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Barrett, L. R. – Higher Education Review, 1991
The common comment made on British university students' comprehensive examinations is incorrect but persists. It is an indication of how (1) the exams themselves upstage the educational process; (2) educators overuse platitudes and are quick to criticize; and (3) the questions asked are inappropriate. (MSE)
Descriptors: Academic Ability, College Students, Foreign Countries, Higher Education

Woodhouse, Howard – Interchange, 1999
Presents the first of two articles examining Alfred North Whitehead's notion of the rhythm of the university, discussing the rhythm of teaching and learning, the importance of academic freedom to an imaginative faculty, and the relationship between Whitehead's own pedagogy and his considerable administrative practice. The paper's purpose is to…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Academic Freedom, Administrator Role, College Faculty

Ward, Thomas B.; Sifonis, Cynthia M. – Journal of Creative Behavior, 1997
This study examined the impact of three conditions on how subjects (105 college students) generated ideas about imaginary extraterrestrials. Results are discussed in terms of constraints on innovation, ways of overcoming those constraints, and the general tendency for new ideas to preserve many of the central properties of existing concepts.…
Descriptors: College Students, Creative Thinking, Creativity, Divergent Thinking
Axtell, James – History Teacher, 2001
In this article, the author suggests that teachers of history have not only professionally "challenging" and socially "important" jobs, but immensely "pleasurable" ones as well. He emphasizes not the pleasures that "all" teachers, whatever their subject, enjoy from time to time, but those particular to teachers of "history". Here, the author…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, History Instruction, Teaching Conditions, Stereotypes