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Hannon, Paul D.; Collins, Lorna A.; Smith, Alison J. – Industry and Higher Education, 2005
There is a strong interest in knowledge-based economies in increasing the levels of graduate entrepreneurship. The role of higher education in this context is crucial in enhancing the motivation and capability of graduates to engage in entrepreneurial activity. However, traditional pedagogical approaches in business and management as applied to…
Descriptors: Entrepreneurship, Higher Education, Foreign Countries, College Students
Boyer, Leanna; Roth, Wolff-Michael – Environmental Education Research, 2005
In this article we describe an instance of free-choice learning in the context of an eelgrass mapping and stewardship project (the "Project") that covers over 500 kilometers of coastline in British Columbia, Canada, and involves 20 volunteer groups. In this ethnographic case study we sought to (a) explicate the relationship between…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Cartography, Maps, Informal Education
Peer reviewedLynch, Sherry K.; Kogan, Lori R. – Journal of College Counseling, 2004
This article describes 4 online workshops designed to assist college students with improving their time management, textbook reading, memory and concentration, and overall academic performance. These workshops were created to work equally well with imaginative, analytic, common-sense, and dynamic learners. Positive student feedback indicated that…
Descriptors: Workshops, Study Skills, Time Management, Feedback
Weisburd, Claudia – School Administrator, 2005
Many adults today consider the hours after school to be an opportunity for students to squeeze in a little more help with schoolwork. For most children, though, that final bell rings freedom. The last thing they want is more school, and faced with an after-school program that looks like an extension of their school day, they'll opt out.…
Descriptors: School Districts, Homework, After School Programs, Experiential Learning
Peer reviewedWetig, Saundra – Academic Exchange Quarterly, 2003
Outlines the development of a service-learning project between university students enrolled in an elementary Social Studies methods course, urban elementary students, their principal and instructional facilitator, and an Junior Achievement staff representative. Asserts that the elementary school students' experiences helped prepare them for active…
Descriptors: Colleges, Economics Education, Experiential Learning, Higher Education
Peer reviewedRomack, Jennifer L. – Academic Exchange Quarterly, 2003
Describes the attempts by one faculty member to assess the impact of service learning on student learning in a motor development class. Concludes that service learning has powerful effects on student engagement, but that faculty have to find new ways to properly assess those outcomes. (Contains 16 references.) (CAK)
Descriptors: Colleges, Exercise Physiology, Experiential Learning, Higher Education
Peer reviewedMcGinnis, Pearl Yeadon – Academic Exchange Quarterly, 2003
Describes Southwest Missouri State University's efforts to transform opera from an event that the audience simply watches to an event that stimulates life-long learning and interest in the arts for rural public school children. The project incorporates elements of experiential and interactive learning to benefit both the student performers and the…
Descriptors: Colleges, Experiential Learning, Higher Education, Instruction
Peer reviewedManning, Francis; Zuzel, Katherine – Journal of Biological Education, 2003
Cell death is an essential factor in many biological processes including development. Discusses two types of cell death: (1) necrosis (induced by sodium azide); and (2) apoptosis (induced by sodium chromate). Illustrates key features that differ between these two types of cells death including loss of membrane integrity and internucleosomal DNA…
Descriptors: Biology, Cytology, Experiential Learning, Higher Education
Peer reviewedChow, Esther Ngan-Ling; Fleck, Chadwick; Fan, Gang-Hua; Joseph, Joshua; Lyter, Deanna M. – Teaching Sociology, 2003
Explores the nature, dynamics, and implications of the Dialogic, Participator, and Experiential (DPE) approach to teaching and learning. Contrasts three dimensions analytically, and compares their interrelationships in theory and practice. Discusses three goals of the article. (Author/KDR)
Descriptors: College Instruction, Educational Strategies, Experiential Learning, Feminism
Larson, Renya T. H. – Teaching Artist Journal, 2004
Few universities or colleges offer courses in the Teaching Arts; even fewer offer formal degree programs in the field. What alternative models already exist for the training of Teaching Artists? And as educators build new models, what should be the core content, and with what scope and structure? This article explores these questions through a…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Teacher Education, Artists, Art Teachers
McKenna, Frank P.; Horswill, Mark S.; Alexander, Jane L. – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied, 2006
Skill and risk taking are argued to be independent and to require different remedial programs. However, it is possible to contend that skill-based training could be associated with an increase, a decrease, or no change in risk-taking behavior. In 3 experiments, the authors examined the influence of a skill-based training program (hazard…
Descriptors: Risk Management, Driver Education, Behavior Theories, Simulation
Enkvist, Tommy; Newell, Ben; Juslin, Peter; Olsson, Henrik – Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 2006
Previous studies have suggested better learning when people actively intervene rather than when they passively observe the stimuli in a judgment task. In 4 experiments, the authors investigated the hypothesis that this improvement is associated with a shift from exemplar memory to cue abstraction. In a multiple-cue judgment task with continuous…
Descriptors: Intervention, Cues, Learning Processes, Memory
Apsche, Jack A. – Journal of Early and Intensive Behavior Intervention, 2005
In his work on the Theory of Modes, Beck (1996) suggested that there were flaws with his cognitive theory. He suggested that though there are shortcomings to his cognitive theory, there were not similar shortcomings to the practice of Cognitive Therapy. The author suggests that if there are shortcomings to cognitive theory the same shortcomings…
Descriptors: Theory Practice Relationship, Epistemology, Symptoms (Individual Disorders), Self Control
Riordan, Diane A. – Journal of Teaching in International Business, 2006
Prior researchers have described how individuals prefer to learn with different types of activities. Vincent and others (2002) have reported that business students prefer kinesthetic and interpersonal modes of learning and prescribe their use in the international business curriculum. Based on their findings, this paper presents a compendium of…
Descriptors: Business Administration Education, Accounting, College Students, Student Projects
Wolmarans, H. P. – South African Journal of Higher Education, 2006
Business simulations provide a teaching method that typically yields (1) more hands-on experience, (2) a higher level of excitement, (3) a higher noise level (and yet a lower incidence of problems), and (4) more commitment than traditional methods of teaching (McLure 1997, 3). Business simulations are experiential learning opportunities that have…
Descriptors: Business Administration Education, Higher Education, Money Management, Experiential Learning

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