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Showing 1 to 15 of 52 results Save | Export
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Herron, Brigette A.; Roulston, Kathryn – LEARNing Landscapes, 2021
Teaching students to become critical consumers of interviews, which often serve as influential sources for learning and interpreting world events, is important in today's information-rich world. This paper outlines an approach to teaching in-depth interviewing in which students examine excerpts from interviews (e.g., archival collections, oral…
Descriptors: Interviews, Interaction, Critical Thinking, Teaching Methods
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McFarland, Andrew – History Teacher, 2022
Some historians still hold back from assigning literature out of concern for historical accuracy, but using fiction and popular culture is no longer unusual and, if anything, using novels may be seen as outdated in some circles. The author suggests that one way to reinvigorate the use of the novel when teaching history is to center a class on only…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Teaching Methods, Authors, Undergraduate Students
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Marfo, Amma; Meier, Jason – Journal of Campus Activities Practice and Scholarship, 2019
Comedy, like higher education, is an institution forged from and heavily influenced by tradition. Performers readily recite their influences, drawing a clear line between their idols and the art they currently create onstage. However, because culture and norms surrounding comedy are considerably more malleable than those surrounding higher…
Descriptors: Student Reaction, Emotional Response, Comedy, College Students
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John Yandell; Imaan Ahmed; Jumana Amin; Tanzina Begum; Isobel Clarke; Ewa Dolega; Selin Goksungur; Zaynab Khatun; Yasmin Omar; Safiyyah Shah; Alexandra Suciu – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2024
What kind of knowledge informs the practice of English teachers? Recent policy developments, in England and elsewhere, have sought to specify a knowledge base for teachers. Drawing on case studies produced by pre-service English teachers, this essay explores the complex, multifaceted and situated character of the knowledge that teachers develop in…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Foreign Countries, Knowledge Base for Teaching, Grade 7
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Gleye, Paul – Frontiers: The Interdisciplinary Journal of Study Abroad, 2017
On the morning of March 22, 2016, two men pushed luggage trolleys containing suitcases laden with nail bombs into the departure hall of the Brussels airport and detonated them. About an hour later, a third suicide bomber detonated a nail bomb in a subway train at the Maelbeek metro station near central Brussels. These attacks claimed the lives of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Study Abroad, Terrorism, Student Experience
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Teckchandani, Atul; Obstfeld, David – Management Teaching Review, 2017
This article discusses the virtues of using podcasts in the classroom by focusing on the pedagogical merits of one podcast: StartUp. The StartUp podcast provides a compelling first-person account of the entrepreneurial journey, as told by an award-winning radio journalist. Episodes from the podcast can be used to engage students and improve their…
Descriptors: Story Telling, Classroom Techniques, Video Technology, Entrepreneurship
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Munir, Sirajul – Dinamika Ilmu, 2019
This article discusses my experience in shaping EFL learners? project on textbook design in teaching English for Specific Purposes (ESP) subject. This task was challenging since the learners? project designing textbook was in the sixth semester students. This article first explores the concept of ESP, principles in developing materials and…
Descriptors: English for Special Purposes, Second Language Instruction, Second Language Learning, Social Values
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Cooke, Kathy J. – Honors in Practice, 2015
While traditional practices of critical reading, writing, dialogue, and discussion are no doubt essential inputs and outputs of higher education and a means of achieving critical thinking in college students, recent science and pedagogical innovation can help develop additional, unique methodologies that can have more immediate significance for…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, College Students, Honors Curriculum, Metacognition
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Muzyka, Jennifer L. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2015
In the Just-in-Time Teaching approach, a faculty member assigns readings to students before every class. After the students have done the daily reading, they access a short reading quiz using a course management system (e.g., Moodle). The faculty member uses student responses to the quiz in the preparation of the day's class material and is able…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Teaching Methods, Classroom Techniques, Educational Practices
Collins, Samuel Gerald; Durington, Matthew; Fabricant, Nicole – Metropolitan Universities, 2017
One year ago, Baltimore citizens took to the streets to protest not only the death of Freddie Grey, but the structural inequalities and structural violence that systematically limit the opportunities for working-class African Americans in Baltimore. The protests, though, were not just confined to Baltimore City. Borne on sophisticated…
Descriptors: Thematic Approach, Urban Areas, Activism, Racial Discrimination
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Ross, John; Shelton, Therese – PRIMUS, 2019
We present several modules that address social justice issues in an introductory statistics course. The activities consider possible disparities of housing location, language spoken at home, and job sector as they relate to, respectively, access to healthy foods, air pollution via proximity to traffic, and health concerns via proximity to fracking…
Descriptors: Statistics, Social Justice, Fuels, Introductory Courses
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Kathryn M. Silva – History Teacher, 2018
In this essay, I compare "Django Unchained," directed by Quentin Tarantino in 2012, which relies on common tropes about slavery and largely silences the experiences of enslaved women, to "Daughters of the Dust," directed by Julie Dash in 1991, a film that focuses on black womanhood in the post-Reconstruction era on the eve of…
Descriptors: High School Teachers, Instructional Films, Mass Media Role, History Instruction
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Blackey, Robert – History Teacher, 2014
Identification questions (or IDs), according to some critics, merely test factual knowledge (which involves only memorization), but for them to be effective learning tools for students, teachers must also make sure that students develop their understanding of the significance or importance of people, events, and concepts both in the context of…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Student Reaction, Identification, Questioning Techniques
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Nock, Destenie; Plummer, Justice; Wilson, Ashleigh R.; Cundall, Michael K., Jr. – Journal of the National Collegiate Honors Council, 2014
Gary Bell's essay, "The Profit Motive in Honors Education," raises important questions about the future of honors education--questions that will have the greatest impact on honors students. The voices of those students are not typically included in discussions about the funding and administration of honors even though they have crucial…
Descriptors: Privatization, Student Reaction, Student Attitudes, Honors Curriculum
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Barber, Clifton E. – College Student Journal, 2014
Why students respond differently when they are denied admission to a preferred academic major may be explained using a psychological theory of alienation. Using this theoretical perspective, three trajectories producing feelings of alienation are presented. The most intense of these trajectories, the process of disillusionment, is examined using a…
Descriptors: College Admission, Student Attitudes, Majors (Students), Alienation
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