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Peer reviewedFaughnan, John G.; Elson, Robert – Academic Medicine, 1998
Drawing on academic studies and on personal clinical and industry experiences, argues that ubiquitous, simple network computing and "power tools" for managing medical knowledge are coming to medicine in the near future. Implications are drawn for how medical school curricula cover issues such as patient confidentiality, systems thinking and error…
Descriptors: Clinical Teaching (Health Professions), Computer Networks, Confidential Records, Confidentiality
Peer reviewedShepherd, Anne; Cosgriff, Bryna – Journal of Planning Education and Research, 1998
Details the process of implementing problem-based learning in the classroom, illustrated by a planning course. Problem-based learning is a promising method that helps students acquire the skills and knowledge to be more effective practitioners by tackling real-world problems. The instructor, as cognitive coach, ensures that students are active,…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Administrator Education, Classroom Techniques, College Instruction
Peer reviewedPapa, Frank J.; Harasym, Peter H. – Academic Medicine, 1999
Identifies and characterizes five major curricular-reform movements in North American medical education since 1765: the apprenticeship-based model; a discipline-based model; the organ-system-based model; the problem-based model; and a clinical-presentation model. Discusses principles and practices and disadvantages and advantages of each. (MSE)
Descriptors: Allied Health Occupations Education, Apprenticeships, Clinical Experience, Cognitive Psychology
Peer reviewedEvangelidis-Sakellson, Vicky – Journal of Dental Education, 1999
Columbia University (New York) dental-school study examined educational/patient care effects of changing from a numerical requirements-driven clinical curriculum to a comprehensive-care model driven by patient needs and led by faculty group leaders. Results suggest a significant increase in number of treatment plans completed by students, with no…
Descriptors: Allied Health Occupations Education, Case Studies, Clinical Experience, College Faculty
Atlas, James – New Yorker, 1999
Describes a visit to the Harvard University (Massachusetts) business school to examine how its curriculum and instruction have responded to economic, social, and technological changes in the business world. Focus is on the use of the case method and classroom discussion as central teaching techniques and the value of program participation to…
Descriptors: Business Administration Education, Case Method (Teaching Technique), Classroom Environment, College Environment
Peer reviewedJonassen, Julie A.; Pugnaire, Michele P.; Mazor, Kathleen; Regan, Mary Beth; Jacobson, Eric W.; Gammon, Wendy; Doepel, David G.; Cohen, Andrew J. – Academic Medicine, 1999
A study investigated the effectiveness of two- and 3.5-day domestic-violence interclerkships in improving the knowledge, attitudes, and skills of two successive cohorts of University of Massachusetts third-year medical students. Participating students immediately and significantly improved in each of these areas and fully or partially sustained…
Descriptors: Allied Health Occupations Education, Curriculum Design, Family Violence, Higher Education
Peer reviewedDunn, Mary Anna – Educational Leadership, 2000
Established in 1973, a progressive Charlotte, North Carolina, elementary school has been subjected to trends and pressures (particularly the back-to-basics and direct- instruction movements) that threatened its integrity and survival. Irwin Avenue must cover citywide academic objectives, but organizes its curriculum around themes and active,…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Back to Basics, Curriculum Design, Diversity (Student)
Strickland, Kathleen; Strickland, James – English Teachers' Journal (Israel), 1997
Defines and clarifies the whole-language approach to second-language instruction, discussing the process of shifting to the whole-language approach, use of the approach in secondary schools, and using student interests to shape the curriculum. A chart contrasts elements of the transmission philosophy of the traditional classroom and the…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Classroom Environment, Classroom Techniques, Comparative Analysis
White, Charles R. – Metropolitan Universities: An International Forum, 1998
Urban and metropolitan college students often experience a traditionally organized curriculum as a series of disconnected course requirements. Portland State University (Oregon) has found that integrating attention to community-building as a central element of the core curriculum strengthened student and faculty affiliations and improved…
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, Case Studies, Classroom Environment, College Curriculum
Peer reviewedBrewer, Gene A.; Facer, Rex L., II; O'Toole, Laurence J., Jr.; Douglas, James W. – Journal of Public Affairs Education, 1998
Reports results of a 1995 survey of 56 doctoral programs in public administration and public affairs, finding that public administration is a fragmented, interdisciplinary field, but many doctoral programs are training students for research careers. A lingering concern is whether these innovations are making a difference in the quantity and…
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Doctoral Programs, Educational Trends, Graduate Study
Peer reviewedReese, Andy C.; Mobley, Mary F. – Innovative Higher Education, 1996
Principles of quality management, focusing on defect prevention rather than correction, were applied to the design of a graduate biomedicine course in immunology. The principles require clearly stated course mission and objectives, numerous intermediate steps to achieving objectives, immediate feedback on student performance, and immediate…
Descriptors: Behavioral Objectives, Classroom Techniques, College Instruction, Course Organization
Peer reviewedMoore, Helen – Linguistics and Education, 1996
Discusses new approaches in assessment development and describes two examples of English-as-a-Second-Language assessment recently developed in Australia. The article places these approaches within the context of state responses to linguistic and cultural diversity and demonstrates the implications of the differences between them. (85 references)…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Context Effect, Curriculum Design, Discourse Analysis
Peer reviewedLondon, Norrel A. – Comparative Education, 2002
An ethnohistorical study of a small rural elementary school in Trinidad and Tobago during the colonial period (1931-53) examines four ideologies--mental discipline, social efficiency, humanism, and child study--that underlay curriculum planning and pedagogical practices and converged to maintain the colonial state. The postcolonial persistence of…
Descriptors: Colonialism, Curriculum Design, Educational History, Educational Practices
Smith, Rachel; Terry, Andy; Vibhakar, Ashvin – Journal of Teaching in International Business, 2006
In the increasingly complex and competitive global marketplace, many students seek to gain multiple skills and credentials that can aid them in their career goals. One such career strategy weds a general overarching comprehensive degree with a specific and targeted skill set. This paper provides a viable curriculum path for students who seek…
Descriptors: Credentials, International Trade, Global Approach, Business Administration Education
Harrisson, Elizabeth G. – Journal of Postsecondary Education and Disability, 2006
Both learner-centered education (LCE) and universal design (UD) require an instructor to be constantly reflective and flexible. But although both focus on the needs of different types of learners, until now LCE has not explicitly included students with disabilities within the array of learners it seeks to serve. And the UD movement, while it…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Special Needs Students, Curriculum Development, Student Needs

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