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Berkenkotter, Carol – College Composition and Communication, 1991
Examines the roots of some disciplinary quarrels (cognitive versus social perspectives and quantitative versus qualitative research methods) that polarize thinking in composition studies. Notes that these quarrels act as obstacles to reading and evaluating research and to training graduate students to conduct multimodal inquiry. (MG)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Graduate Students, Higher Education, Inquiry
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Monson, Robert J.; Monson, Michele Pahl – Reading Teacher, 1994
Presents an interview with Jerome C. Harste, outlining a broad view of the relationships and interactions between literacy, content, inquiry, and curriculum. (SR)
Descriptors: Content Area Reading, Content Area Writing, Curriculum, Educational Improvement
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Cherif, Abour – Science Teacher, 1993
Presents and discusses the following six questions to focus students' inquiry experiences: (1) What do you think will happen? (2) What actually happened? (3) How did it happen? (4) Why did this happen? (5) How can we find out which of these hypotheses is the most reasonable? (6) How can you relate the investigation to your daily life? (PR)
Descriptors: High Schools, Inquiry, Learning Activities, Science Activities
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Hay, Iain; Foley, Paul – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 1998
Argues that geography educators need to give greater attention to the teaching of professional ethics as part of their contribution to the education of responsible citizens. Introduces an approach that couples the case method with a jurisprudential inquiry model, asking students to resolve professional ethical dilemmas through publicly defensible…
Descriptors: Case Method (Teaching Technique), Citizenship Education, Civics, Ethical Instruction
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Barab, Sasha A.; Hay, Kenneth E.; Duffy, Thomas M – TechTrends, 1998
Educators are adopting learner-centered instruction in which students, facilitated by technology, collaborate with peers and engage in problem solving and inquiry. This article discusses ways to use technology in authentic learner inquiry as an information resource, content contextualizer, communication tool, construction kit, and…
Descriptors: Computer Uses in Education, Cooperative Learning, Educational Environment, Educational Technology
Spady, William G.; Schwahn, Charles J. – American School Board Journal, 1999
Total professionalism is based on 10 principles governing how individuals think, decide, and behave: connection, inquiry, focus on the future, clarity, inclusiveness, win-win attitude, accountability, improvement, alignment, and contribution. Possible board of education scenarios and dilemmas are presented to illustrate each principle. (MLH)
Descriptors: Accountability, Administrative Principles, Boards of Education, Elementary Secondary Education
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Allison, Jeanette – Reading and Writing Quarterly: Overcoming Learning Difficulties, 1997
Considers current research on students' intertextual encounters. Examines the relationship between intertextuality and inquiry learning and how developing pedagogy on the basis of these fields provides students with larger arenas in which to make intellectual connections. Evaluates benefits of multitext inquiry by describing how at-risk urban…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Class Activities, Dance, High Risk Students
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Parry, Gareth – Journal of Education Policy, 1999
The National Committee of Inquiry into Higher Education in the United Kingdom (the Dearing Committee) aimed to examine short-term problems and long-term development more efficiently than did previous inquiries. The committee's uneven engagement with research and academic literatures reflects general features of higher education's contemporary…
Descriptors: Educational Policy, Educational Research, Foreign Countries, Higher Education
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Reason, Peter – Management Learning, 1999
Defines co-operative inquiry as a radically participative form of inquiry in which all involved are both co-researchers and co-subjects. Introduces methodology in a layperson's guide. Reflects on the learning process of an inquiry group, especially the process of research cycling, importance of peer group, and the paradoxical self-reflexive…
Descriptors: Action Research, Cooperation, Higher Education, Inquiry
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Edelson, Daniel C.; Gordin, Douglas N.; Pea, Roy D. – Journal of the Learning Sciences, 1999
Describes five significant challenges to implementing inquiry-based learning. Presents strategies for addressing them through the design of technology and curriculum. (Author/CCM)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education, Inquiry
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Damnjanovic, Arta – School Science and Mathematics, 1999
Describes differences between preservice and inservice middle school science teachers in their attitudes toward the learning and teaching of science through inquiry. Indicates that inservice teachers hold more positive views regarding the process of inquiry and inquiry teaching than do preservice teachers. Contains 18 references. (Author/ASK)
Descriptors: Inquiry, Inservice Teacher Education, Middle Schools, Preservice Teacher Education
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Singletary, James R. – Science Teacher, 2000
Uses a hypothetical ecology problem in which students need to apply problem based learning for a town government. Explains how to evaluate student results. (YDS)
Descriptors: Ecology, Evaluation, Inquiry, Internet
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Garmston, Robert; Wellman, Bruce – Educational Leadership, 1998
Dialog leads to collective meaning-making and shared understanding by building a sense of connection and belonging. Skillful discussion displays rigorous critical thinking, mutual respect, weighing of options, and decision making that serves the group's visions, values, and goals. When school faculties develop these skills, they transform their…
Descriptors: Advocacy, Communication Skills, Discussion, Elementary Secondary Education
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Summers, R. L.; Woodward, L. H.; Sanders, D. Y.; Galli, R. L. – Medical Teacher, 1998
Explains why the research requirement of the resident curriculum should be developed around the scientific method. The method can be stated in the form of: (1) make an observation; (2) make a hypothesis; (3) test the hypothesis; and (4) reach a conclusion. When research topics are broken down under these main steps, residents can see a more…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Graduate Medical Education, Higher Education, Inquiry
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Glassman, Michael – Educational Researcher, 2001
Compares Dewey and Vygotsky on three conceptual issues that relate directly to educational processes and goals: the roles of social history, experience/culture, and human inquiry in the educational process. The differences in their approaches are illustrated by examining the educational models of the zone of proximal development and long-term…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Elementary Secondary Education, Experience, Inquiry
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