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Peer reviewedEllis, Susan S. – Educational Leadership, 1979
Teachers in an elementary school decide not to match students with teachers. Instead, the teachers learn a variety of styles. (Author)
Descriptors: Educational Environment, Elementary Education, Learning Processes, Staff Development
Peer reviewedHofstein, Avi; And Others – Journal of Chemical Education, 1978
Describes a study done to compare the cognitive preferences of four student populations: postgraduate students in chemistry, students from academic high schools, those in vocational schools training to become lab technicians, and students joining science clubs. Results of a 34 item cognitive preference test are summarized. (Author/MA)
Descriptors: Chemistry, Cognitive Style, Educational Research, Higher Education
Peer reviewedGray, John; Satterly, David – Educational Research, 1978
The authors respond to criticism of their review of "Teaching Styles and Pupil Progress." They make further objections to the book's research design, compare various "teaching styles" studies, and suggest that the studies' findings are due to different amounts of time devoted to subjects by teachers with different objectives. (MF)
Descriptors: Book Reviews, Educational Research, Educational Researchers, Evaluation
Bishop, Douglas – Agricultural Education Magazine, 1978
The author directs comments to first-year vocational agricultural teachers: importance of personal interest, developing a teaching philosophy and teaching techniques, being ambitious, and using good judgment. (JH)
Descriptors: Agricultural Education, Beginning Teachers, Secondary Education, Teacher Attitudes
Peer reviewedLinn, William J. – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1978
Stresses the importance of the teacher's judgment and method of presentation in the teaching of writing. (MKM)
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Personality, Postsecondary Education, Teacher Attitudes
Peer reviewedWagner, Betty J. – Elementary School Journal, 1977
Descriptors: Case Studies, Classroom Environment, Elementary Education, Elementary School Teachers
Peer reviewedKraft, Robert E. – Physical Educator, 1976
College professors achieve the best academic results by matching their teaching methods with those learning styles most prominent in a particular class, or ideally, placing every student into a learning situation that best fits his most effective learning style. (JD)
Descriptors: College Faculty, College Students, Individual Characteristics, Learning
Peer reviewedMack, Richard Wayne – Journal of Creative Behavior, 1987
Sixty-two teacher educators and 388 student teachers were surveyed to determine their perceptions about teaching methods which enhance creativity and creativity in teaching styles. Results suggest that enhancing creativity is considered important but is not frequently taught directly or by example. (KM)
Descriptors: Adults, Creativity, Student Attitudes, Student Teachers
Peer reviewedDocking, Russell A. – Journal of Education for Teaching, 1985
Research related to pupil control ideology is reviewed and the effects of an inservice course dealing with child management techniques that was conducted with an elementary school staff are examined. Implications for further research and inservice courses are offered. (Author/DF)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Discipline, Elementary Education, Inservice Teacher Education
Peer reviewedSang, Richard C. – Bulletin of the Council for Research in Music Education, 1987
Reviews literature on teacher modeling. Reports on a study which investigated the relationship between an instrumental music teacher's modeling skills in performance and students' performance behavior. Concludes that teachers with stronger modeling skills produce students who perform better. (RKM)
Descriptors: Educational Research, Junior High Schools, Modeling (Psychology), Music Education
Peer reviewedBennett, Neville – Teaching and Teacher Education: An International Journal of Research and Studies, 1988
As teaching has come to be defined as a skill which embodies both science and art, research on it has also changed. This article discusses this theoretical development, assesses the extent to which different teaching processes and outcomes have been enhanced, and hypothesizes about future developments. (JL)
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Educational Research, Educational Theories, Elementary Education
Peer reviewedNietzke, Doug – Clearing House, 1988
Emphasizes telling stories and relating personal experiences as effective teaching strategies. Declares that story telling captures students' interest, involves them mentally and emotionally, keeps their attention, and makes a significant point that will be remembered. (MM)
Descriptors: Higher Education, Story Telling, Student Attitudes, Teacher Attitudes
Peer reviewedRoen, Duane; Diogenes, Marvin – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1987
Advocates that the antiquated "current traditional paradigm" prevalent in the teaching of writing be conquered by the C-Team, a group of four fighters for justice whose mission is to defend the "new paradigm" against violations. (NKA)
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Higher Education, Parody, Satire
Kuhn, David J. – Illinois Schools Journal, 1987
There is a place for the discovery model in science education, but it should not be the exclusive instructional model. Reception and discovery learning should be used. In reception, scientific concepts are sequentially transmitted to the learner followed by clarification and reinforcement. Reception has not been supported by teacher training…
Descriptors: Cognitive Style, Discovery Learning, Lifelong Learning, Models
Peer reviewedScarth, John; And Others – Educational Research, 1986
Analysis of teachers' questions, part of the ORACLE (Observation Research and Classroom Learning Evaluation) project research, is examined in detail. Scarth and Hammersley argue that the rules ORACLE uses for identifying different types of questions involve levels of ambiguity and inference that threaten reliability and validity of the study's…
Descriptors: Classroom Observation Techniques, Data Analysis, Data Collection, Program Evaluation


