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Reich, Jill; Head, Judy – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2010
A college education has never been so necessary, or so expensive. It is incumbent upon us, the educators, to do it the best we can. The products of our work are not the buildings on our campuses but our students who go out into this complicated and exciting world to serve as its leaders, its citizens, and its workers. The Bates College general…
Descriptors: Integrated Curriculum, College Curriculum, General Education, Undergraduate Study
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Ignelzi, Michael – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2000
Describes Robert Kegan's theory of meaning-making--how individuals make sense of knowledge, experience, relationships, and the self. Applies the theory to college students and how their understanding of their experience, themselves, and their relationships with others mediates learning. Draws implications for the design of college curricular…
Descriptors: College Curriculum, Curriculum Development, Epistemology, Higher Education
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Hutchings, Pat; Wutzdorff, Allen – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 1988
The integration of learning and knowing is not simply a matter of application but rather an ongoing interactive process in which both knowledge and experience are repeatedly transformed. Two models of the integration of knowledge and experience were used at Alverno College. (MLW)
Descriptors: College Curriculum, College Students, Experiential Learning, Females
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Laff, Ned Scott – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2005
This chapter argues that liberal learning can be transformative and foster students' intellectual and ethical development only if we consider its development underpinnings and pedagogic strategies that illustrate that the skills of academic inquiry are the skills of personal development. (Contains 1 note.)
Descriptors: Liberal Arts, Student Development, Cognitive Development, Ethics