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Ripoll-Núñez, Karen J.; Mojica-Ospina, Iván Enrique; Torres-Riveros, Andrés Camilo; Castellanos-Tous, María Silvana – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2018
Using the TBC, we compared students' and teachers' perceptions of excellent teaching in different disciplines at a private university in Colombia. Faculty and students in all fields rated being respectful and being a good communicator as the two most important qualities of excellent teachers. Differences in students' and faculty's perceptions…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Teacher Attitudes, Student Attitudes, Comparative Analysis
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Miller-Young, Janice; Boman, Jennifer – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2017
This chapter presents the bottlenecks identified by seven faculty members from diverse disciplines and an inductive content analysis of their Decoding interviews. Representative quotations illustrate themes in the interviews and we consider the implications for both faculty development and pedagogical research.
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Barriers, Interdisciplinary Approach, Intellectual Disciplines
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Kelly, Karen – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2013
This chapter describes an assignment that immerses Millennial students in discipline-based politics and policy as a means of helping them meaningfully connect with content.
Descriptors: College Students, Assignments, Politics, Policy
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Murray, Harry G.; Renaud, Robert D. – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 1995
Observation of 401 college teachers indicates that teachers of different academic disciplines (arts/humanities, social sciences, natural sciences/mathematics) differ in the frequency of specific classroom teaching behaviors, but that what makes an effective teacher, in the perception of students, is consistent regardless of discipline.…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, College Instruction, Comparative Analysis, Educational Strategies
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Entwistle, Noel; Tait, Hilary – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 1995
Drawing on a number of studies of college student learning, this review concludes that students in different disciplines develop characteristic ways of learning based on their perceptions of what is required in their academic work. Within a discipline, effective learning involves an interplay between the characteristics of the student and the…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, College Instruction, College Students, Comparative Analysis
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Stout, Barbara R.; Magnotto, Joyce N. – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 1988
Survey responses from 401 community colleges show that many of these two-year, open-admissions institutions have developed writing-across-the-curriculum programs that address the special needs of their faculty and students. (MSE)
Descriptors: College Curriculum, College Faculty, Community Colleges, Curriculum Development
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Hativa, Nira – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 1995
Two lessons from comparable undergraduate courses in physics and engineering are analyzed to identify content, issues emphasized, and concepts used. Differences reflecting the pure nature of one field (physics) in contrast to the applied nature of the other are identified. Implications for classroom instruction and for research on college teaching…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, College Instruction, Comparative Analysis, Concept Formation
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Franklin, Jennifer; Theall, Michael – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 1995
In a study using student rating data from over 8,000 course sections in a large university, disciplinary differences and the value students placed on the time they spent preparing for class are correlated with students' evaluations of teaching. Implications for faculty promotion and tenure policy, instructional improvement, and further research…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, College Faculty, College Instruction, College Students
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Stodolsky, Susan S.; Grossman, Pamela L. – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 1995
A study of the role of subject matter in shaping high school teachers' beliefs, curricular concerns, and instructional practices complements studies of the disciplines in higher education. Factors discussed include the "hard/soft" distinction between disciplines, curriculum sequencing, range of classroom techniques, breadth of course content, and…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Classroom Techniques, College Instruction, Comparative Analysis
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Smart, John C.; Ethington, Corinna A. – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 1995
A survey of 4,072 college faculty examined institutional and disciplinary differences in faculty opinions of desired outcomes of undergraduate education. Significant differences by both institution type and discipline were found in emphasis on knowledge acquisition versus knowledge application and integration. It is suggested that reform of…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Classification, Classroom Techniques, College Instruction
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Eisenbach, Regina; Golich, Vicki; Curry, Renee – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 1998
Three college instructors, teaching very different content (management, political science, and literature) and using classroom assessment techniques (CATs), compared the results. All found that CATs contributed to self-reflection, that designing CATs helps faculty focus on course and class goals, and that responding to CATs requires students to…
Descriptors: Business Administration Education, Classroom Research, Classroom Techniques, College Instruction
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Lenze, Lisa Firing – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 1995
Interviews with two college faculty in linguistics and two in Spanish over three years probed attitudes about the nature of pedagogical content knowledge of new faculty. In each discipline, a core concept around which knowledge of teaching revolved was found: in linguistics, argumentation; in Spanish, production. It also emerged that direct…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Classroom Techniques, College Instruction, Comparative Analysis