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Showing 1 to 15 of 60 results Save | Export
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Vikki C. Terrile – College Teaching, 2025
Community college students are more likely than their peers in four-year colleges to experience homelessness or housing instability. At the same time, homelessness is a curricular topic, particularly in social science courses. Given the prevalence of homelessness and housing instability in the community college student population, likely worsened…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Community Colleges, Community College Students, Homeless People
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Gunn, Laura H.; Ghosh, Subhanwita; ter Horst, Enrique; Markossian, Talar W.; Molina, German – College Teaching, 2022
In a polarized society, it is a university's responsibility to offer courses that explore highly controversial issues. Traditional forms of debate may create barriers to knowledge and entrenchment of perspectives, with students self-limiting their ability to develop informed opinions. We describe an active learning, double-blinded approach to…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Debate, Discussion, Public Health
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Amy Fisk; Rebecca Mushtare – College Teaching, 2024
This qualitative, narrative study explores the experiences of college students with disabilities before and during the remote learning period. Three main themes emerged as critical influences on student perceptions of institutional access and inclusion: accommodations and accessibility; building relationships and community and course structure and…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, College Students, Students with Disabilities, Access to Education
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Meyers, Sal; Rowell, Katherine; Wells, Mary; Smith, Brian C. – College Teaching, 2019
This paper defines teacher empathy, argues that teacher empathy enhances student learning, and offers suggestions for increasing teacher empathy. Teacher empathy is the degree to which an instructor works to deeply understand students' personal and social situations, to feel care and concern in response to students' positive and negative emotions,…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Teacher Attitudes, Teacher Characteristics, Empathy
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Desa, Geoffrey; Howard, Pamela J.; Gorzycki, Meg; Allen, Diane D. – College Teaching, 2020
The advancement of college reading abilities from novice to expert is not an automatic outcome of an undergraduate education. Faculty play a large role in the undergraduate academic reading experience through course curricula and in-class instruction. However, descriptions of faculty beliefs about collegiate academic reading and pedagogical…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Teacher Attitudes, Undergraduate Students, Reading Skills
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Kerrigan, John – College Teaching, 2018
Active learning involves students engaging with course content beyond lecture: through writing, applets, simulations, games, and more (Prince, 2004). As mathematics is often viewed as a subject area that is taught using more traditional methods (Goldsmith & Mark, 1999), there are actually many simple ways to make undergraduate mathematics…
Descriptors: Active Learning, Mathematics Instruction, College Mathematics, Undergraduate Students
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Jenkins, Jade S.; Bugeja, Ashley D.; Barber, Larissa K. – College Teaching, 2014
Research has suggested that a lengthier course syllabus may increase positive impressions of instructor effectiveness. In this investigation, we disentangle the effects of adding restrictive course boundary information from the addition of course content information. Furthermore, we examine the role of instructor gender as a moderator of the…
Descriptors: Course Descriptions, Educational Policy, Psychology, Teacher Effectiveness
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Blinne, Kristen C. – College Teaching, 2013
In this teaching reflection, the author discusses the benefits of incorporating learners' input into classroom content design, starting with the syllabus, to invite a more democratic learning process. She suggests four guiding questions teachers can employ throughout their courses, working with learners to create a collaborative classroom culture…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Curriculum Development, Reflection, Course Content
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Walsh, Bridget A.; Bonner, Dave; Springer, Victoria; Lalasz, Camille B.; Ives, Bob – College Teaching, 2013
Little information exists about the structure and content of grant writing courses offered in the United States. To fill this gap, we used multiple data sources, including a content analysis of syllabi from 93 graduate-level grant writing courses in the United States, and an online survey that sought insight into (a) the ways in which textbooks…
Descriptors: Grantsmanship, Proposal Writing, Course Content, Course Descriptions
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Reynolds, Candyce; Stevens, Dannelle D.; West, Ellen – College Teaching, 2013
Creative thinking skills are essential for today's workplace. Three faculty members from different professional schools (business, higher education administration, teacher education) examined student responses to the creative assignments in their courses. The assignments exemplify the following criteria: invited taking risks, encouraged innovative…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Professional Education, Creative Thinking, Thinking Skills
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Nardone, Carroll Ferguson; Lee, Renee Gravois – College Teaching, 2011
Problem posing is a higher-order, active-learning task that is important for students to develop. This article describes a series of interdisciplinary learning activities designed to help students strengthen their problem-posing skills, which requires that students become more responsible for their learning and that faculty move to a facilitator…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Interdisciplinary Approach, Learning Activities, Inquiry
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Sherer, Pamela; Shea, Timothy – College Teaching, 2011
Online videos are used increasingly in higher education teaching as part of the explosion of Web 2.0 tools that are now available. YouTube is one popular example of a video-sharing resource that both faculty and students can use effectively, both inside and outside of the classroom, to engage students in their learning, energize classroom…
Descriptors: Video Technology, Discussion, Student Attitudes, Learner Engagement
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Fry, Sara Winstead; Villagomez, Amanda – College Teaching, 2012
Writing to learn is a pedagogical approach grounded in the belief that the reasoning required to write about a topic or concept will help students gain understanding. However, research indicates that the impact writing has on student learning depends on context. Using a mixed-method, quasi-experimental, repeated measures design, we examined how…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Course Content, Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction
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Youssef, Lamiaa – College Teaching, 2010
In a world literature course, an instructor faces the challenge of engaging the students in classical texts that are historically, geographically, and linguistically "alien" to them. Through a three-step instructional model that includes approximation, thematic relevance, and application, the instructor tries to help students identify,…
Descriptors: Classics (Literature), College Instruction, World Literature, Course Content
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Gibson, Laura – College Teaching, 2011
Student engagement and retention is a concern of many university professors. To engage sophomore-level students in a Sociology of Aging class, I challenged them to design the course in a way that would make the outcome personally meaningful to them. The class was asked to identify specific learning objectives related to the university's course…
Descriptors: Learner Engagement, Feedback (Response), Assignments, Course Content
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