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Optner, Ruth L. – California English Journal, 1970
"Group groping," a classroom activity in which discussion units of five to seven students search into a text (play, essay, poem or short story) to illuminate a problem posed by the teacher, is a way of making discussions both teacher-directed and student-centered. After a class has read a work, the teacher provides background information to…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Discussion Groups, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Group Discussion
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Frantz, Thomas T.; Cramer, Stanley H. – College Student Journal, 1972
The results of the study suggest that for one graduate department, a week of discussions changed few attitudes toward campus issues. (Author)
Descriptors: Attitude Change, College Students, Discussion, Discussion (Teaching Technique)
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Wedman, Judy M.; Moutray, Carol – Reading Research and Instruction, 1991
Investigates differences in questions developed and asked by preservice teachers during literature set discussions. Finds that preservice teachers' questioning practices can be influenced by training and practice. Concludes that classroom reading instruction and students' reading achievement may be enhanced through teacher questioning practices.…
Descriptors: Discussion, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Discussion Groups, Preservice Teacher Education
Middleman, Ruth R. – Children, 1969
Descriptors: Black Attitudes, Community Programs, Discussion, Discussion Groups
Knutson, Thomas J. – Speech Monographs, 1972
Groups assigned to the High Orientation condition'', wherein a confederate manipulated behavior, were significantly closer to concensus after discussion than groups in either the Low or No Orientation conditions''; thirty groups were involved in the study. (Author/SP)
Descriptors: Behavior Theories, Discussion, Group Behavior, Group Discussion
Bloom, Lynn Z. – Journal of English Teaching Techniques, 1971
The author describes an experiment performed with her college class. The students realize there can be many interpretations and impressions of a single incident. (MR)
Descriptors: College Applicants, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Group Discussion, Visual Perception
Madar, Daniel – Teaching Political Science, 1982
Shows how the "nominal group technique" can be applied in the initial meetings of discussion groups in university courses to clarify group norms and climate and to exemplify productive discussion behaviors. (Author/RM)
Descriptors: Discussion (Teaching Technique), Discussion Groups, Higher Education, Political Science
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Parker, Walter C. – Educational Researcher, 2006
Classroom discussion can play an important role in the formation of citizens, and in more ways than one. Yet recitation persists as the discursive norm in classrooms, and the literature on discussion lacks clarity as to purpose. This article contributes a delineation of two purposes--interpretation (enlightenment) and decision making…
Descriptors: Discussion, Discussion (Teaching Technique), General Education, Citizenship
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Hoffman, Brittany L.; Breyfogle, M. Lynn; Dressler, Jason A. – Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School, 2009
Mathematical argumentation is an important skill. It leads to the process of proof, which is one area that students are being asked to master by the end of secondary school. Encouraging explanation and justification in math class allows this skill to develop. Explaining and justifying their ideas forces students to think deeply about mathematics…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Validity, Mathematical Logic, Secondary School Mathematics
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De Simone, Christina – Journal on Excellence in College Teaching, 2009
The author examines using problem-based learning (PBL) to guide preservice teachers' problem-solving abilities. Two classes of preservice teachers were divided into either an experimental group, who were taught to solve classroom problems using PBL, or a control group, who used traditional teaching methods such as discussion and videoclips of…
Descriptors: Experimental Groups, Control Groups, Preservice Teachers, Problem Based Learning
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Harrod, Wendy J. – Teaching Sociology, 2009
Professional journals serve the vital scientific function of disseminating knowledge to colleagues. In so doing, journals become the "face" and "voice" of the professional disciplines they represent. Journal content shows the major topics of interest, the scope, and the boundaries of the profession. It shows the techniques and methods of research…
Descriptors: Learning Activities, Social Psychology, College Students, College Faculty
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Kennedy, Ruth R. – Active Learning in Higher Education, 2009
The students in three sections of a class rated their knowledge and identified their view before and after each of five in-class debates. The degree of self-reported knowledge was significantly different after four of the five debates. Between 31% and 58% of participants changed their views after participating in or observing each debate. Some…
Descriptors: Educational Strategies, Debate, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Teaching Methods
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Li, Yanyan; Dong, Mingkai; Huang, Ronghuai – Educational Technology & Society, 2009
Online discussion forums provide open workspace allowing learners to share information, exchange ideas, address problems and discuss on specific themes. But the substantial impediment to its promotion as effective e-learning facility lies in the continuously increasing messages but with discrete and incoherent structure as well as the loosely-tied…
Descriptors: Semantics, Active Learning, Social Environment, Internet
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Damico, James S.; Rosaen, Cheryl L. – Teachers College Record, 2009
Background/Context: Research has demonstrated that moving from traditional teacher-directed, monologic practices to dialogic discussions remains a daunting challenge. The reasons for this staying power are multiple: Teachers often stick with familiar canonical texts; districts often mandate the literature teachers must use; standardized tests…
Descriptors: Discussion (Teaching Technique), Freedom, Grade 5, Epistemology
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Staarman, Judith Kleine – Language and Education, 2009
Classroom discourse is structured by socially accepted ways in which knowledge is presented and by established procedures for carrying out educational activities. However, the underlying linguistic and social ground rules are usually implicit, for students as well as for teachers. The implicitness of these ground rules has been attributed to…
Descriptors: Discussion Groups, Educational Technology, Classroom Communication, Cooperative Learning
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