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Ghoshal, Raj A. – Teaching Sociology, 2023
This teaching note presents an assignment in which students write an op-ed on a course-related issue and submit it to a newspaper. I argue that an op-ed assignment dovetails with pedagogical goals around democratic citizenship and public sociology. I explain the project's objectives, instructions, and timeline. I present evidence from three…
Descriptors: Citizen Participation, Opinions, Writing Assignments, Newspapers
Oganessian, Armen – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2023
This paper addresses a surprising phenomenon in the evangelical theological classroom. Evangelical theological students often approach theology as an exclusively analytic subject, failing to use imaginative criteria in "doing theology." Specifically, they fail to use their literary imaginations or what some call narrative imagination.…
Descriptors: Christianity, Theological Education, Imagination, Student Attitudes
Corrigan, Paul T. – Teaching & Learning Inquiry, 2023
Teachers in any discipline where reading matters should practice a robust scaffolding pedagogy to teach critical reading, in contrast to the more common but less direct approaches that often leave students to learn or not learn these skills themselves. In this essay, I describe how to adapt established methods for teaching writing (including…
Descriptors: Critical Reading, Scaffolding (Teaching Technique), Reading Instruction, Writing Assignments
James W. Drisko – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2025
The rise of AI generated texts offers promise but creates new challenges for social work teaching. A recent survey found that 89% of higher education students used AI on their homework. AI generated text may be difficult to distinguish from a student's own work, yet are being submitted as the student's own work. This poses new challenges to…
Descriptors: Plagiarism, Social Work, Counselor Training, Artificial Intelligence
Aditi Jhaveri – Journal of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2025
This essay examines the potential impact of paid-for or premium language models, where some students may be able to afford advanced models generating superior outputs while others could face inequities due to financial constraints. It explores how this dynamic can exacerbate the digital divide, challenge traditional as well as more recent…
Descriptors: Natural Language Processing, Artificial Intelligence, Technology Uses in Education, Equal Education
Hawk Chang – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2025
Most literature courses at the tertiary level require students to write a research paper. However, due to their lack of experience and training in high school, many undergraduates fresh from high school find it difficult to meet the requirements when preparing for this assignment. Based on my experience teaching first-year university students in…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Research Papers (Students), Persuasive Discourse, Cultural Influences
Salinas, Juan L. – Teaching Sociology, 2022
This article is a reflective analysis of an assignment in which undergraduate students developed dystopian, postapocalyptic, fantasy, and fictional short story parables to illustrate their understanding of sociological theory. In a social theory course, students were assigned a final paper in which they designed a short story that integrated…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Sociology, Social Theories, Teaching Methods
Bama Andika Putra – Educational Process: International Journal, 2025
Background/purpose: This study argues the prospects of simulations and policy briefs as signature international relations (IR) pedagogies by examining their potential benefits in region-focused case study subjects such as the Southeast Asian Regional Dynamics course. In doing so, it looks back to the need for creativity and student-centered…
Descriptors: International Relations, Creative Teaching, Student Centered Learning, Asians
Bay, Jennifer; Fillenwarth, Gracemarie Mike; Masters-Wheeler, Christine – Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 2022
Though the remote internship is certainly not a new phenomenon, the COVID-19 pandemic has accelerated the growth of this model for undergraduate experiential learning. As we consider this shift, we must evaluate how to best assist students completing remote internships. In this article, we argue that infrastructure offers a useful framework for…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Internship Programs, Distance Education, COVID-19
Leporati, Matthew – CEA Forum, 2021
This article explores how college instructors can use William Blake's unique pairing of image and text -- what W.J.T. Mitchell calls "composite art" -- to encourage students to think and write about the dynamic interplay of image and text in modern communications. Opening with an anecdote of teaching Songs of Innocence and of Experience…
Descriptors: Writing Instruction, Freshman Composition, Illustrations, Poetry
Bickford, John H.; Little, Dalani A. – Social Studies, 2022
Students, especially young children, recognize differences. This guided inquiry positions elementary students to consider the (dis)abilities they see and do not see. This article couples trade books emphasizing diverse perspectives--general, American, people of color, international contexts, fiction, and disparate (dis)abilities--with evocative…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Elementary School Teachers, Activism, Advocacy
He, Yuemin; Gaiser, Catherine Megliola – Inquiry: The Journal of the Virginia Community Colleges, 2023
The five-paragraph essay is highly controversial, and yet it has also been a useful format for composition. In this essay we explain why, despite its limits, students need to go along with the format to make what use and get what advantage of it. We then demonstrate that valuing the philosophical, historical, cultural, and educational backgrounds…
Descriptors: Essays, Writing Assignments, Culturally Relevant Education, Asian American Students
Aisha Alsfouk – Journal of Chemical Education, 2023
Fourth- and fifth-year pharmacy students attending integrated pharmacotherapy courses at Princess Nourah bint Abdulrahman University completed a medicinal chemistry assignment using computer-based technology. This written assignment encompassed multiple components requiring the use of free online resources to study and illustrate several stages of…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Pharmaceutical Education, Medicine, Chemistry
Cory A. Campbell; Sridhar Ramamoorti – Advances in Accounting Education: Teaching and Curriculum Innovations, 2023
We use design thinking in the context of accounting pedagogy to exploit recent advances in cybernetics in the form of generative artificial intelligence technology. Relying on the intuition that supplementing or augmenting human argumentation (natural intelligence or NI) with parallel AI output can produce better student written assignments, we…
Descriptors: Accounting, Business Education, Artificial Intelligence, Cybernetics
Romano, Nike – Education as Change, 2021
This article explores some of the complexities of teaching art and design history to students in a Design Extended Curriculum Programme at a university of technology in the context of post-1994 South African society--a society troubled by the ghosts of colonial and apartheid histories that agitate the present/future. Tracking a series of…
Descriptors: Art History, Foreign Countries, Teaching Methods, Feminism

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