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Wyatt, Sarah – Journal of General Education, 2005
Extending inquiry-based learning to allow students to develop their own questions and design and perform their own experiments can greatly enhance education. Students gain an appreciation of how knowledge is acquired and insights into evaluating data. Although easily applied to laboratory courses, the technique is also applicable to lecture…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Inquiry, Student Research, Higher Education
Martino, Wayne; Lingard, Bob; Mills, Martin – Gender and Education, 2004
This paper explores the effects of specific teacher threshold knowledges about boys and gender on the implementation of a so-called 'boy friendly' curriculum at one junior secondary high school in Australia. Through semi-structured interviews with selected staff at the school, it examines the normalizing assumptions and 'truth claims' about boys,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary Education, Teacher Characteristics, Curriculum Development
Lowerison, Gretchen; Sclater, Jennifer; Schmid, Richard F.; Abrami, Philip C. – Journal of Educational Technology Systems, 2006
This study investigated the role that computer technology plays in transforming the learning process in higher education. Specifically, we looked at the relationship between computer-technology use, active learning, and perceived course effectiveness. The sample consisted of 1966 students in 81 graduate and undergraduate classes at a large, urban…
Descriptors: Time on Task, Computers, Urban Universities, Active Learning
Peer reviewedDewprashad, Brahmadeo; Kosky, Charles; Vaz, Geraldine S.; Martin, Charlotte L. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2004
A clinical study was designed and used to show the relationship of health and medicine, in a typical clinical scenario, where many chemical principles are involved and that an integrated knowledge of chemistry and biology is essential to the understanding, diagnosing and treating of illnesses. A case study would be a positive learning experience…
Descriptors: Learning Experience, Active Learning, Chemistry, Science Instruction
Moran, Seana; Kornhaber, Mindy; Gardner, Howard – Educational Leadership, 2006
Education policymakers often go astray when they attempt to integrate multiple intelligences theory into schools, according to the originator of the theory, Howard Gardner, and his colleagues. The greatest potential of a multiple intelligences approach to education grows from the concept of a profile of intelligences. Each learner's intelligence…
Descriptors: Multiple Intelligences, Theories, Teaching Methods, Learning Activities
Balsis, Steve; Eaton, Nicholas R.; Zona, Denise Martin; Oltmanns, Thomas F. – Teaching of Psychology, 2006
Students in advanced psychopathology courses can learn key concepts by administering semistructured interviews designed to identify specific mental disorders. Such an active learning approach potentially can help students gain fundamental knowledge about psychopathology and begin to develop clinical and research skills. To explore the value of…
Descriptors: Advanced Courses, Psychopathology, Clinical Diagnosis, Interviews
Weisskirch, Robert S. – College Teaching, 2006
This article evaluates the use of instructor-created crossword puzzles as a means of reviewing course material. Students completed one crossword puzzle in class to prepare for an exam, and then they had the opportunity to complete a second crossword puzzle outside of class to prepare for the second exam. Students generally rated the crossword…
Descriptors: Puzzles, Review (Reexamination), Test Coaching, Active Learning
Peer reviewedOrvis, Jessica N.; Orvis, Jeffrey A. – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2005
Active engagement in the classroom is one of the best tools available for overcoming conceptual difficulties. Science educators agree that students of all ages learn more by participating actively in the interpretation of scientific phenomena (NAS 2003; NSF 1998). In this article, the authors describe demonstrations in class using paper wads as an…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Instruction, Demonstrations (Educational), Active Learning
Peer reviewedLuquet, Wade; Wetcher-Hendricks, Debra – College Teaching, 2005
The topic of social structure and interaction presents social science professors with a notable teaching opportunity. The active learning technique described in this article requires students to briefly analyze the statuses and roles of individuals with whom they are familiar. They then role play assigned characters as they would interact at a…
Descriptors: Social Behavior, Learning Processes, Interpersonal Relationship, Teaching Methods
Stine, Linda – Journal of Basic Writing, 2004
Basic writing students and online learning are not necessarily an ideal match. In hopes of stimulating more conversation and research on how technology can best advance the basic writing curriculum, this article first classifies the problems students and faculty encounter when a basic writing class moves online and discusses the pedagogical…
Descriptors: Online Courses, Basic Writing, Writing Instruction, Teaching Methods
Peer reviewedBudd, John W. – Journal of Economic Education, 2004
A Mind Map is an outline in which the major categories radiate from a central image and lesser categories are portrayed as branches of larger branches. The author describes an in-class exercise in which small groups of students each create a Mind Map for a specific topic. This exercise is another example of an active and collaborative learning…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Cooperative Learning, Economics Education, Concept Mapping
Peer reviewedHazlett, Denise; Hill, Cynthia D. – Journal of Economic Education, 2003
Outlines how students develop a price index based on candy-purchasing decisions made by class members. Explains that students used the index to practice calculating inflation rates and to consider the strengths and weaknesses of the consumer price index (CPI). States that the exercise has been used in introductory and intermediate macroeconomics…
Descriptors: Active Learning, College Students, Economics, Economics Education
van Vliet, Rudolf G.; Roeling, Monika M.; de Graaff, Rick; Pilot, Albert – European Journal of Engineering Education, 2004
Virtual project rooms (VPRs) may support collaborative project-based learning groups by facilitating project management, documentation and communication. In this study a set of experiments was carried out at Eindhoven University of Technology using the MS Outlook/Exchange software as a groupware platform for design-oriented group projects. The…
Descriptors: Student Projects, Cooperative Learning, Active Learning, Educational Technology
Alrutz, Megan – Teaching Artist Journal, 2004
This study explores a fourth grade classroom, hypothesizing about the possibilities for using drama to teach elementary school science. The case study provides one with the author's first glimpse into a fourth grade science classroom, as well as a preliminary examination of whether or not room exists for drama in the elementary science classroom.…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Elementary School Science, Grade 4, Integrated Activities
Slish, Donald F. – Bioscene: Journal of College Biology Teaching, 2005
This project involved the use of two small, closely matched non-majors introductory biology classes to test the use of the Jigsaw method of teaching vs. a passive, instructor-oriented model of teaching. In this study, the Jigsaw method was used as a jumping off point for the teaching-learning of the material. Students were to learn the concepts of…
Descriptors: Nonmajors, Science Instruction, Learning Activities, College Science

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