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Karp, Basil – International Studies Notes, 1989
Points out that the growing interdependence of nations aided by advanced communications has led to the need for comparable changes in U.S. education. Suggests that the undergraduate curriculum should be infused with an international/global perspective. (KO)
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Course Content, Curriculum Enrichment, Economic Change
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Kahn, David – NAMTA Journal, 1996
Notes that the critical art of parent education is to bring the parent into the child's world view. Describes current publications from NAMTA's parent education tool kit which support the child's perspective. Includes strategies for generating parent discussion to merge the parent's point of view with that of the child in dealing with conflict.…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Childhood Needs, Early Childhood Education, Montessori Method
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Fernald, Peter S. – Teaching of Psychology, 1995
Asserts the importance of empathy as a necessary condition for health service professionals. Describes classroom techniques and assignments that teach and assess empathic-listening skills. Includes students' ratings of 14 learning activities designed to enhance listening skills and empathy. (CFR)
Descriptors: Assignments, Classroom Techniques, Counselor Training, Empathy
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Green, Robert P., Jr. – Social Studies, 1991
Discusses using historiography on the Reconstruction Era as a method for generating classroom lessons in both inductive reasoning and critical thinking. Urges teaching of historical process as well as content. Suggests emphasizing limitations of available historical data and perspective. Recommends presenting students with historical data allowing…
Descriptors: Bias, Critical Thinking, Historiography, History Instruction
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Greenbaum, Vicky – English Journal, 1999
Describes how a high school English teacher uses the metaphor of "lenses" to help her students learn to see through the eyes of another and come to understand their experiences. Discusses how this fosters students' awareness of gender as a lens to view the world; reduces their resistance to acknowledging other viewpoints; and encourages awareness…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Gender Issues, High Schools, Justice
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Johannessen, Larry R. – Social Studies, 2000
Addresses teaching about the Vietnam War. Focuses on selecting literature and how to implement the "mines and booby traps simulation," which demonstrates the experience of an infantry soldier. Describes follow-up activities to the simulation, the connections students made between the simulation and literature, and the importance of simulation…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Educational Benefits, Educational Strategies
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Hartoonian, H. Michael – International Journal of Social Education, 2001
Presents six different investigations of character enhancement that attempts to answer three questions: (1) who are you; (2) what is your destination; and (3) who is your captain? Intends to build relationships among ideas such as perspective taking, seeing and making connections with the other, and understanding more about ethical development.…
Descriptors: Concept Mapping, Educational Strategies, Elementary Secondary Education, Ethics
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Gehlbach, Hunter – Educational Psychology Review, 2004
Social perspective taking (SPT) is thought to be important in its own right and is often associated with other important skills, such as interpersonal conflict resolution. Previous research on SPT, however, has conceptualized it as a unidimensional construct leaving scholars with an insufficient understanding of this aptitude and how it relates to…
Descriptors: Academic Aptitude, Perspective Taking, Conflict Resolution, Outcomes of Education
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Valadez, Albert A.; Evans, Marcheta – Journal of Creativity in Mental Health, 2005
The relationship between empathy and forgiveness is explored through the painful experience of divorce and relationship loss. Authors propose a literary exercise, the Novel Approach, to help clients discover the power of empathy and find resolution to past pains. Included is a case study used to describe the Novel Approach and to highlight its…
Descriptors: Divorce, Creativity, Counseling, Empathy
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Lovat, Terence – Australian Journal of Educational & Developmental Psychology, 2004
This paper discusses ways in which examiners position themselves in relation to doctoral students' knowledge. The epistemological thesis of Habermas is utilized and its well-established connections with the world of formal learning re-stated. Against this conceptual framework, the examiner reports are appraised with a view to identifying the ways…
Descriptors: Examiners, Epistemology, Doctoral Programs, Doctoral Dissertations
Barton, Keith C. – 1996
This study examines the ability of students to develop empathy for peoples of the past and to avoid the belief that people in the past were no different than today. The paper reports the results of a year-long qualitative investigation of fourth and fifth graders' attempts to understand the values, attitudes, and beliefs of people in the past. The…
Descriptors: Consciousness Raising, Empathy, Grade 4, Grade 5
Hateley, B. J. – 1982
This paper, written for counselors and educators, describes a course in guided autobiography (a self-narrative which is structured around important life themes such as family, work, health, love and death) and its role in developmental psychology. A description of the course which is structured around three components, lectures, writing…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Course Content, Developmental Psychology, Higher Education
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Glassberg, Sally; Sprinthall, Norman A. – Journal of Teacher Education, 1980
Role-taking, peer supervision, and gradual peer leadership evolution appear a promising method of producing positive psychological development during the student teacher experience. (JD)
Descriptors: Developmental Stages, Individual Development, Peer Evaluation, Perspective Taking
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Reiman, Alan J.; Peace, Sandra DeAngelis – Journal of Moral Education, 2002
Discusses a study involving experienced teachers that illustrates a developmental methodology for promoting technical performance dimensions and moral and conceptual reasoning. Argues this learning-teaching framework (LTF) uses role taking, guided inquiry, balance, support and challenge, continuity and instructional coaching in educational…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Inquiry, Moral Development, Moral Issues
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Lamy, Steven L. – International Journal of Social Education, 1989
Discusses issues related to teaching international relations. Supports the position that teaching controversial issues is an integral part of any social studies course. Explores some controversial issues that might be considered in the classroom, describing approaches to teaching these issues. (KO)
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Course Content, Critical Thinking, Curriculum Development
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