holistic. Content and instructional methods, such as those of Kurt Hahn and Charity James, that are based on images of the intact human being see things whole from the beginning. But our school experience and the…
Descriptors: Adventure Education, Educational Environment, Educational Philosophy, Elementary Secondary Education
Gray-Whiteley, Peter – 1992
This paper attempts to reconcile the notion of a planetary future with shamanism, presenting the theme that any planetary future will be severely diminished unless shamanic experiences and outcomes are considered in the understanding of education. Methodology was based on participant observation conducted at a medicine lodge at Bengal Mountain,…
Descriptors: American Indian Literature, Educational Philosophy, Elementary Secondary Education, Holistic Approach
White, Fred D. – 1992
As Lewis Thomas has maintained, much of today's public anxiety about science is the apprehension that the whole is being overlooked by an endless, obsessive preoccupation with the parts, and this is a suitable analogy for composition teaching. Students and teachers alike tend to fret endlessly over minute details of writing, like grammar,…
Descriptors: Creative Expression, Creative Thinking, Essays, Higher Education
Davies, Owen K.; Seagren, Alan T. – 1992
Findings of a study that examined effective approaches to the professional development of teachers are presented in this paper. Methodology involved a survey of principals in New South Wales, Australia, and the United States; an evaluation of 379 inschool staff development programs in New South Wales; case study analysis of 8 New South Wales…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Faculty Development, Foreign Countries, Holistic Approach
Ediger, Marlow – 1994
The act of reading is holistic and involves acquisition of facts, concepts, and generalizations. With Instructional Management Systems (IMS) and state mandated testing, however, reading too frequently becomes a means of appraising the achievement of students in acquiring word recognition skills as well as diverse comprehension abilities. School…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Evaluation Methods, Holistic Approach, Individualized Instruction
Myers, Robert G. – 1990
This digest issues a call to make good on the rhetoric of "integrated attention to the whole child" and provides some suggestions about how that might be done, beginning with combined interventions aimed at improving the nutritional status and the psychosocial development of the young child. After an introductory chapter that provides a…
Descriptors: Child Health, Curriculum Development, Developing Nations, Foreign Countries
Heinemann, Allen W.; Shontz, Franklin C. – 1983
Conventional research strategies typically emphasize behavior-determining tendencies so strongly that the person as a whole is ignored. Research strategies for studying whole persons focus on symbolic structures, formulate specific questions in advance, study persons one at a time, use individualized measures, and regard participants as expert…
Descriptors: Coping, Emotional Adjustment, Emotional Response, Holistic Approach
Putman, Scottie – Innovation Abstracts, 1983
Improvisational gaming is a technique involving the use of theater and drama in the teaching of other subjects. The student uses intuition, sense-memory, and imagination in a holistic approach to learning which teaches social skills while it teaches subject matter. Everyone can act and improvise; getting everyone involved is seldom a problem as…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Dramatic Play, Educational Games, Elementary Secondary Education
Centra, John A. – 1986
Although college faculty may hesitate to evaluate each others' teaching, it is a sensible alternative to evaluation by students or by administrators. Peer evaluations are not only useful for improving teaching, but also affect promotion and tenure decisions. When faculty are rated by observation, repeated visits and rater training are required in…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Evaluation Methods, Evaluation Problems, Higher Education
Beer, Valorie – 1984
The purposes of this investigation were to describe the curricular elements of a museum and to determine if the framework for interpreting a school curriculum found in "A Study of Schooling" (Goodlad & Associates, 1979) is applicable to the informal curriculum of the non-school setting. Eight museums were studied; curators were…
Descriptors: Curriculum Evaluation, Educational Needs, Educational Research, Experiential Learning
Kontiainen, Seppo – 1989
This study intoduces a strategy for analysing different kinds of phenomena by building "information structures" for analysing how parts make a whole in complex systems. The strategy introduced may be of use when there is a need to understand complex systems or situations; e.g., in various studies of adult education when education is seen as…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Educational Planning, Educational Theories, Evaluation Methods
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