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Thompson, Roger K. R. – Teaching of Psychology, 1987
An advanced undergraduate comparative psychology course is described. Reviews the methodological goals and traditional roles of comparative psychology courses. Focuses on research strategies for relating group differences to specific processes and for inferring the evolutionary and developmental histories of behavior. The conclusion stresses the…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Course Descriptions, Educational Methods, Higher Education
Lazo, Dimitri D. – 1981
This paper describes an ethnic studies course taught at Alverno College, Milwaukee, Wisconsin. The course is offered as a two semester, hour elective in the Weekend College which provides women an opportunity to complete a college degree by attending classes on weekends only. The course meets for three hours every other weekend for a total of…
Descriptors: Black Studies, Blacks, Comparative Analysis, Course Descriptions
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Handelsman, Mitchell M. – Teaching of Psychology, 1985
Described is an exercise that will help college-level psychology students learn abstract and relational thinking skills. The exercise will provide students with a new way to handle compare-and-contrast questions. (RM)
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Comparative Analysis, Concept Formation, Course Descriptions
Brooks, Gary H. – Teaching Political Science, 1981
Describes a college course dealing with comparative state politics. Students learn about the way in which political scientists employ the study of American state politics as a "laboratory" for the development of scientific explanations of political phenomena. (RM)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Course Descriptions, Higher Education, Political Issues
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Parry, Sally E. – Exercise Exchange, 1998
Discusses a college course on "the Bible as Literature." Describes how, by focusing on the biography of Jesus as portrayed in the Gospels, and comparing it to other cultural narratives about him (in the Apocrypha, films, biographies, and novels), students learn to see how various ages and cultures have reshaped Jesus's life and mission.…
Descriptors: Biblical Literature, Biographies, Comparative Analysis, Course Descriptions
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Nelson, Murry R. – Social Studies Journal, 1985
A legal education course that teaches senior high school students how different cultures resolve conflicts is described. Students need to see that our system of justice is only one among many, all of which have shortcomings, external influences, and internal variance. (RM)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Conflict Resolution, Course Descriptions, Cross Cultural Studies
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Jobes, Patrick C.; Aldea, Andra; Cernat, Constantin; Icolisan, Ioana-Minerva; Iordache, Gabriel; Lazeru, Sabastian; Stoica, Catalin; Tibil, Gheorghe; Udangiu, Eugenia – Teaching Sociology, 1997
Describes how the constant comparative method was introduced as a teaching and research tool at a Romanian university. Presents a four-step procedure for employing the constant comparative method. Suggests that the method may be well-suited for teaching sociology to small numbers of committed students in the foreign classroom. (DSK)
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Consumer Economics, Course Descriptions, Educational Environment
Dustin, Daniel L. – Improving College and University Teaching, 1981
The strengths of classroom education, combined with the strengths of experiential education, can create an even more effective learning environment. The steps involved in classroom learning are contrasted with those involved in experiential learning, then realigned and implemented for a college course. (MLW)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, College Instruction, Comparative Analysis, Course Descriptions
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Stirling, Susan – New Zealand Journal of Geography, 1998
Proposes content changes for a revised geography syllabus in New Zealand discussing each strand: (1) social organization; (2) culture and heritage; (3) place and environment; (4) time, continuity, and change; (5) resources and economic activities; and (6) making sense of planet earth and beyond. Addresses current trends in geography and syllabus…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Course Descriptions, Curriculum Development, Educational Change
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DeNeve, Kristina; Heppner, Mary J. – Innovative Higher Education, 1997
Use of active learning techniques of role-playing and simulation in an industrial psychology course (n=29 students) is described and assessed. Subjective reports and objective assessments of knowledge retention indicate the approach was effective. The differential importance of active learning and passive learning (lecture) in the college…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Classroom Techniques, Comparative Analysis, Course Descriptions
Haight, Robert – 1991
An infusion model for bringing a global perspective to business communication courses allows traditional course objectives to be met while presenting international material. In the typical 15-week term, the module begins with a four-week look at the traditional rhetorical patterns employed in business communication in the United States. It then…
Descriptors: Audience Analysis, Business Communication, College Curriculum, Comparative Analysis
Hengesbach, Theodore W. – 1980
Information and course materials for a comparative religion course offered to registered nurses as part of an off-campus bachelor's degree completion program are presented. Some presumptions about the students that affected design of the course are considered. The course provided students the opportunity to study the broad field of comparative…
Descriptors: Adult Students, Bachelors Degrees, Comparative Analysis, Course Descriptions
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Liebman, Robert C. – Teaching Sociology, 1994
Asserts that not using a cross-cultural approach to American Studies is paradoxical, since comparative analysis is the principal sociological method of discovery and proof. Describes an American Studies course in which the core is comparative analyses of work and education in other countries. (CFR)
Descriptors: American Studies, Comparative Analysis, Comparative Education, Course Content
Cortes, Carlos – 1983
How the theme of human movement--migration, and particularly immigration--can be integrated into junior high U.S. history and world history/geography courses is discussed. To avoid turning the study of migration into an unwitting process of reinforcing ethnocentrism, two steps need to be taken. First, the movement of people throughout the world…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Course Descriptions, Curriculum Development, Educational Needs
Crozier, William L. – 1985
Intended to engage students in a comparative look at local history in two upper Mississippi river towns (Winona, Minnesota and Dubuque, Iowa), this paper describes the computer-assisted component of an upper-level American Studies course. With emphasis on the 19th century, students examine the transition made by the United States from a…
Descriptors: American Studies, Community Study, Comparative Analysis, Computer Assisted Instruction
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