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Colin Loughlin – Teaching in Higher Education, 2025
Large-class university lectures remain commonplace, yet their educational value is contested. While the majority of criticism contrasts transmissive lectures with active learning pedagogies, this case study evaluates a lecture series on its intrinsic qualities, looking at staff and student understandings of the lecture's contribution to academic…
Descriptors: Attendance, Large Group Instruction, Lecture Method, Outcomes of Education
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Yuchen Wang – Teaching in Higher Education, 2024
The implementation of lecture recording (LR) technology is becoming common practice in higher education (HE). While it is often promoted as a technological solution to inclusion, there is a need for more in-depth research to examine such assumptions. This study was conducted in a research-intensive elite university in the UK, employing…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, College Faculty, College Students
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Cameron, Harriet; Nunkoosing, Karl – Teaching in Higher Education, 2012
The aim of this study was to explore lecturers' experiences with and perspectives on dyslexia and dyslexic students to inform the wider debate about the issues of dyslexia support in higher education. Data were collected and analysed using an abbreviated constructivist grounded theory method. Participants were categorised as "positive",…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Dyslexia, Foreign Countries, Grounded Theory
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Petrovic, Juraj; Pale, Predrag – Teaching in Higher Education, 2015
This paper aims to provide insight into various properties of live lectures from the perspective of sophomore engineering students. In an anonymous online survey conducted at the Faculty of Electrical Engineering and Computing, University of Zagreb, we investigated students' opinions regarding lecture attendance, inherent disadvantages of live…
Descriptors: Lecture Method, Student Attitudes, Synchronous Communication, Engineering Education
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Young-Jones, Adena; Cara, Kelly Copeland; Levesque-Bristol, Chantal – Teaching in Higher Education, 2014
Teaching practices can create a range of autonomy-supportive or controlling learning environments. Research shows that autonomy-supportive techniques are more conducive to positive learning outcomes than controlling techniques. This study focused on simple verbal and behavioral cues that any teacher could use to create a positive learning…
Descriptors: Cues, Teaching Methods, Classroom Techniques, Verbal Communication
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Birch, Phil David John; Batten, John; Manley, Andrew John; Smith, Matthew Jeffery – Teaching in Higher Education, 2012
The aim of this study was to examine the informational cues that students perceive to be influential when developing initial impressions and expectancies of a lecturer. Undergraduate university students (n = 452) were required to rate the extent to which 30 informational cues (e.g. gender, qualifications) influence their initial perceptions of a…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Cues, Interpersonal Communication, Interpersonal Competence
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Burke, Lisa A.; Ray, Ruth – Teaching in Higher Education, 2008
Evidence suggests that college students' concentration levels are limited and hard to maintain. Even though relevant in higher education, scant empirical research exists on interventions to "re-set" their concentration during a college lecture. Using a within-subjects design, four active learning interventions are administered across two…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Active Learning, Intervention, Student Attitudes
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Platt, Chris – Teaching in Higher Education, 2002
In a time of high demand for qualified nurses, mass education has become the norm. This is a necessary constraint within which we have to learn to function. However, the need to educate large numbers of nurses may lead to a one-sided unimaginative reliance on the traditional lecture method, creating a learning environment that inadvertently limits…
Descriptors: Lecture Method, Nursing Education, Cooperative Learning, Self Directed Groups