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Peer reviewedWeldhen, Margaret – Assessment and Evaluation in Higher Education, 1981
Despite the amount of work done in evaluation in the humanities, there has not been enough clarification of the kind of knowledge or experience that the humanities can yield. More of this clarification must be done before developing even more new evaluation techniques. (MSE)
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Creativity, Higher Education, Humanities Instruction
Lopushinsky, Theodore – Improving College and University Teaching, 1982
If science is emphasized as an example of human creativity, initial lack of student interest in science can be overcome. Numerous examples from history and art can be used in teaching science, an important step in reducing ignorance and apathy. (MSE)
Descriptors: Art Education, Higher Education, History Instruction, Humanities Instruction
Peer reviewedLouis, Kenneth R. R. Gros – Change, 1981
The target of present-day curriculum revivalists is the curriculum that came into being in the late 1960s. The purpose of the reform is to restore a sense of a shared or common culture among undergraduates and thus among the leaders of American society. (MLW)
Descriptors: Core Curriculum, Culture, Curriculum Development, Educational Change
Peer reviewedHoward, Judy Jeffrey – Community and Junior College Journal, 1981
Discusses an American Association of Community and Junior Colleges/National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) project, "Strengthening Humanities in Occupational Curricula." Reviews conference workshops, which presented model humanities education programs for occupational students and discussed methods for improving humanities…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Demonstration Programs, Humanities Instruction, Job Training
Cohen, Arthur M. – CEA Forum, 1980
Traces the magnitude of the turn away from the liberal arts in American community colleges and suggests ways that faculty members in literature and the humanities might accommodate themselves to this change. (HOD)
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Educational Change, Educational Trends, Faculty Development
Winterowd, W. Ross – ADE Bulletin, 1980
Argues that a paradox exists in humanities departments when such departments, which are the custodians and beneficiaries of literacy, fail to concern themselves with reading, writing, and pedagogy. (DF)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Educational Policy, English Departments, Higher Education
Peer reviewedWagschal, Harry – Roeper Review, 1980
The author proposes the development of a social sciences/humanities curriculum which addresses the special concerns of gifted high school students and suggests that the curriculum incorporate such elements as values clarification and reflection (based on students' own personal experiences). (PHR)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Curriculum Enrichment, Gifted, Humanistic Education
Peer reviewedSeeberg, Mark S. – English Journal, 1980
Reports on a four-year-old, team-taught secondary interdisciplinary program that combined English, social studies, biology, and geometry. The course was organized into three phases: (1) the "Paper Chase," teaching learning skills; (2) "Welcome to the Monkey House," which addressed fundamental human issues; and (3) "Phase Out," or personal…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Humanistic Education, Humanities Instruction, Interdisciplinary Approach
Peer reviewedHauser, Gerald A. – Communication Education, 1979
Argues that graduate education in rhetoric may become the central core of study in speech communication in the 1980s and may assume added significance in the humanities and social sciences. The reconceptualization of rhetoric as an architectonic and productive art will require a restructured graduate curriculum. (JMF)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Futures (of Society), Graduate Study, Humanities
Peer reviewedPenn, Mischa; Aris, Rutherford – Chemical Engineering Education, 1977
Provides general guidelines for shaping a course devoted to the interaction of sciences and humanities, especially for the engineering student. (MLH)
Descriptors: Course Content, Curriculum, Engineering, Engineering Education
Yeaman, Andrew R. J. – Educational Media and Technology Yearbook, 1997
Examines technology as a current professional issue and suggests strategies of interpretation from anthropology, history, sociology, and the humanities that will promote understanding. Highlights include a review of education and technology over the last century; interactions between society and technology; and recommended reading on the discourse…
Descriptors: Annotated Bibliographies, Anthropology, Educational Technology, Humanities
ADE Bulletin, 1996
Highlights the importance of new electronic technologies for the humanities and provides the basis for departmental and institutional support of modern language faculty who use such technologies and integrate them into their work. Provides guidelines for reappointment, tenure, and promotion reviews. (TB)
Descriptors: Computer Uses in Education, Computers, Faculty Development, Faculty Promotion
Peer reviewedHart, Richard L. – Journal of Academic Librarianship, 1997
A survey of faculty information gathering at the State University of New York, College at Fredonia found that formal sources (personal and college libraries, and interlibrary loans) were more important than informal sources (colleagues, and attendance at professional meetings) and that sciences relied more on journals and humanities more on books.…
Descriptors: Books, Faculty, Higher Education, Humanities
Peer reviewedWiberley, Stephen E., Jr. – portal: Libraries and the Academy, 2002
Examines data on prize-winning books during the 1990s from the American Historical Association, American Musicological Society, the College Art Association, and the Modern Language Association. Suggests that studying awards from the leading humanities scholarly associations can tell much about the disciplines, publishing industry, and library…
Descriptors: Classification, Humanities, Intellectual Disciplines, Library Collections
Broderick, Dorothy M. – Library Journal, 1997
A traditional librarian argues that there is no "science of information" and that librarianship belongs to the humanities not the sciences. Traces the replacement of librarians with "machine people,""digital theorists," and other "off-the-wall types" from the 1960s to the present. Proposes a course of…
Descriptors: Conflict, Higher Education, Humanities, Information Science


