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Hegelheimer, Volker; Tower, Dustin – System: An International Journal of Educational Technology and Applied Linguistics, 2004
Recent CALL research has started to go beyond the comparison of CALL versus non-CALL environments to explore what learners do while going through CALL activities. One important strand within that area has focused on the use and utility of providing learners with opportunities to request modified input. While many studies have carried out research…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Second Language Instruction, Interaction, Observation
Innes, Robert B. – Journal of Management Education, 2006
Recent education reforms informed by learning science support the effectiveness of collaborative learning strategies such as problem-based learning groups. However, the efficacy of these methods depends on the authenticity of the problem context and the quality of the dialog established. Communication within groups must be dialogic, and students…
Descriptors: Learning Strategies, Problem Based Learning, Educational Change, Teaching Methods
Spee, James C. – Journal of Management Education, 2005
Focused conversation is a method of collecting observations, emotions, interpretations, and decisions from groups that have shared a significant experience. This article reports how the author used focused conversation to discuss the events of September 11 with students in three sections of a master's-level organizational change class in the week…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Organizational Change, Graduate Study, Interpersonal Communication
Terry, Krista P.; Doolittle, Peter – College Quarterly, 2006
Although much has been written about fostering self-regulated learning in traditional classroom settings, there has been little that addresses how to facilitate self-regulated learning skills in distributed and online environments. This article will examine some such strategies by specifically focusing on time management. Specific principles for…
Descriptors: Time Management, Learning Strategies, College Students, Guidelines
Capus, Laurence; Curvat, Frederic; Leclair, Olivier; Tourigny, Nicole – Educational Technology & Society, 2006
For the past five years, our students have been passing less and less time preparing for lectures and exams. To encourage them to do more exercises, a pedagogical activity was offered outside the classroom. With the goal of making students more active during the problem-solving process, an innovative online environment, Sphinx, was developed.…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Information Management, Learning Strategies, Problem Solving
Molina, Bogusia; Brigman, Greg; Rhone, Angela – Journal for Specialists in Group Work, 2003
A multicultural model for children in Grades K through 5 to foster skills needed for success is presented. The learning, living, and working (LLW) group work model focuses on three skill sets identified by multiple researchers over the past 30 years as necessary for success in school, relationships, and work. These three skill sets--learning…
Descriptors: Story Grammar, Service Learning, Play, Academic Achievement
Barwell, Richard – Mathematics Teaching, 2003
Despite plenty of practice, many students find interpreting and solving word-problems difficult. How can teachers work with students so that they learn to make appropriate sense (or should it be "inappropriate sense"?) of word-problems? One way to investigate how students make sense of word-problems is to ask them to write some of their own. The…
Descriptors: Word Problems (Mathematics), Mathematics Instruction, Problem Solving, Learning Strategies
Cates, Ward Mitchell; Bishop, M. J. – Journal of Educational Technology Systems, 2003
One need not visit many classes to discover some students not sufficiently energized to do the work necessary to learn. Many of these same students, however, immerse themselves in complex computerized mystery/adventure games, becoming so engaged by the experience they lose track of time. Designers invest much of their energy in trying to figure…
Descriptors: Physics, Courseware, Computer Assisted Instruction, Instructional Design
DeKeyser, Raymond – Tech Directions, 2004
Students enrolled in technical programs prefer hands-on activities over reading and writing. While hands-on learning works well for conveying technical skills, most technical jobs will also require good reading, writing, and oral communication skills. Effective reading includes more than just "mouthing the words"--it calls for understanding and…
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Job Skills, Reading Comprehension, Technical Education
Caney, Annaliese – Australian Primary Mathematics Classroom, 2004
Facilitating mental computation discussion comes with its own set of challenges for researchers and teachers. It is important to be able to help capture the students' ideas, before they disappear and seem like little more than moments of magic! In enabling children to learn how numbers work, the current emphasis on mental computation is driven by…
Descriptors: Questioning Techniques, Testing, Mental Computation, Teachers
Reaume, Denise; Ropp, Tracey – Canadian Journal of Higher Education, 2005
This qualitative study investigated how students adapt to medical school. Thirty-six medical students completed an e-mail survey exploring the transition from pre-medical to medical education, the use of learning strategies, and self-regulated learning practices. Their responses highlighted the challenges of medical education and the learning…
Descriptors: Medical Schools, Medical Students, Learning Strategies, Medical Education
Hardre, Patricia L. – Innovative Higher Education, 2005
Institutions need effective and efficient methods of professional development for preparing graduate students to teach. These skills are important both for their immediate roles as teaching assistants (TAs) and for their eventual roles in the professoriate. An iterative process model from instructional design can function as a cognitive…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Cognitive Processes, Teaching Assistants, Faculty Development
Yang, Yong-Chil – Journal of Educational Technology Systems, 2006
The purpose of this study was to explore the effects of embedded strategies on promoting the use of self-regulated learning strategies (SRLS) in an online learning environment. Cognitive strategies, performance control strategies, and self-efficacy strategies among SRLS were employed as embedded strategies into online learning. Thirty-four college…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Self Management, Learning Strategies, Online Courses
Carneiro, Roberto – European Journal of Education, 2006
The article summarises the main findings from a study on school teachers who enrolled on a technology-rich graduate training programme. It features the impact of a distance education environment, strongly supported with Information and Communication Technologies (ICT), on the motivation profiles of student teachers and the acquisition of…
Descriptors: Student Teachers, Learning Strategies, Graduate Study, Distance Education
Dormann, Claire; Biddle, Robert – Learning, Media & Technology, 2006
This paper focuses on the benefits and utilisation of humour in digital game-based learning. Through the activity theory framework, we emphasise the role of humour as a mediating tool which helps resolve contradictions within the activity system from conjoining educational objectives within the computer game. We then discuss the role of humour…
Descriptors: Computer Uses in Education, Humor, Teaching Methods, Computers

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