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Peer reviewedWallenstein, Barry – Journal of General Education, 1981
Discusses the public's lack of appreciation for poetry. Gives examples of poems expressing irony and emotions. Argues that poetry's philosophy, mode, and tone of communication make it difficult. Considers poetry's subversive, exploratory, and entertaining aspects. Presents detailed analyses of four poems. (DMM)
Descriptors: Figurative Language, General Education, Humanities Instruction, Irony
Peer reviewedLepkowski, Wil – Chemical and Engineering News, 1980
Traces the recent history of humanities-based science since the publication of C. P. Snow's "Two Cultures and the Scientific Revolution." Discusses the establishment of science, technology, and society programs in universities. Presents viewpoints of leading scientists and humanists, including Ilya Prigogine, Carl Rubino, T. S. Kuhn, and…
Descriptors: Humanism, Humanities, Science Education, Scientific Attitudes
Peer reviewedMillonzi, Joel C.; Reitano, Joanne R. – Community and Junior College Journal, 1980
Argues that, in spite of their unmarketable nature, liberal arts retain validity for career-oriented students, in that they expand the scope of knowledge, maximize reasoning skills, and encourage lifelong learning. Proposes policies to diminish the prejudices of liberal arts instructors and bring liberal arts departments and work-oriented students…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Education Work Relationship, Humanities Instruction, Liberal Arts
Paxman, David B. – Improving College and University Teaching, 1979
It is argued that the skill for understanding written texts, such as those of the humanities, is more important than facts and knowledge because it lasts after formal education has ended. Therefore its development should be the uppermost educational goal. A technique is suggested to aid college teachers in developing this skill. (JMD)
Descriptors: College Instruction, Educational Objectives, Higher Education, Humanities
Mitchell, Richard – AGB Reports, 1981
A professor of American literature ruefully reports on an interview with a student who will soon be a teacher. It is suggested she has been deprived of knowledge in the name of creativity, deprived of skills in the name of self-expression, deprived of understanding in the name of values. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: College Students, Education Majors, Educational Quality, Higher Education
Peer reviewedConrad, Clifton F.; Pratt, Anne M. – Review of Higher Education, 1981
Despite recent attention to liberal and general education, the fine arts and their relationship to liberal education receive scant attention in terms of curricular reform at the institutional level. It is suggested that the fine arts should be an integral part of the undergraduate curriculum. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: College Curriculum, Creativity, Fine Arts, General Education
Stern, Milton R. – Continuum, 1981
From the standpoint that the humanities represent a second change for adult students, the author addresses the issues of noncredit nondegree programs, the organization and funding of continuing education, and the promotion of humanities courses. (SK)
Descriptors: Adult Students, Continuing Education, Course Descriptions, Humanities
Peer reviewedMcAndrew, Donald A. – English Journal, 1980
Describes a series of procedures that can objectively measure student growth in interdisciplinary humanities courses at the secondary or college level. Preinstruction and postinstruction assessments determine student attitudes, responses to literature, art, and music, and knowledge of course content; midcourse individual conferences are also used.…
Descriptors: Course Objectives, Higher Education, Humanities Instruction, Interdisciplinary Approach
Peer reviewedZigerell, James J. – Journal of Aesthetic Education, 1976
The quarrel as to what part the "humanities" should play in education is not a recent one. Discusses a three-part study on humanities from the Center for the Study of Community Colleges at UCLA, funded by the National Foundation for the Humanities. (Author/RK)
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Educational Attitudes, Educational Research, Humanities Instruction
Peer reviewedSeixas, Peter; Brandes, Gabriella Minnes – Journal of Curriculum and Supervision, 1997
Sketches the interplay of authority and uncertainty that occurred during one year of an American Council of Learned Societies school-university collaborative project. Highlights the role of university scholars from the University of British Columbia's Faculties of Arts and Education. The new humanities scholarship's egalitarianism implicitly…
Descriptors: College School Cooperation, Curriculum Development, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education
Winkler, Karen J. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1997
Scholarly publishers are experimenting with the "electronic monograph," a scholarly book offered on the Internet. Several converging trends (declining university subsidies, increasing research specialization, tightening library budgets) are putting pressure on academic publishing in the humanities and social sciences. Publishers are not convinced…
Descriptors: Faculty Publishing, Higher Education, Humanities, Information Storage
Peer reviewedSchmiesing, Ann; Hollis, Deborah R. – portal: Libraries and the Academy, 2002
Analyzes the pedagogical rationale and learning outcomes for incorporating a special collections department in teaching humanities undergraduate and graduate courses. Presents a case study that highlights an innovative collaboration between a University of Colorado German professor and the special collections librarian and staff. (Author/LRW)
Descriptors: Academic Libraries, Case Studies, German, Higher Education
Chaffin, Nancy J. – American Libraries, 1997
Presents the 1997 U.S. Serials Services Price Index, produced by the Library Materials Price Index Committee of the American Library Association's Association for Library Collections and Technical Services. Finds a 3.9% increase over 1996. Includes eight tables covering U.S. Serial Services, business, general and humanities, law, science and…
Descriptors: Business, Cost Indexes, Humanities, Laws
Peer reviewedNixon, Lois LaCivita – Journal of Personal & Interpersonal Loss, 1996
Illustrates the value of interdisciplinary approaches to patient care by exploring visual articulations of suffering as rendered by one artist. Makes general observations about the nature of humanities courses offered to medical students and depicts a visual portrayal of an illness story representing personal perspectives about patient suffering…
Descriptors: Art Expression, Grief, Humanities Instruction, Interdisciplinary Approach
Peer reviewedPitt, Sharon P.; Updike, Christina B.; Guthrie, Miriam E. – Educause Quarterly, 2002
Describes an Internet-based image database system connected to a flexible, in-class teaching and learning tool (the Madison Digital Image Database) developed at James Madison University to bring digital images to the arts and humanities classroom. Discusses content, copyright issues, ensuring system effectiveness, instructional impact, sharing the…
Descriptors: Art Education, College Instruction, Computer Uses in Education, Database Design


