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Kneller, George F. – 1984
The study of education is such an important undertaking it should be a regular part of the curriculum for all students, not just those preparing to be teachers. An ideal syllabus would comprise four main areas of education, interconnected with aspects of four disciplines. The areas would be: education's relation to the culture and subcultures;…
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Educational Anthropology, Educational History, Educational Philosophy
Cromwell, Ronald – 1993
A study was conducted to better understand creative visioning, the human ability to make connections. Interviews were conducted with 20 Seattle (Washington) residents, each of whom was involved in creativity or creative visioning. The sample defined creative visioning as a process which encourages the pursuit of new possibilities, dimensions, and…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Creative Activities, Creative Development, Creative Teaching
Rivers, Thomas M. – 1983
As communication is a moral action involving personal choice, composition instructors must help promote their students' character development. Whether during audience analysis, invention, or disposition, composition always involves the development and testing of four virtues: honesty, courage, love, and a combination of hope and humility. Teachers…
Descriptors: Audience Analysis, Codes of Ethics, Communication (Thought Transfer), Higher Education
Manikas, William T. – 1983
As society becomes more individualized in production techniques and the college-aged population becomes more diverse, education must adjust to help the individual cope with a world full of rapid change. Recent research has opened new doors to understanding how individuals learn, and this understanding should be used to develop programs and…
Descriptors: Affective Behavior, Cerebral Dominance, College Curriculum, Community Colleges
Crane, Terese A. – 1986
All research on curriculum development incorporates implicit assumptions about the nature of persons and the nature of learning. These assumptions fall into two major categories: (1) psychological assumptions, based on empirical descriptions; and (2) logical (conceptual) assumptions, which give explanatory accounts of meaning. Most curriculum…
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Curriculum Evaluation, Curriculum Problems, Educational Change
Henning-Stout, Mary – 1991
The entry of more "non-traditional" students into graduate social psychology programs brings varied life experiences into the field. Women in particular bring different experiences than those conventionally assumed by the academy. Research shows that many women who have succeeded in higher education did so by adopting…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Cognitive Processes, Cultural Context, Females
Rosen, Carl L. – 1981
The orthodox view of reading as the accumulation of isolated skills continues to dominate classroom practice. Under this framework, prescriptions for problem readers usually involve intensified drills in the same basic skills to which the students failed to respond in the first place. Prevention entails the early and often precipitous examination…
Descriptors: Diagnostic Teaching, Discourse Analysis, Educational Theories, Elementary Education
Ittzes, Kata – 1986
One teacher of English as a second language found that Gertrude Moskowitz' humanistic approach to instruction brought about significant changes in her small and diverse class. The direct results she perceived included very strong ties within the group, mutual trust and interest, values changes, and expressions of sentiment. Indirect results, those…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Communicative Competence (Languages), English (Second Language), Group Dynamics
Greene, Maxine – 1984
A rethinking of the definition of excellence is called for. It is suggested that a definition of excellence must go beyond narrow issues and include attention to the nature of the teacher, the subject matter that needs to be transformed and communicated, and the diversity of learners. Upon this triad of concerns, educators are challenged not to…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Cognitive Style, Divergent Thinking, Educational Quality
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Mulligan, Joan C.; Book, Lynn A. – 1992
Among the goals of the teacher of human development is to open students' minds to the diverse cultural and ethnic influences that effect the development of children. A new approach to a semester-long human development course offered at Green Mountain College, in Vermont, is based on the study of children's literature. The course is organized…
Descriptors: Child Development, Childrens Literature, Course Content, Cultural Awareness
Frye, Daniel; And Others – 1991
This paper discusses the perception of "self" and "other" in the relationship between teacher and student as well as in all human relations. The dialogical philosophy of Martin Buber that defines an "I-Thou" relationship as one where the relationship exists in concert and not singly is described. The "I" is…
Descriptors: Cultural Awareness, Cultural Differences, Cultural Interrelationships, Educational Philosophy