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Peer reviewedBall, Charles H.; And Others – Design for Arts in Education, 1989
Three arts educators comment on the relationships among skills, knowledge, and creativity in the arts curriculum. Charles H. Ball states that these elements should be balanced in the curriculum. Eunice Boardman suggests that adequate statement of curricular goals does away with the need for balancing. Karen A. Hamblen notes that the three elements…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Education, Art Education, Comprehension, Course Content
Peer reviewedRubenstein, Jeffrey E.; Corbett, Suzanne M. – Journal of Dental Education, 1996
A study club for continuing education in dental implant techniques at the University of Washington is described and evaluated. Training included didactic and patient treatment components. In two sessions of the program, 17 participating restorative dentists and oral surgeons completed treatment on 12 patients. Practitioners found this…
Descriptors: Allied Health Occupations Education, Clinics, Curriculum Design, Dental Schools
Peer reviewedNelson, J. Ron; Frederick, Lin – Educational Leadership, 1994
A Washington State first-grade teacher and her students created the Learning-Centered Curriculum-Making Project, developing each unit over a two-week period and highlighting language and thinking skills related to various subject disciplines. They used dialog, coaching, modeling, questioning, and reinforcing techniques. Students helped select…
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Grade 1, Interdisciplinary Approach, Learning Activities
Gray, James H.; Viens, Julie T. – National Forum: Phi Kappa Phi Journal, 1994
In the face of increasing cultural diversity, educators need new ways of understanding how children think. The theory of multiple intelligences provides a means for distinguishing the many ways children have to solve problems and create products, identify cognitive strengths, and group students according to complementary intelligences. (MSE)
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Cultural Pluralism, Curriculum Design, Educational Strategies
Peer reviewedPhillips, William A. – Journal of Economic Education, 1994
Contends that, despite ongoing criticism, Allen's arc elasticity formula remains entrenched in the microeconomics principles curriculum. Reviews the evolution and continuing scrutiny of the formula. Argues that the use of the geometric mean offers pedagogical advantages over the traditional arithmetic mean approach. (CFR)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Cost Indexes, Curriculum Design, Economic Factors
Peer reviewedBrosh, Hezi; Olshtain, Elite – Foreign Language Annals, 1995
The question of the sequencing of skills is an important issue in language policy and curriculum design in general, and even more so in the case of a diglossic language such as Arabic. This paper tries to investigate the implications of diglossia on the order of linguistic skills acquisition in Arabic among Hebrew speakers in Israel. (JL)
Descriptors: Arabic, Curriculum Design, Diglossia, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedWilliams, Peter C.; Winslade, William – Academic Medicine, 1995
It is argued that the medical school curriculum should include content on jurisprudence to empower physicians to use the law and their legal colleagues to serve patients and promote public welfare. Developing practitioners' skills and changing attitudes are seen as more important than imparting information about particular doctrines and laws. (MSE)
Descriptors: Attitudes, Course Content, Court Litigation, Curriculum Design
Peer reviewedPerry, Dorothy A.; Gerbert, Barbara – Journal of Dental Education, 1995
A mail survey investigated dental hygiene graduates' perceptions of their preparation for practice with respect to certain curriculum areas, the importance of those topics to practice, and demographic characteristics. Subjects were 64 graduates of the San Francisco University (California) dental school from 1985-89. Results are analyzed and…
Descriptors: Allied Health Occupations Education, Attitudes, Curriculum Design, Curriculum Evaluation
Peer reviewedWittig, Constance; Wolfram, Dietmar – Library Trends, 1994
Discussion of networked information resources highlights a survey of American Library Association accredited library schools in North America that investigated the inclusion of networking concepts in the curriculum. Faculty attitudes regarding the place of networking education and their perceptions of its impact on library and information science…
Descriptors: Accreditation (Institutions), Computer Networks, Curriculum Design, Higher Education
Peer reviewedAlberts, Bruce M. – Academic Medicine, 1994
This article proposes that more leadership is needed in the scientific community to combat inertia in research and education and for progress in higher education and scientific research to occur. This means using new techniques, designing funding mechanisms that promote more adventuresome research, and supporting the independence of creative young…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Creativity, Curriculum Design, Educational Change
Peer reviewedRouyer, Alwyn R. – College Teaching, 1995
A University of Idaho introductory course in political science describes basic concepts, institutions, and processes of politics and relate their importance to students' daily lives. The course is comparative in organization and structured to promote critical and analytical thinking about politics. (MSE)
Descriptors: Assignments, College Instruction, Comparative Analysis, Course Content
Manning, Maryann; Manning, Gary – Teaching Pre K-8, 1994
Discusses the differences between theme units and theme immersion (TI). Unlike traditional, predetermined theme units, TI has teachers and their students jointly plan the investigation of a topic or question, using student-centered lines of inquiry and methodology. Also discusses several resources that teachers can use to learn more about TI. (MDM)
Descriptors: Curriculum Design, Elementary Education, Interdisciplinary Approach, Program Implementation
Peer reviewedGonzalez, Agustin L. – Journal of Optometric Education, 1995
A description of the optometry program at the Universidad Autonoma de la Laguna (Mexico) provides information on the composition of the faculty, design of the five-year program as compared with the traditional four-year program, curriculum content, clinical education, visiting lecturer program, and certification of graduates. (MSE)
Descriptors: Certification, Clinical Experience, College Faculty, Curriculum Design
Peer reviewedStach, Donna J.; And Others – Journal of Dental Education, 1995
A survey of 169 dental hygiene training programs investigated the curriculum content and instruction concerning medical emergency treatment, related clinical practice, and program policy. Several trends are noted: increased curriculum hours devoted to emergency care; shift in course content to more than life-support care; and increased emergency…
Descriptors: Allied Health Occupations Education, Course Content, Curriculum Design, Dental Hygienists
Kanno, Yasuko; Applebaum, Sheila Dermer – TESL Canada Journal, 1995
Explores students' views of English-as-a-Second-Language courses in discussions with three Japanese secondary students. Their stories were analyzed in terms of Schwab's four curriculum commonplaces: learner, subject matter, milieu, and teacher. For the students, learning English is connected to negotiating their identities in a new environment.…
Descriptors: Course Content, Curriculum Design, English (Second Language), Interviews


