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Kay, Sivia – Community and Junior College Journal, 1979
Discusses the audio-visual orientation of contemporary students and urges writing teachers to convert students' facility with aural modes into effective written discourse. Suggests that instructor comments on written assignments be made on cassette tapes and that campus lectures be used to stimulate student writing. (JP)
Descriptors: Audiotape Recordings, Community Colleges, Interdisciplinary Approach, Lecture Method
Kutchai, Howard – Physiologist, 1980
Presents a self-instructional package for medical students and graduate students and is intended to communicate the basics of ionic equilibria in a lecture format. The package deals with osmotic aspects of the Gibbs-Donnan Equilibrium and with ionic equilibria. (Author/SA)
Descriptors: Chemical Equilibrium, College Science, Higher Education, Instructional Materials
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McNamara, James F.; Johnson, Glenn Ross – Community/Junior College Research Quarterly, 1980
Describes a study designed to determine: (1) if professors use the lecture method exclusively; (2) if all disciplines reflect the same instructional patterns; (3) if students take an entirely passive part in postsecondary education; (4) other verbal interaction strategies used; and (5) if instructors at community colleges and universities differ.…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Community Colleges, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Lecture Method
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Furedy, Chris – Canadian Journal of Higher Education, 1979
It is argued that workshops for lecture improvement in higher education tend to concentrate on delivery techniques, whereas improvement programs should maintain a broad perspective on lecture useage, which might include consideration of the design of lecture courses, variation of teaching methods, and attention to student lecture learning skills.…
Descriptors: College Instruction, Helping Relationship, Higher Education, Improvement Programs
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Kipper, David A.; Ben-Ely, Zion – Journal of Clinical Psychology, 1979
Sophomores were assigned to a no-training control group or to one of three empathy training methods: the double method, involving role taking; reflection, where the trainee is asked to mirror back another's feelings; or lecture. All three methods proved effective, but the double method provided the best results. (SJL)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Empathy, Feedback, High School Students
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Long, Huey B.; Ashford, M. L. – Journal of General Education, 1976
Focuses on one kind of continuity in education by showing that our current interest in self-directed study and lifelong learning is not a new development. (Editor/RK)
Descriptors: Adult Education, Colonial History (United States), Independent Study, Lecture Method
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Dimitrov, Roumen Ivanov; Mateeva, Boyanka Tsankova – Journal of Chemical Education, 1997
Lists 36 topics that may optimize the effectiveness of teaching and learning in the scientific disciplines at the university level. Topics are related to planning for instruction, the role of a syllabus in guiding instruction, and interaction strategies. (DDR)
Descriptors: Chemistry, College Curriculum, Educational Strategies, Higher Education
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Hargreaves, D. J. – European Journal of Engineering Education, 1996
Describes the use of three questionnaires in assessing how students learn. Results of the study process questionnaire, the course experience questionnaire, and the learning style inventory indicate that lecturers need to change their teaching paradigm to one where the lecturer is closely involved in the learning context. (DDR)
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Course Content, Educational Strategies, Engineering Education
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Cardellichio, Thomas; Field, Wendy – Educational Leadership, 1997
Teaching strategies that overcome the brain's natural tendency to limit information can open students' minds to new ideas and creative mental habits. Seven strategies to provoke divergent thinking and deepen understanding are hypothetical thinking, reversal, application of different symbol systems, analogy, viewpoint analysis, completion, and web…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Creative Thinking, Divergent Thinking, Elementary Secondary Education
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Aybay, Isik; Dag, O. Oguz – Turkish Online Journal of Educational Technology, 2003
Discusses distance education programs in higher education and describes the Eastern Mediterranean University (Cyprus) Learning Management System which was developed while the online program was offered to on-campus students. Explains functions of the system, including user enrollment, course management, lectures, quizzes, announcements,…
Descriptors: Assignments, Comparative Analysis, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Distance Education
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Fritschner, Linda Marie – Teaching Sociology, 2001
Uses a relational approach to teach about race showing how it effects whites as well as people of color. Reveals differences in attitudes and feelings on race and age. Uses answers from nine questions submitted by each student as a basis for lecture and guided classroom discussion. (DAJ)
Descriptors: Discussion (Teaching Technique), Educational Strategies, Higher Education, Introductory Courses
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Bell, Steven – TechTrends, 2003
Explains Webcasts and discusses how they can be used for teaching. Topics include Webcast technology; streaming audio and video; bandwidth capacity; locating Webcasts, including search engine strategies for the Internet; using Webcasts in the classroom; similarities with other multimedia materials; expectations for students and faculty; and future…
Descriptors: Futures (of Society), Higher Education, Internet, Lecture Method
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Pyle, Jeffrey J. – Journal of Law and Education, 1997
If Socrates returned, he would find inculcation a ubiquitous feature of U.S. education. Students and teachers who dissent from the community's wisdom are still denied their voice. The ideal of genuine Socratic inquiry remains an elite proposition. The First Amendment, which should protect students' right to question long held assumptions and…
Descriptors: Court Litigation, Educational Benefits, Elementary Secondary Education, Freedom of Speech
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Hartley, James E. – Journal of Economic Education, 2001
Describes an introductory economics course in which all of the reading material is drawn from the Great Books of Western Civilization. Explains the rationale and mechanics of the course. Includes an annotated course syllabus that details how the reading material relates to the lecture material. (RLH)
Descriptors: Classics (Literature), College Curriculum, Course Content, Economics
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Rosenzweig, Roy – History Teacher, 2001
Presents an interview with Leon F. Litwack, a professor of U.S. history at the University of California, Berkeley. Covers topics such as what led him to teaching history, his lectures at Berkeley, themes covered in his U.S. history surveys, and his perception of good teaching. (CMK)
Descriptors: Careers, College Faculty, Course Content, Higher Education
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