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Regnier, Robert – Interchange: A Quarterly Review of Education, 2005
Besides learning transmitted content, university students develop learning patterns through pedagogical processes designed into the structure of their courses. Courses shaped within the assumptions of epistemologies and ontologies that only afford narrow learning patterns can eschew learning as valuing processes. However, university courses can be…
Descriptors: College Students, College Faculty, Learning Processes, Learning Strategies
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Steele, Susan – Journal of General Education, 2006
When faculty members think about curriculum, they think about course content. Debates about general education reflect this focus. Drawing on a case study, this article considers, rather, the politics and process of curricular change. It argues that success in this realm depends on the skill of academic administrators. (Contains 2 figures.)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, Course Content, Educational Change, Faculty
LUSKIN, BERNARD JAY – 1967
THE DATA PROCESSING TECHNICIAN SHOULD BE COMPETENT IN SYSTEMS, APPLICATIONS, AND METHODS. RECENT TRENDS HAVE EMPHASIZED COMPUTER TECHNOLOGY, WITH UNIT RECORD EQUIPMENT USED ONLY AS SUPPORT. PROGRAMS IN DATA PROCESSING TECHNOLOGY MUST INCLUDE BOTH THEORY AND APPLICATION, WITH BREADTH TO PROVIDE A BASIS FOR LATER ADVANCEMENT AND SPECIALIZATION. A…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Computers, Course Content, Curriculum Development
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Braxton, John M. – The Review of Higher Education, 1983
The relationship between publication productivity and the performance of scholarly-based course activities was investigated. A moderately strong relationship between research and teaching role performance was demonstrated. (Author/MLW)
Descriptors: College Faculty, College Instruction, Course Content, Data Analysis
Jones, Nathan Brian – Online Submission, 2004
In a debate in the Forum section of the "TESOL Quarterly", Jones and Silva (1998) exchanged views about the merits and demerits of teacher-assigned themes and topics in tertiary-level EFL/ESL writing classes. However, much more remains to be explored. Should teachers assign the topics of papers, or even the content themes for the entire…
Descriptors: Personal Autonomy, Data Analysis, Course Content, Writing Teachers
Quinlan, Kathleen M. – 1999
The educational beliefs of seven mechanical engineering faculty members at one university were examined in the context of their department and the history of the engineering education. Participants were selected to cover the demographic range across the department. Each of the faculty members was interviewed and observed at two points over the…
Descriptors: Case Studies, College Faculty, Course Content, Design
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Werner, D. Leonard – Journal of Optometric Education, 1993
A survey of 16 optometry schools found 12 had a required course or portion of a required course dedicated to teaching ethics. Classroom hours varied from 0 to 60; the median was 7. Topics covered varied. Courses were usually offered in the first and third years. Faculty were typically, though not exclusively, optometrists. (MSE)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Course Content, Curriculum Design, Degree Requirements
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Fingerman, Karen L. – Teaching of Psychology, 2000
Presents an interview with Susan Krauss Whitbourne in which she discusses issues such as the challenge in teaching a course on the psychology of aging; types of assignments and active learning she uses in her course; resources she recommends; and how her research influences the adult development courses she has taught. (CMK)
Descriptors: Active Learning, Adult Development, Aging Education, College Faculty
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Swing, Randy L. – Innovative Higher Education, 1998
Public opinion poll data dating from 1973 suggest a trustworthy and honest professoriate engaged in important work through college teaching, research, and service, but the same surveys show hesitation in granting full academic freedom to teachers holding controversial ideas. The impact of events, such as publication of critical reports, on college…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, College Faculty, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Faculty Workload
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Talburt, Susan – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education, 1999
Explores the logic of ethnographic inquiry that seeks to make gay and lesbian subjects seen and heard. Focuses on participants' opinions of the course Introduction to Christianity. Theorizes the effects of religious and sexual "open secrets," or "knowledge that is present yet unarticulated," in constituting the teacher's form of instruction. (CMK)
Descriptors: Christianity, College Faculty, Course Content, Educational Practices
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Canabal, Maria E.; Winchip, Susan M. – Journal of Family and Consumer Sciences, 2004
One of the challenges faced by graduate programs in family and consumer sciences (FCS) is how to maintain the identity and cohesion of the profession (its values, mission and goals) despite an increasing number of students who have undergraduate degrees from other disciplines or from specialized areas within FCS but who do not identify themselves…
Descriptors: Consumer Science, Masters Programs, Curriculum Development, Program Evaluation
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Smart, Kathy A.; Meyer, Katrina A. – EDUCAUSE Quarterly, 2005
During 2003, the North Dakota University System began to be concerned about the cost of supporting multiple course management systems. Since 1997, the 11 NDUS institutions had used 9 different course management packages, including one homegrown product (HTMLeZ) and such proprietary products as Blackboard, WebCT, and e-College. The University of…
Descriptors: Management Systems, Online Courses, Course Content, College Faculty
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Barbour, JoAnn – Journal of Leadership Education, 2006
Leader educators know that demands on leaders of organizations are increasing, requiring different strategies of leading, for example, working in diverse and global environments, using shared decision-making, and developing effective work teams. To educate future leaders in a postmodern era, instructors must attempt nontraditional teaching methods…
Descriptors: Teamwork, Teaching Methods, Leadership Training, Problem Based Learning
Wihl, Gary – Liberal Education, 2006
Political pressure on colleges and universities has been a matter of common debate and concern since 1934. That was the year the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) and the Association of American Colleges (the precursor of AAC&U) established a series of conferences in order to reaffirm and develop the 1925 Conference Statement on…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Debate, Conferences, Educational Policy
Brouwer, Lynnette F. – International Education Journal, 2006
This paper addresses the Fulbright experience of an American faculty member in Eastern Siberia, Russian Federation. Both course content and teaching method are contrasted with what is traditional and customary in that region. The author regularly kept a journal, enabling thoughtful post-experience reflection. Continued emphasis on the…
Descriptors: Course Content, Foreign Countries, College Faculty, Teaching Methods
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