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Kearsley, Greg – Educational Technology, 2002
Suggests reasons why online learning may not be appropriate for all situations. Discusses barriers for students, including self-discipline, initiative, and convenient access to computers and the Internet; barriers for teachers and administrators; suitability for course content; organizational and institutional barriers; cultural differences; and…
Descriptors: Access to Computers, Administrator Attitudes, Administrator Characteristics, Appropriate Technology
Peer reviewedAlison, Desmond – English for Specific Purposes, 1998
The author responds to criticism of an earlier article on pragmatism in the study and teaching of English for Academic Purposes (EAP). Discussion focuses on the relevance of political and cultural issues in design of the EAP curriculum and the need for attention to the communicative demands, both conceptual and discourse-related, that students…
Descriptors: Course Content, Curriculum Design, Educational Needs, English (Second Language)
Peer reviewedRusso, Charles J.; Delon, Floyd G. – NASSP Bulletin, 1999
Disagreements over teachers' First Amendment, academic-freedom rights in curricular contexts are again receiving judicial attention. Two federal cases involving termination of exemplary high-school drama and creative-writing teachers have upheld school boards' authority to control curriculum context in disagreements over permissable subject matter…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Boards of Education, Censorship, Controversial Issues (Course Content)
Burack, Jonathan – Education Next, 2004
The global education ideology detailed in this essay results in excessive breadth of coverage as well as a lack of rigor in the study of world history and the evaluation of other cultures. In its most concentrated form, it instills a deep skepticism about the political worth of the nation-state and support for a divisive, anti-western form of…
Descriptors: Cultural Pluralism, Learning Experience, Ideology, Cultural Background
Inquiry-Based Instruction: Understanding How Content and Process Go Hand-in-Hand with School Science
Chiappetta, Eugene L.; Adams, April D. – Science Teacher, 2004
Inquiry has been used to promote activity-oriented learning that reflects scientific investigation, specifically the observation, experimentation, and reasoning used by scientists. Understanding the roles of content and process in school science helps educators better understand and practice inquiry-based instruction. The relationship between…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Science Teachers, Science Instruction, Science Education
Khishfe, Rola; Lederman, Norman – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2006
This study investigated the influence of two different explicit instructional approaches in promoting more informed understandings of nature of science (NOS) among students. Participants, a total of 42 students, comprised two groups in two intact sections of ninth grade. Participants in the two groups were taught environmental science by their…
Descriptors: Form Classes (Languages), Grade 9, Teaching Methods, Scientific Principles
Bolgatz, Jane – Social Studies, 2005
"American history," writer James Baldwin told a group of teachers in 1963, "is longer, larger, more various, more beautiful, and more terrible than anything anyone has ever said about it" (1963/1996, 227). Children, Baldwin argued, have "the right and necessity to examine everything." In particular, they need to…
Descriptors: Elementary School Teachers, Race, Social Studies, Elementary School Students
Agostinho, Shirley; Meek, Jim; Herrington, Jan – Journal of Interactive Learning Research, 2005
A constant challenge facing university faculty and academics is determining how innovative and authentic elements, based on constructivist philosophy, can be manifested effectively in online learning settings. In this article, we describe an educational technology postgraduate course on evaluation that incorporated a scenario whereby assessable…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Online Courses, Constructivism (Learning), Distance Education
Kohlmeier, Jada; O'Brien, Joe – Journal of Social Studies Research, 2004
This manuscript reports the findings from a web-based, issues-centered project created by teacher education students for high school seniors in a government class. The university students compiled web pages that formulated an issue facing the Kansas Legislature and authored questions to be evaluated by the high school government students. The…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), High School Seniors, Web Based Instruction, Preservice Teacher Education
Fessel, Shirley – InSight: A Collection of Faculty Scholarship, 2006
Critical thinking enjoys almost universal support, except when applied to controversial topics. Yet it is these topics that are often the most effective initiators of critical thinking exercises that improve students' rational approaches to challenging problems. The use of controversial issues to promote critical thinking requires an institutional…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Academic Freedom, Critical Thinking, Educational Policy
Puccio, Gerard J.; Wheeler, Russell A.; Cassandro, Vincent J. – Journal of Creative Behavior, 2004
Creative Problem Solving (CPS), a well-documented methodology for developing creative-thinking skills, has often been the focus of studies that have examined the impact of creativity training. The purpose of the present study was to extend this line of research in two ways. The first objective was to evaluate participants' reactions to specific…
Descriptors: Creativity, Cognitive Style, Identification, Problem Solving
Giugni, Miriam – Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood, 2006
Religion, like Superhero discourse, is a contested topic of question and debate in early childhood education. This article draws on data from a small ethnographic study that took place in a long day care centre in Sydney Australia. The study examined how children negotiated their "identity work" in the context of popular culture. In this…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Popular Culture, Early Childhood Education, Christianity
Kunkel, Karl R. – Teaching Sociology, 2004
"Teaching Sociology" recently published several articles dealing with the use of computer-assisted pedagogical techniques. Many authors assess the effectiveness of specific computer-assisted instruction (CAI) forms by examining either student performance or student course evaluation. Typically one group uses some form of CAI while the other does…
Descriptors: Course Evaluation, Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Software, Sociology
Weld, Jeffrey; Funk, Lucas – Journal of Science Teacher Education, 2005
Inquiry Into Life Science is a content biology course expressly for the fulfillment of the General Education life science laboratory course requirement of elementary education majors at this university. The course is modeled on the Teaching Standards and Content Standards of the National Science Education Standards [National Research Council.…
Descriptors: Inquiry, Biology, Course Content, Preservice Teachers
Green, Ann E. – College Composition and Communication, 2003
By addressing race and class through the stories we tell about service-learning in the classroom and in our scholarship, I argue that we can more effectively negotiate the divide between the university and the community and work toward social change. (Contains 13 notes.)
Descriptors: Service Learning, Social Change, Story Telling, Racial Factors

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