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Peer reviewedWilkinson, Collette; Peters, Laurenna; Mitchell, Kimberley; Irwin, Tracy; McCorrie, Kary; MacLeod, Martha – Nurse Education Today, 1998
In an introductory nursing course taught using a phenomenological approach, analysis of student narratives revealed their learning patterns moved from detachment to active participation. Stories shared by nurses in practice introduced students to the world of learning and facilitated their sense of belonging. (SK)
Descriptors: Active Learning, Higher Education, Nursing Education, Phenomenology
Peer reviewedMcManus, Evelyn S.; Sieler, Pualine A. – Nurse Education Today, 1998
Describes how a nursing school employs active learning in a nursing skills lab and in a physiology lab, increasing student motivation. (SK)
Descriptors: Active Learning, Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Laboratories
Peer reviewedCaccavo, Frank, Jr. – American Biology Teacher, 2001
Presents a course designed to effectively utilize active learning techniques to accent a more traditional style of presenting scientific information. Uses research-based principles and techniques to facilitate active learning. (SAH)
Descriptors: Active Learning, Higher Education, Microbiology, Nursing Education
Peer reviewedChaill, Christine; Silvern, Steven B. – Childhood Education, 1996
Examines practice play, symbolic play, games with rules, and constructions and their relation to Piaget's active education, the intentional social process of constructing understanding involving interest, experimentation, and cooperation within the play context. Recommendations for identifying the type of knowledge being constructed (physical,…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Cognitive Development, Constructivism (Learning), Informal Education
Peer reviewedLeamnson, Robert – Change, 2000
Recent research suggests that thinking of learning as an activity of the brain will lead to greater understanding of how and why students learn and how faculty can better facilitate learning. Discusses: genetic contributions; epigenetic growth; the synapse; stabilizing synapses; pedagogy; the role of emotions; kinds of learning; active learning;…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Brain, Elementary Secondary Education, Genetics
Peer reviewedSchmidt, Stan M.; Palmer, Courtney – Science Teacher, 2000
Introduces an activity on the rock cycle. Sets 11 stages representing the transitions of an earth material in the rock cycle. Builds six-sided die for each station, and students move to the stations depending on the rolling side of the die. Evaluates students by discussing several questions in the classroom. Provides instructional information for…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Earth Science, Geology, High Schools
Peer reviewedHeim, Werner G. – American Biology Teacher, 2002
Describes a card game that illustrates natural selection acting on random mutations with or without cumulative selection. (YDS)
Descriptors: Active Learning, Biology, Creationism, Evolution
Peer reviewedCronin, Michael W.; Grice, George L.; Palmerton, Patricia R. – JACA: Journal of the Association for Communication Administration, 2000
Claims that oral communication across the curriculum (OCXC) offers unique pedagogical advantages in three areas: (1) active learning; (2) discipline-specific application of communication; and (3) continued instruction and practice throughout college for non-communication majors. Provides a guide for administrators and faculty in developing OCXC…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Competence, Higher Education, Instructional Improvement
Kember, David; Leung, Doris Y. P. – Studies in Higher Education, 2005
Surveys at a university in Hong Kong indicated that graduates of discrete part-time programmes perceived significantly higher development in eight out of nine graduate capabilities than their counterparts in full-time programmes. Several possible explanations are considered and rejected. The conventional view that capabilities are nurtured through…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teaching Methods, Active Learning, Structural Equation Models
Hamdan, May – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science & Technology, 2005
Students find difficulty in learning linear algebra because of the abstraction and formalism associated with concepts such as vector space, linear independence, rank and invertible matrices. Learning the necessary procedures becomes insufficient, and imitating worked examples does not guarantee the maturity level necessary for understanding these…
Descriptors: Matrices, Educational Change, Journal Writing, Active Learning
Hill, Susan E. – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2004
This paper explores the use of the educational pilgrimage as an active learning strategy in the introductory world religions course. As we study pilgrimages from different religious traditions throughout the semester using Victor Turner as our theoretical guide, students also plan their own campus pilgrimage, paying homage to sites that help them…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Religion Studies, Active Learning, Theory Practice Relationship
Berkwitz, Stephen C. – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2004
This article responds to the exponential growth in academic textbooks on Western or American Buddhism by arguing that popular trade books written by Buddhist teachers in the West make more effective tools for teaching and learning about the growth of Buddhism in western societies. The use of such texts in the classroom provides students with…
Descriptors: Buddhism, Misconceptions, Textbooks, Critical Thinking
Smith, Janet S. – International Research in Geographical and Environmental Education, 2005
This paper examines how Geographic Information Systems (GIS) can potentially capture a student's imagination, facilitate active learning, and create a state of "flow" in geography classrooms. The paper is organised in four sections. First, the author provides a condensed overview to the major tenets of "FlowTheory." Second, a short discussion…
Descriptors: Geography Instruction, Active Learning, Information Systems, Imagination
Jones, Rachel; Fox, Christine; Levin, Douglas – State Educational Technology Directors Association, 2011
The State Educational Technology Directors Association (SETDA)--the principal association representing the technology leadership in all fifty states, the District of Columbia, the U.S. Virgin Islands, American Samoa, and the Bureau of Indian Affairs--presents its eighth annual report on select, national, educational technology activities. This…
Descriptors: Communities of Practice, Blended Learning, Dropout Prevention, Educational Technology
Shieh, Ruey S.; Chang, Wheijen; Liu, Eric Zhi-Feng – Australasian Journal of Educational Technology, 2011
This study explored the impact of "Technology Enabled Active Learning" (TEAL) on students learning general physics, focusing on differences between genders and among various achievement levels. A quasi-experimental investigation was conducted on two semesters of courses offered in 2008. Data sources consisted of pre-tests, post-tests,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Active Learning, Experimental Groups, Control Groups

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