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Najjar, Lawrence J. – Journal of Educational Multimedia and Hypermedia, 1996
Reviews empirical studies from a wide variety of fields to show that computer-based multimedia instruction may be able to help people learn more information more quickly compared to traditional classroom lecture. Topics include interactivity; control of learning pace; novelty; and learners with low prior knowledge or aptitude. (103 references)…
Descriptors: Academic Aptitude, Comparative Analysis, Computer Assisted Instruction, Conventional Instruction
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Yousif, Amna Abdel Gadir – International Journal of Applied Linguistics, 1996
Examined the speech of Sudanese non-native speakers of English while they lectured to non-native English speaking students from in content-subject classes. The study was carried out to see whether lecturers simplified their language syntactically by proficiency level. Findings reveal that the lecturers used five different syntactic variables…
Descriptors: College Students, English (Second Language), Foreign Countries, Higher Education
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Mendelsohn, David – TESL Canada Journal, 2002
Describes a study of the listening comprehension of first-year, nonnative English speakers in a large North American university that sought to find out how students--all economics majors--were coping with listening to economics lectures and to try an experiment in mentoring by linking them with a lecture buddy. The mentoring project was found to…
Descriptors: College Students, Economics, English (Second Language), English for Academic Purposes
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DeLamater, John; And Others – Teaching Sociology, 1994
Maintains that helping to see the personal relevance of course material is an important instructional goal. Discusses student characteristics, instructor characteristics, and the use of discussion groups. Describes four strategies to personalize information presented in large lecture sessions. (CFR)
Descriptors: Course Content, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Educational Strategies, Higher Education
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Greene, Edith – Teaching of Psychology, 1995
Describes an undergraduate Psychology of Social Problems course. The course focuses on the psychological aspects of legal abortion for adolescents and women, the consequences of denied abortions on unwanted children, and psychological ramifications of alternatives to abortion. Summarizes student evaluations of the course. (CFR)
Descriptors: Abortions, Assignments, Classroom Techniques, Controversial Issues (Course Content)
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Benjamin, Ludy T., Jr. – Teaching of Psychology, 1991
Discusses methods of personalizing the large introductory college psychology class. Contrasts active learning by students with lecturing by professors. Suggests that separating the large class into smaller units can facilitate active learning. Argues that active learning also can be promoted in the large class setting. (SG)
Descriptors: Class Size, Classroom Environment, Educational Improvement, Group Activities
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Hansen, Edmund J.; Rubin, Richard S. – Journal of Public Administration Education, 1997
Collaboration between a public affairs faculty member and an instructional developer resulted in design of a learner-centered large lecture course. Evaluation after three years revealed which elements of the course format generated the most student interest and, in some cases, changed attitudes about learning in college. Suggestions are made for…
Descriptors: Attitude Change, College Instruction, College Students, Course Organization
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Beeler, Karin – Educational Media International, 1998
Discussion of use of the World Wide Web for literary studies focuses on a course on contemporary Canadian literature offered at the University of Northern British Columbia. Highlights include weekly lectures, discussion forum, assignments, evaluations, Web courses versus other distributed learning media such as videoconferencing, and future…
Descriptors: Assignments, Canadian Literature, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Evaluation Methods
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Leeder, Dawn – Educational Media International, 2000
Discusses the development of interactive multimedia learning modules and describes the decisions and processes involved in transforming a traditional lecture in medical sociology into an interactive online learning module at the University of Cambridge (United Kingdom). Considers method of delivery, including the World Wide Web; media choices; and…
Descriptors: Conventional Instruction, Decision Making, Higher Education, Learning Modules
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Fossey, Annabel; Hancock, Carolyn – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2005
First-year students in genetics at the University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, attend two general biology modules, one in each semester. Teaching involves four formal lectures per week of 45 min each, one 3-h practical, and one lecture period tutorial. These students, graduating from secondary education, are well schooled in rote learning but…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teaching Methods, Scientific Concepts, Genetics
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McClanahan, Elaine B.; McClanahan, Lon L. – College Teaching, 2002
This article describes how a traditional biology lecture course was transformed into an interactive class. A review the activities used, changes made to grading policy, and practical tips for integration of active learning in the classroom are provided. Analysis of student responses to course assessments indicated that active learning experiences…
Descriptors: Learning Experience, Biology, Lecture Method, Grading
Schneider, Robert – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2006
In an article in the "Northern Star," a university student newspaper, reporter Lauren Stott began a lyrical note: "It's every student's dream: Wake up for school, stumble over to the computer, and download the day's class lectures ... then crawl back into bed--iPod in one hand, notebook in the other." The object of the student journalist's…
Descriptors: Student Publications, College Students, College Faculty, Higher Education
Disbrow, Nancy; Huwiler, Paul – 1986
An alternative method for teaching a three-credit, undergraduate library instruction course for students other than library science majors was explored at Southern Connecticut State University. It was believed that traditional methods of instruction--e.g., lecturing in libraries and using paper handouts--were colorless, failed to engage students,…
Descriptors: Academic Libraries, Comparative Analysis, Experimental Teaching, Faculty Publishing
Ramsden, Patricia A. – 1980
Observing that the lecture/discussion instructional technique resulted in high failure rates among students taking technical composition, an instructor at Madisonville Community College (Kentucky) implemented a new course system designed to provide individualized instruction. The system called for two fifty-minute lectures per week attended by all…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Academic Failure, Community Colleges, Conventional Instruction
Dutton, J. C. – Engineering Education, 1988
Discusses some of the advantages and disadvantages of both live and videotaped presentations, particularly in regard to courses in mechanical engineering. Describes a graduate-level gas dynamics course that was offered live and on videotape to students both on and off campus by the University of Illinois (Urbana-Champaign). (TW)
Descriptors: College Science, Continuing Education, Course Content, Course Descriptions
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