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Knutson, Sonja – TESL Canada Journal, 2003
Discusses issues surrounding experiential learning in the second language classroom. Experiential learning is defined by the inclusion of phases of reflection designed to help the learner relate current learning experience to past and future experience. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Experiential Learning, Foreign Countries, Prior Learning
Peer reviewedWoodward, Tessa – ELT Journal, 2003
Discusses loop input, a specific type of experiential teacher training process that involves an alignment of the process and content of learning. This concept has gradually gained ground in English language teacher training since 1986 when the term was coined. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Experiential Learning, Learning Processes, Second Language Instruction
Reed, Chris – Horizons, 2003
Applied outdoor experiences may be seen as theater and, as such, can allow a more flexible, integrative approach to outdoor learning. Both the arts (particularly theater) and outdoor experiential learning contain nine common elements, including elements of working with groups, and personal and transpersonal components of experience. Three…
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Creativity, Design, Experiential Learning
Peer reviewedRusinko, Cathy A. – Journal of Teaching in International Business, 2003
Proposes that literature may be a valuable tool in adapting teaching methods to the online environment, particularly developing experiential exercises, and in helping students become better international managers by building communication skills, team building skills, and contextual understanding of cultural diversity issues. Includes an example…
Descriptors: Business Administration Education, College Instruction, Experiential Learning, Higher Education
Peer reviewedWallin, Jason; Graham, Tanya – Alberta Journal of Educational Research, 2002
Modern educational practice, inspired by the scientific rationalism of the 17th and 18th centuries, focuses on control, certainty, and order, thus rendering students' experiences superficial. Generativity "finds" the curriculum in students' life experiences, giving them relevance and the opportunity to be explored. Where life is not the…
Descriptors: Consciousness Raising, Educational Philosophy, Experiential Learning, Relevance (Education)
Peer reviewedEdwards, Jennifer – Investigating, 2003
Raises the notion of service learning, which is defined as a method of helping students develop their own learning through active participation in thoughtfully organized service experience. Explores the use of science as the curriculum and service learning as the methodology to reach students and improve science instruction. (KHR)
Descriptors: Active Learning, Curriculum Development, Elementary Secondary Education, Experiential Learning
Gibson, Andrea – Perspectives: Research, Scholarship, and Creative Activity at Ohio University, 2002
An Ohio University program that introduces botany students to field work sent a team to study Hawaiian species of violets and algae, endangered by invasive, imported plants. The situation of the native species relates to larger scientific and ecological issues because algae is the basis of the aquatic food chain, and violets adapt in unique ways…
Descriptors: Biodiversity, College Programs, Ecology, Endangered Species
Peer reviewedGoldenberg, Dolly; Dietrich, Pamela – Nurse Education Today, 2002
A humanistic-educative evaluation method for nursing education emphasizes collaboration, caring, creativity, critical thinking, and self-assessment. A teacher-student shared home visit in family nursing illustrates the use of the approach for developing self-directed and competent nurses. (Contains 34 references.) (SK)
Descriptors: Evaluation Methods, Experiential Learning, Higher Education, Humanistic Education
Peer reviewedCarey, Lynda; Whittaker, Karen A. – Nurse Education Today, 2002
Survey responses from 58 nursing students and 15 focus group interviews showed that problem-based learning (PBL) improved understanding of multidisciplinary practice and challenged them to work together and tolerate other perspectives. One-third felt learning was hindered by uncertainty over the PBL process and organizational/group issues.…
Descriptors: Community Health Services, Experiential Learning, Higher Education, Nursing Education
Peer reviewedPun, Aaron – Journal of European Industrial Training, 1990
A postgraduate diploma course for trainers offered by the University of East Asia is a learner-centered process in which participants select their own goals and evaluate their own learning experience. Although participants saw the value of an action learning approach, their learning preference was basically teacher centered and the process met…
Descriptors: Adult Learning, Cognitive Style, Experiential Learning, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedWing, Kennard T. – Small Group Research: An International Journal of Theory, Investigation, and Application, 1990
Claims, despite extensive research on the role of feedback in learning, there is little theoretical understanding of the concept of feedback, because of overly broad definitions which favor certain explanations and lines of research over others. Discusses implications of feedback research for group facilitation and design of experiential learning…
Descriptors: Cybernetics, Error Correction, Experiential Learning, Feedback
Katz, Lilian G. – Child Care Information Exchange, 1990
Premature academic instruction may undermine a child's learning tendencies or dispositions. Informal small-group interaction can strengthen dispositions and set the context for acquisition of knowledge, skills, and feelings. Teachers should focus on learning goals rather than performance goals. (SH)
Descriptors: Child Development, Curriculum Evaluation, Early Childhood Education, Experiential Learning
Peer reviewedNorris, Janet A.; Hoffman, Paul R. – Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools, 1990
The article discusses principles of speech/language intervention that impose organization within naturalistic interactions. The general structure of the intervention process is presented including strategies to control for activity and response complexity, techniques for facilitating a communicative response, and methods for providing natural…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Experiential Learning, Interaction Process Analysis, Intervention
Peer reviewedFisher, Alfred J. – Canadian Journal of Native Studies, 1988
Explains how the author's experiences with Native people's ways and music had a powerful linkage to his own musical composition in that these cultural experiences acted as a catalyst to action and subsequent self-knowledge. Compares this learning process to that found in higher education. (SV)
Descriptors: American Indian Culture, Anthropology, Canada Natives, Experiential Learning
Peer reviewedBerry, Roger – System, 1990
Discusses how the language improvement components of teacher training programs are often taken for granted. It is concluded that language improvement, if integrated with a methodology component, can have a central role in in-service teacher training. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Inservice Teacher Education, Language Skills, Language Teachers


