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Peer reviewedSolmon, Melinda A.; Boone, Jerry – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 1993
This study examined the impact of goal perspective in physical education classes. College students in beginning tennis classes completed skill pretests and posttests and two questionnaires on task and ego orientation. Results indicated that goal perspectives were important influences on students' thought and action in physical education class. (SM)
Descriptors: Achievement Need, College Students, Decision Making, Goal Orientation
Peer reviewedEly, Mark C. – Music Educators Journal, 1993
Discusses the characteristics of a good vibrato in musical performance. Reviews four types of vibrato used by woodwind performers: (1) diaphragmatic/abdominal vibrato; (2) jaw vibrato; (3) throat vibrato; and (4) lip vibrato. Includes two charts with suggestions for teaching diaphragmatic vibrato and jaw vibrato. (CFR)
Descriptors: Bands (Music), Class Activities, Elementary Secondary Education, Individual Instruction
Peer reviewedTishman, Shari; And Others – Theory into Practice, 1993
Describes a dispositional conception of thinking, presenting a view of what good thinking dispositions look like and what they are made of. The article compares different models of teaching (teaching as transmission and as enculturation) and examines the extent to which they provide adequate guidelines for teaching thinking dispositions. (SM)
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Creative Thinking, Critical Thinking, Cultural Context
Peer reviewedSinatra, Gale M.; Royer, James M. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 1993
Differences in component processing skills of students of different ages and developmental changes over 1 year were studied for 96 students in grades 2 through 4 and 59 of them in a follow-up. Results trace the development of component processing skills and suggest a theory of the development of component skills. (SLD)
Descriptors: Age Differences, Child Development, Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes
Peer reviewedGourgey, Annette F. – Instructional Science, 1998
Describes self-regulatory processes that promote achievement in the basic skills of reading (clarifying purpose, understanding meanings, drawing inferences, looking for relationships, reformulating text) and mathematical problem solving (clarifying problem goals, understanding concepts, applying knowledge, monitoring progress). Experiences in…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Basic Skills, Higher Education, Learning Processes
Peer reviewedMartin, Graham A.; Double, Jeremy M. – Innovations in Education and Training International, 1998
Considers an action-based approach to the development of teaching skills in higher education through peer observation and collaborative reflection. The central features of a three-phase process model are described and explored, and the preliminary results of a pilot scheme at the University of Bradford (United Kingdom) are reported. (Author/LRW)
Descriptors: Classroom Observation Techniques, Experiential Learning, Feedback, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedCosh, Jill – Innovations in Education and Training International, 1998
Examines some popular models of peer observation and their potential drawbacks and discusses the implementation of a more active and reflective model, where the focus is less on the observed and more on the active self-development of the observer. Relevance to staff development is also considered. (LRW)
Descriptors: Classroom Observation Techniques, Experiential Learning, Feedback, Higher Education
Peer reviewedOrban, Clara – Italica, 1997
Discusses the problems faced by teachers of third-year (i.e. advanced) Italian language courses, particularly in developing students' speaking skills. Stresses the importance of "real talk" and discusses relevant student activities such as interviewing native speakers, preparing live radio broadcasts, and videotaping students speeches and…
Descriptors: Advanced Students, Broadcast Journalism, Higher Education, Interviews
Peer reviewedNaidu, Som; Oliver, Mary – Journal of Distance Education, 1996
Describes a course developed at the University of Southern Queensland (Australia) that used problem-based learning within a computer-supported collaborative environment to give undergraduate nursing students practice in developing decision-making skills. The use of computer-mediated communication is also discussed. (LRW)
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Mediated Communication, Curriculum Development, Decision Making
Peer reviewedYucht, Alice – Teacher Librarian, 1999
Describes "FLIP IT," a process developed to help a seventh-grade class succeed at information problem solving by analyzing and defining the research process. Explains the mnemonic, FLIP IT, as focusing on the topic, locating appropriate resources, investigating and implementing the information, and producing results while using intelligent…
Descriptors: Grade 7, Information Retrieval, Information Skills, Junior High Schools
Peer reviewedKneale, Pauline E. – Journal of Geography in Higher Education, 1998
Addresses geography students' questions about why, when, and how to take notes. Outlines a step-by-step process for taking notes from written sources and from class lectures. Discusses what types of notes are appropriate for various types of sources. Suggests some ideas for making notes useful for individual learning styles. (DSK)
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, College Students, Geography Instruction, Higher Education
Peer reviewedGoldfinch, Judy; Laybourn, Phyllis; MacLeod, Lucy; Stewart, Sheila – Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 1999
A project involved employers in the development of teamwork skills of undergraduate accounting students, with the aims of increasing student awareness of group dynamics and processes, and promoting more effective group work. Employers observed students working in small groups and provided feedback on skills. Students, staff, and employers were…
Descriptors: Accounting, College Students, Educational Strategies, Feedback
Peer reviewedGrayson, J. Paul – Canadian Journal of Higher Education, 1999
Argues that while the best method for measuring "value added" to skills (e.g., critical and communication skills) by the university experience is through longitudinal analyses using both subjective and objective measures of skills with appropriate control groups, a more feasible strategy used at York University (Ontario) compares the…
Descriptors: College Outcomes Assessment, College Students, Communication Skills, Critical Thinking
Wright, Helen – MCT--Multicultural Teaching, 1999
Studied the development of writing skills as a way to raise academic achievement for four year-6 ethnic minority students in an English classroom. Identifies strategies that increased achievement and confidence of students and parent participation in their schooling. (SLD)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Elementary School Students, English, Ethnic Groups
Peer reviewedFeasey, Rosemary; Siraj-Blatchford, John – Education in Science, 1999
Describes the Key Skills, which will be established across the revised National Curriculum being introduced by the British government in September 2000. Discusses ways in which the Key Skills--communication, information and communication technology, application of number, problem solving, working with others, and improving own learning and…
Descriptors: British National Curriculum, Communication Skills, Communications, Core Curriculum


