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Abd-El-Khalick, Fouad – International Journal of Science Education, 2005
This study aimed to assess the influence of a philosophy of science (POS) course on science teachers' views of nature of science (NOS), perceptions of teaching about NOS, and instructional planning related to NOS. Participants were 56 undergraduate and graduate preservice secondary science teachers enrolled in a two science-methods course…
Descriptors: Science Curriculum, Science Teachers, Methods Courses, Scientific Principles
McKinley, Elizabeth – International Journal of Science Education, 2005
The international literature suggests the use of indigenous knowledge (IK) and traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) contexts in science education to provide motivation and self-esteem for indigenous students is widespread. However, the danger of alienating culture (as knowledge) from the language in which the worldview is embedded seems to have…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Science Education, Malayo Polynesian Languages, Indigenous Knowledge
Beeghly, Dena G. – Journal of Adolescent and Adult Literacy, 2005
The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect that participating in online literature discussions would have on the discourse and learning of adult students. Would electronic literature (e-lit) discussions promote grand conversations? Would students feel that e-lit discussions enhanced their understanding of what they read, and, if so,…
Descriptors: Adult Students, Adult Learning, Discussion Groups, Computer Mediated Communication
Arthur, Nancy; Anchan, John P.; Este, David; Khanlou, Nazilla; Kwok, Siu-Ming; Mawani, Farah – Canadian Journal of Counselling, 2004
The trend towards multidisciplinary research funding and partnerships brings together researchers with diverse perspectives. However, guidelines for effective supervision in multidisciplinary research are lacking. The New Canadian Children and Youth Study is described as an example of multidisciplinary, multi-site research involving researchers…
Descriptors: Researchers, Students, Faculty, Interdisciplinary Approach
Lehr, Ron – Canadian Journal of Counselling, 2005
The current paper uses information obtained from teaching practices to conceptualize how computers might be used to enhance the supervision of graduate counselling students (herein called beginning counsellors). Using Hill and O'Grady's (1985) list of counsellor intentions, the author devised a computer program called "Counsellor Assisted…
Descriptors: Supervision, Educational Technology, Computer Software, Computer Uses in Education
Barnes, George R.; Cerrito, Patricia B.; Levi, Inessa – Journal of General Education, 2004
This paper discusses the method and results of an evaluation of general education mathematics courses. Students at the University of Louisville were surveyed in the first week of the Fall 2000 semester to determine their expectations for their mathematics course. Student grades were examined to determine how student expectations related to student…
Descriptors: General Education, Student Attitudes, Mathematics Instruction, College Students
Birkholz, Alex D. – Journal of Vocational Education Research, 2004
The Wisconsin Technical College System (WTCS) engaged in an educational reform initiative by implementing the use of an accelerated instructional methodology. Rather than strictly compressing course meeting times, the WTCS required that courses identified as "accelerated" incorporate brain-based instructional tools and delivery methods.…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Supervisors, Student Attitudes, Educational Change
Azevedo, Roger; Cromley, Jennifer G. – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2004
The authors examined the effectiveness of self-regulated learning (SRL) training in facilitating college students' learning with hypermedia. Undergraduate students (N = 131) were randomly assigned to either a training condition or a control condition and used a hypermedia environment to learn about the circulatory system. Students in the SRL group…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Human Body, Anatomy, Hypermedia
Kalyuga, Slava; Sweller, John – Journal of Educational Psychology, 2004
The expertise reversal effect occurs when a learning procedure that is effective for novices becomes ineffective for more knowledgeable learners. The authors consider how to match instructional presentations to levels of learner knowledge. Experiments 1-2 were designed to develop a schema-based rapid method of measuring learners' knowledge in a…
Descriptors: Instructional Design, Knowledge Level, Schemata (Cognition), Measurement Techniques
Serlin, Ronald C.; Harwell, Michael R. – Psychological Methods, 2004
It is well-known that for normally distributed errors parametric tests are optimal statistically, but perhaps less well-known is that when normality does not hold, nonparametric tests frequently possess greater statistical power than parametric tests, while controlling Type I error rate. However, the use of nonparametric procedures has been…
Descriptors: Multiple Regression Analysis, Monte Carlo Methods, Nonparametric Statistics, Error Patterns
Bottino, Rosa Maria – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2004
This paper briefly outlines the evolution of ICT-based learning environments discussing some of the main aspects that have characterised such evolution (eg, technological evolution, changed cognitive and pedagogical frameworks, changed role assigned to ICT-based systems in education). The objective is to point out how the implementation of…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Educational Technology, Telecommunications, Information Technology
Concannon, Fiona; Flynn, Antoinette; Campbell, Mark – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2005
There is a trend in Irish universities to utilise the benefits of the e-learning as a mechanism to improve learning performance of campus-based students. Whilst traditional methods, such as face-to-face lectures, tutorials, and mentoring, remain dominant in the educational sector, universities are investing heavily in learning technologies, to…
Descriptors: Learning Experience, Educational Technology, Internet, Instructional Design
Bowman, Wayne – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2005
This essay explores the contingency of music's value, and the significant ways that contingency qualifies (or should qualify) our understandings of the utility of instructional method. More specifically, it raises the possibility that the altruistic pursuit of methodological purity may serve ends dramatically different than those espoused by…
Descriptors: Music Education, Music, Teaching Methods, Music Appreciation
Walker, Keith; Smith, Liz – International Journal of Art and Design Education, 2004
This paper examines the value of a task-based approach to engaging with original works of art and focuses in particular upon the experiences of a group of PGCE Art and Design trainees when they visited an exhibition entitled, Air Guitar: Art Reconsidering Rock Music, to carry out given tasks. The extent to which a task-based approach might…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Rock Music, Arts Centers, Art Criticism
Esser-Hall, Gabriele; Rankin, Jeff; Ndita, Dumile Johannes – International Journal of Art and Design Education, 2004
This case study takes as its focus the work of the Fine Art graduate, Dumile Johannes Ndita, who visually narrates his experience of life in contemporary South Africa. The artist graduated from Border Technikon, East London, an institution which teaches the narrative approach. It is the aim of the authors to illustrate how this method enables…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teaching Methods, Artists, Art Education

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