NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Showing 346 to 360 of 1,018 results Save | Export
Troup, Wilson – College Planning & Management, 2002
Offers advice on furnishing a technology classroom, asserting that the overriding selection criteria must be quality. This is defined as furniture that functions smoothly and looks attractive with regular maintenance for up to two decades. Addresses eye appeal, versatility versus performance, and durability. A sidebar also discusses ergonomics and…
Descriptors: Classroom Furniture, Educational Technology, Evaluation Criteria, Human Factors Engineering
Rosenberg, Marc J. – Training, 1990
The United States needs a skilled, productive work force. The science of human performance technology can be applied to the establishment of performance improvement systems in organizations. (Author)
Descriptors: Adult Education, Human Factors Engineering, Job Performance, Organizational Development
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Betterini, Robert L.; Daniels, Jim – Tech Directions, 1995
Describes a class project to design a better and safer woodworking tool using computer-assisted design. (SK)
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Design, Human Factors Engineering, Secondary Education, Technology Education
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Waggoner, Todd C.; Barker, William J. – Technology Teacher, 1994
Offers a unit of laboratory instruction for a general technology class that looks at ergonomics--the engineering science that seeks to prevent disorders caused by uncomfortable or stressful working conditions. The activity involves the measurement of body motions. (JOW)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Human Factors Engineering, Laboratory Experiments, Technology Education
Kennedy, Mike – American School & University, 2001
Explains why the influx of computers into classrooms means that schools need to pay more attention to ergonomic furnishings. The health risks of poorly designed furniture are discussed as are the kings of furniture that work best ergonomically for computer use. (GR)
Descriptors: Computer Uses in Education, Furniture Design, Human Factors Engineering, Postsecondary Education
Kennedy, Mike – American School & University, 2007
In recent years, more education administrators and designers have embraced the potential benefits of daylighting. They have been persuaded that using natural light to illuminate facilities enables schools and universities to conserve energy and provide a learning environment in which students perform better. For daylighting advocates, the…
Descriptors: Natural Resources, Lighting, Building Design, Energy Conservation
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
PDF on ERIC Download full text
Spaeth, Sebastian; Haefliger, Stefan; von Krogh, Georg; Renzl, Birgit – Information Research: An International Electronic Journal, 2008
Introduction: Virtual communities play an important role in innovation. The paper focuses on the particular form of collective action in virtual communities underlying as Open Source software development projects. Method: Building on resource mobilization theory and private-collective innovation, we propose a theory of collective action in…
Descriptors: Innovation, Computer Software, Educational Technology, Computer System Design
Sagan, Carl – Natural History, 1975
The author of this article believes that human survival depends upon the ability to develop and work with machines of high artificial intelligence. He lists uses of such machines, including terrestrial mining, outer space exploration, and other tasks too dangerous, too expensive, or too boring for human beings. (MA)
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Bionics, Cybernetics, Human Factors Engineering
Shriver, Edgar L.; Trexler, Robert C. – 1963
Socratic Non-Anacoluthic Programing (SNAP) is designed as a simple way of producing programed materials (under certain conditions) rather than as a method for producing more refined programs. SNAP programing might be regarded as taking the questions and answers from the end of each chapter of a textbook and interspersing them throughout the…
Descriptors: Guides, Human Factors Engineering, Programed Instruction, Programed Instructional Materials
McHarg, Ian L. – 1971
The 1971 B.Y. Morrison Memorial Lecture by Ian L. McHarg, noted landscape architect, planner, and lecturer, is presented in this pamphlet. His expose is two-fold. "Man is an epidemic, multiplying at a superexponential rate, destroying the environment upon which he depends, and threatening his own extinction. He treats the world as a storehouse…
Descriptors: Ecology, Environmental Influences, Evolution, Human Factors Engineering
Yeaman, Andrew R. J. – Computing Teacher, 1987
Describes ways to reduce computer screen glare in schoolrooms with lighting arrangements originally designed for reading the printed page. Suggested readings are listed for additional information on the topic. (LRW)
Descriptors: Display Systems, Educational Facilities Design, Glare, Human Factors Engineering
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Diamond, Marion L. – Business Education Forum, 1984
Business educators preparing students for jobs in business and industry should become aware of the problems faced by workers in a typical large office environment. Word processor operators face many of the same problems as factory assembly line workers--lack of personalization, lack of incentive, and removal from the mainstream. (JOW)
Descriptors: Business Education, Education Work Relationship, Human Factors Engineering, Word Processing
Seibert, M. Angelice; Jacob, Martha Ann – Momentum, 1976
The response that this generation and the next generation gives to that most basic question of all, "What is man?," was the focus of this article. It attempted to make us aware of and informed of the topic. (Author/RK)
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Beliefs, Ethics, Genetics
Weisberg, Michael – 1993
Many of the findings from ergonomics research on visual display workstations are relevant to the design of interactive learning stations. This 1993 paper briefly reviews ergonomics research on visual display workstations; specifically, (1) potential health hazards from electromagnetic radiation; (2) musculoskeletal disorders; (3)vision complaints;…
Descriptors: Educational Environment, Educational Technology, Elementary Secondary Education, Guidelines
Wehrli, Robert – Building Research, 1974
Discusses differe nces between "soft" and "hard" conversion to metrication; what benefits or problems might be expected; the role of engineering standards; the role of modular precoordination as an adjunct to engineering standards; and how metrication might be turned to advantage for the users of buildings. (A paper presented at Building Research…
Descriptors: Construction Industry, Human Factors Engineering, Metric System, Modular Building Design
Pages: 1  |  ...  |  20  |  21  |  22  |  23  |  24  |  25  |  26  |  27  |  28  |  ...  |  68