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Peer reviewedParilla, Robert E. – College Teaching, 1987
The issue of the relationship between teaching and scholarship in the community college is discussed and a revival of scholarly activities at the community college is argued. A program to encourage faculty scholarship at Montgomery College, Rockville, Maryland, is described. (MLW)
Descriptors: College Faculty, College Instruction, Community Colleges, Higher Education
Peer reviewedGlidden, Jock; Kurfiss, Joanne Gainen – College Teaching, 1990
In a method called "cooperative controversy," students team up to study controversial subjects, then synthesize their findings. In a philosophy course, small-groups work on a specific philosophical problem. Group work was as effective as traditional lecture in three cases and more effective in two cases. (MLW)
Descriptors: College Instruction, Cooperative Learning, Group Discussion, Higher Education
Peer reviewedStaats, William L. – College Teaching, 1991
In response to high attrition in accounting courses, Hudson Valley Community College began a "late start" program for students otherwise inclined to drop or fail the course, in which students can begin again up to four weeks after the semester is under way, at no cost. Results have been encouraging. (MSE)
Descriptors: Accounting, College Instruction, Community Colleges, Higher Education
Peer reviewedShreeve, William C.; And Others – College Teaching, 1988
In a new model for marketing teaching education, the Eastern Washington University Department of Education has devised a program that uses research and publication to encourage better teaching, more interaction with the community, and improved communication at all levels of the education system. (MLW)
Descriptors: College Curriculum, College Faculty, Higher Education, Marketing
Peer reviewedHenry, Louis H. – College Teaching, 1986
Little effort has been made to combine the "writing-to-oneself" process with an exercise in creative thinking as an effective way to teach any subject or to learn a given subject. A program to combine writing and a creativity exercise to foster learning for students studying basic economics is described. (MLW)
Descriptors: College Instruction, Economics, Expressive Language, Higher Education
Peer reviewedHobbs, Valerie; Rex-Kerish, Lesley – College Teaching, 1986
University of California writing instructors must teach poorly prepared freshmen how to survive English classes and how to adapt the skills they learn to the rest of their university writing assignments. Reading, thinking, organizing, and stylistic problems are discussed. (MLW)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Freshmen, College Instruction, Higher Education
Peer reviewedAnthes, Susan H.; Crowe, Lawson – College Teaching, 1987
A collaborative course, "The Human Encounter with Alcohol," offered to freshmen at the University of Colorado College of Arts and Sciences is described. The idea was to offer a subject that would intellectually interest students, as well as provide a subject suitable for freshmen level library research. (MLW)
Descriptors: Alcohol Education, Bibliographies, College Freshmen, College Instruction
Peer reviewedRollins, Sidney P. – College Teaching, 1987
Through the use of a marketing model to begin an instructional development program at Bryant College, Smithfield, Rhode Island, more than 50 percent of the faculty have been involved after only one year. Sources of the model, the model and communications, and implementing a marketing model are discussed. (MLW)
Descriptors: College Faculty, College Instruction, Communication (Thought Transfer), Faculty Development
Peer reviewedFinkel, Judith S.; Bollin, Gail G. – College Teaching, 1996
A process engaged in by the West Chester University (Pennsylvania) teacher education program began with a faculty seminar on racial, class, and gender identity and culminated in the redesign of courses in special education and child development. Theory of the stages of racial identity formation proved useful in interpreting both faculty and…
Descriptors: Child Development, College Instruction, Curriculum Development, Faculty Development
Peer reviewedWolfe, Christopher R. – College Teaching, 1993
The Miami University (Ohio) School of Interdisciplinary Studies has implemented a program of quantitative thinking across the curriculum. Four aspects of quantitative reasoning (learning from data, quantitative expression, evidence and assertions, and quantitative intuition) are developed in the core curriculum as a foundation for further…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, College Instruction, Core Curriculum, Higher Education
Peer reviewedMcHugh, Frank; And Others – College Teaching, 1986
Eastern Michigan University's opportunity program for underprepared students, called the Promote Academic Survival and Success (PASS) program, is described. The improvement of the students' reading and writing skills was emphasized. This was seen as the most direct way for the students' to achieve academic competence and self-integration. (MLW)
Descriptors: College Instruction, English Instruction, High Risk Students, Higher Education
Peer reviewedToppins, Anne Davis – College Teaching, 1987
A unit on adult learning with an exercise based on the theories of Malcolm Knowles and Allen Tough is described. After students in the class see that they actually planned and directed much of their significant adult learning, they are eager to join in the process of modifying course objectives. (MLW)
Descriptors: Adult Learning, College Instruction, Course Objectives, Graduate Students
Peer reviewedHenschen, Beth M.; Sidlow, Edward I. – College Teaching, 1990
A project at Loyola University of Chicago and Northwestern University has three teams of two students each write papers and present them at a joint meeting. One team from a university writes in support of a particular side, while its counterpart at the other university takes the opposite view. (MLW)
Descriptors: Collaborative Writing, Cooperative Learning, Higher Education, Institutional Cooperation
Peer reviewedCohen, Kenneth – College Teaching, 1991
The development and structure of 6 interdisciplinary world civilization courses by 14 faculty at San Jose State University are described. The curriculum provides a framework for investigation of common problems facing all cultures, analysis and assessment of attempted solutions, successful and unsuccessful, and evaluation of contemporary attempts…
Descriptors: College Instruction, Course Organization, Curriculum Development, General Education
Peer reviewedCowan, Michael A.; And Others – College Teaching, 1995
Three courses in the adult education division of Loyola University (Louisiana) combined religious studies and literature appreciation using an interdisciplinary, team-taught approach. Instruction was guided by the metaphor of conversation, first through collegial discussion of the ideas underlying the courses and later, in the classroom, in the…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Assignments, Classroom Communication, Classroom Techniques
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