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Peer reviewedBrowne, Lois M.; Blackburn, Edward V. – Journal of Chemical Education, 1999
Describes attempts to adapt collaborative-learning techniques and a problem-solving approach to large introductory organic chemistry course sections at the University of Alberta. (WRM)
Descriptors: Cooperative Learning, Course Descriptions, Educational Change, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewedAllchin, Douglas; Anthony, Elizabeth; Bristol, Jack; Dean, Alan; Hall, David; Lieb, Carl – Science and Education, 1999
Describes an interdisciplinary science laboratory course for non-majors that uses the history of science as a curricular guide. Profiles two sample projects that consider the importance of teachers to classroom dynamics and the institutional political context. (Author/WRM)
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Course Descriptions, Higher Education, Instructional Innovation
Harper, Dennis; Conor, Jeff; Course, Amanda – Learning & Leading with Technology, 1999
Describes Generation www.Y (Gen Y), a program that trains technology-savvy students to help teachers incorporate technology into their lessons. Discusses how Gen Y works; benefits for students and teachers; and how Gen Y is funded. One table lists differences between the traditional way of infusing technology and the Gen Y way. The two student…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Uses in Education, Conventional Instruction, Educational Technology
Day, Janice Neibaur; McDonnell, Andrea P.; Heathfield, Lora Tuesday – Young Exceptional Children, 2005
Emergent literacy can be viewed as skills that are precursors to later reading and writing (Sulzby & Teale, 1991) or can be more broadly conceptualized as literacy acquisition that occurs along a developmental continuum. Because children with disabilities, such as visual impairments, can be at risk for later reading difficulties, it is critical…
Descriptors: Emergent Literacy, Preschool Education, Disabilities, Inclusive Schools
Carpenter, B. Stephen; Taylor, Pamela G. – Computers in the Schools, 2006
When interactive computer technology is used in meaningful and connective ways, it both enhances and provokes the focus and purpose of art instruction and learning to be expansive and personally relevant. In this paper, we describe an approach to interpretation and curriculum design that requires users to make visual and conceptual associations…
Descriptors: Art Education, Educational Technology, Curriculum Design, Computer Uses in Education
Goh, Tiong; Kinshuk – Journal of Educational Multimedia and Hypermedia, 2006
Emerging from e-learning, mobile learning is going to be a significant next wave of learning environments. This is an evolving research area and many issues regarding mobile learning have not yet been exhaustively covered. This article focuses on implementing m-learning modules using a simple case study. Most existing typical e-learning systems…
Descriptors: Educational Environment, Computers, Internet, Telecommunications
Elbow, Peter – Assessing Writing, 2006
Inoue [Inoue, A. B. (2005). "Community-based assessment pedagogy." "Assessing Writing: An International Journal, 3", 208-238] sets up a radically experimental writing class as a kind of laboratory of assessment. He seeks to avoid the standard situation where a teacher unilaterally assesses and grades student writing, using only his or her own…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Evaluation Methods, Evaluation Criteria, Educational Environment
Ensminger, David C.; Surry, Daniel W.; Porter, Barry E.; Wright, Dawn – Educational Technology & Society, 2004
This paper reports the results of a study into the conditions that facilitate the implementation of instructional innovations. One hundred seventy-nine participants completed an online instrument designed to determine the relative importance of eight conditions shown to facilitate implementation. This paper describes the construction and testing…
Descriptors: Instructional Innovation, Factor Analysis, Program Implementation, Performance Factors
Dublin, Thomas; Sklar, Kathryn Kish – History Teacher, 2002
Worldwide web technology is a perfect match for teaching about history. The technology boosts teachers capacities because it gives its students access to the documents that reveal the processes of historical change, and it helps students develop better analytic skills by learning to interpret documents. This amazing conjuncture of new technology…
Descriptors: United States History, Females, Womens Studies, Technology Uses in Education
Stearns, Peter N. – History Teacher, 2003
Globalization provides history teachers with an opportunity to link past to present in new ways and to test historical thinking. This is particularly true in world history surveys, but has relevance to Western civilization or United States history surveys as well. For globalization in turn, the historical perspective offers opportunities for more…
Descriptors: World History, United States History, Western Civilization, Global Approach
Sicilia, Miguel-Angel – Computer Science Education, 2006
A considerable amount of experiences in teaching object-oriented concepts using the Java language have been reported to date, some of which describe language pitfalls and concrete learning difficulties. In this paper, a number of additional issues that have been experienced as difficult for students to master, along with approaches intended to…
Descriptors: Learning Problems, Learning Strategies, Programming, Programming Languages
Allen, Deborah; Donham, Richard; Tanner, Kimberly – Cell Biology Education, 2004
For more than 20 years, the American public has grown accustomed to the drumbeat of bad news about their schools. Poor performance on standardized tests, gaps in achievement between minority and white students, and high student drop-out rates have become part of the modern lexicon. Although college- and university-level science educators are not…
Descriptors: Science Education, Teaching Methods, Lesson Plans, Undergraduate Study
Hollingsworth, Sandra; Gallego, Margaret A. – Journal of In-service Education, 2004
This is a narrative report of a three-year professional development effort taking place within a professional development school (PDS). University professors collaborated with teachers in an urban junior high school to work on broadening their conceptions of literacy to enable student success. At the end of the project, it was clear that the…
Descriptors: Professional Development Schools, Professional Development, Literacy, Educational Environment
Hug, Barbara; Reese, George – Teaching Education, 2006
Helping teachers to change practices by adopting new tools and pedagogical approaches is of interest to a wide range of educational researchers and practitioners. This article describes a teacher, Ms. Hogan, who is an early adopter of a technological innovation: the authoring tool Squeak. We analyze email messages from Ms. Hogan applying Rogers'…
Descriptors: Electronic Mail, Technology Integration, Educational Technology, Teacher Role
Griffin, Sean – Irish Educational Studies, 2005
The school operated by David Manson in 18th century Belfast was a centre of learning which represented a critical approach to traditional forms of education. Choice instead of coercion; encouragement rather than ridicule; achievement and recognition for all learners were the hallmarks of his method. Enjoyment in teaching and in learning was not…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Teaching Methods, Educational Games, Learner Engagement

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