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Peer reviewedRoberts, Terry – Educational Leadership, 2002
Describes Chicago magnet school's use of seminar discussion and classroom dialogue to nurture students' active engagement in the learning process. Draws on experience at a public magnet school in Chicago with a student population that is largely poor and minority. (Contains 10 references.) (PKP)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Discussion Groups, Economically Disadvantaged, Educational Environment
Peer reviewedDressel, Janice Hartwick – Research in the Teaching of English, 1990
Studies the effects of listening to and discussing different qualities of children's literature on fifth grade students' writing. Finds that stories written by children who heard and discussed higher quality literature were rated significantly differently on traits related to literary quality and genre development than those written by children…
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Discussion Groups, Grade 5
Peer reviewedMiller, Janet L. – Theory into Practice, 1992
Describes informal curriculum discourse in a group of graduate students and their teacher who met regularly to discuss curriculum theory and research; examines power structure and assumptions, discussing ways in which habitual responses, roles, expectations, and identities were constructed by intersections of personal, social, historical, and…
Descriptors: Collegiality, Cooperation, Curriculum Development, Discussion Groups
Peer reviewedBecker, Ruth R. – Reading Horizons, 1999
Examines four fifth-grade students' stances and their responses to a narrative text in three classroom activities--a peer-led discussion group, a story map activity, and written responses. Investigates issues regarding the accessibility of shifts in stance for the students. Calls into question L. Rosenblatt's construct of the aesthetic-efferent…
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Case Studies, Class Activities, Discussion Groups
Schellens, Tammy; Valcke, Martin – Computers and Education, 2006
Does collaborative learning in asynchronous discussion groups result in enhancing academic discourse and knowledge construction? This general research question has been researched in a study involving 300 students, working during six months in 38 electronic discussion groups. The transcripts of the discussions were coded and analysed to test…
Descriptors: Computer Mediated Communication, Teleconferencing, College Students, Discussion Groups
Neuss, Deirdre – Volta Review, 2006
This Canadian study reports on the experiences of parents whose children use cochlear implants and on their perspectives prior to and following the transition to Auditory-Verbal therapy. A qualitative case study design, framed in social-ecological theory, guided this research. Data collection procedures included a family information questionnaire,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Parents, Experience, Children
Bye, Lynn; Prom, Kim Boland; Tsybikdorzhieva, Bairma; Boldonova, Irina – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2006
This paper presents a model for using technology to help fulfill the Council on Social Work Education requirement for international content in the social work curriculum. The literature on including global content and using Web-based technology in social work education is reviewed. Special considerations for international Web-based discussions are…
Descriptors: Social Work, Internet, Educational Technology, Technology Integration
Guiller, J.; Durndell, A. – Journal of Computer Assisted Learning, 2006
This paper discusses findings from an extensive project examining gender, language and computer-mediated communication (CMC) in the context of undergraduate psychology courses. The contributions of 197 introductory psychology students (148 females, 49 males) participating in asynchronous CMC as part of their course were collated and coded for…
Descriptors: Gender Differences, Interaction, Computer Mediated Communication, Psychology
Ho, Chia-Huan; Swan, Karen – Internet and Higher Education, 2007
This study goes beyond student perceptions of online learning experiences, satisfaction, and attitudes, to examine the actual participation and dynamics that occur in online discussions and their relationship to student learning outcomes. A content analysis approach was used to investigate students' socio-cognitive processes in an online…
Descriptors: Grammar, Student Participation, Online Courses, Scoring Rubrics
Moni, Roger W.; Moni, Karen B.; Poronnik, Philip; Lluka, Lesley J. – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2007
The authors detail the design, implementation and evaluation of an eConference entitled "Biohorizons," using a presage-process-product model to describe the development of an eLearning community. Biohorizons was a summative learning and assessment task aiming to introduce large classes of first-year Human Biology students to the practices of…
Descriptors: Scientists, Student Evaluation, Focus Groups, Academic Achievement
Roberts, Tim S.; McInnerney, Joanne M. – Educational Technology & Society, 2007
The benefits of online collaborative learning, sometimes referred to as CSCL (computer-supported collaborative learning) are compelling, but many instructors are loath to experiment with non-conventional methods of teaching and learning because of the perceived problems. This paper reviews the existing literature to present the seven most commonly…
Descriptors: Student Evaluation, Student Attitudes, Cooperative Learning, Problems
Downing, Kevin J.; Lam, Tsz-fung; Kwong, Theresa; Downing, Woo-kyung; Chan, Sui-wah – ALT-J: Research in Learning Technology, 2007
This paper uses the case-study method to examine detailed data related to student and tutor usage of an asynchronous discussion board as an interactive communication forum during a first-semester associate degree course in applied psychology at the City University of Hong Kong. The paper identifies "what works" in relation to discussion…
Descriptors: Computer Mediated Communication, Online Courses, Associate Degrees, Interaction
Gröschner, Alexander; Seidel, Tina; Kiemer, Katharina; Pehmer, Ann-Kathrin – Professional Development in Education, 2015
For developing professional development (PD) programs, research suggests referring to effective components. In developing a PD program on classroom dialogue, we explored to what extent effective components could be addressed. We conducted a study with two groups. In the "Dialogic Video Cycle" (DVC), six German teachers participated in a…
Descriptors: Faculty Development, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Teaching Methods, Intervention
Rector-Aranda, Amy; Raider-Roth, Miriam – Research in Learning Technology, 2015
This article presents an educational action research study examining how one online, classroom-based role-play simulation offers middle school students the opportunity to strengthen their agency and voice. The Jewish Court of All Time (JCAT) is a web-mediated simulation designed for middle school classrooms where students take on roles of various…
Descriptors: Action Research, Role Playing, Simulation, Middle School Students
Sauntson, Helen – Language and Education, 2007
This paper reports on research that examines the use of acknowledging moves in the single-sex group discussions of 12-13-year-old girls and boys in their Key Stage 3 Design and Technology lessons. Within structural-functional models of discourse analysis, acknowledging moves are a discourse feature that perform the function of providing feedback…
Descriptors: Group Discussion, Gender Differences, Discourse Analysis, Classroom Communication

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