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Schaub, Mark – Business Communication Quarterly, 2007
The author relates experiences from teaching abroad, highlighting the challenges and rewards of adapting to other cultures and new environments. In Poland, the writer cites a dichotomy among his fellow instructors in dealing with cases of plagiarism, from those who would fail students outright and for the entire course, to those who treated his…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Foreign Countries, Teaching Methods, Teaching Experience

Missett, James R.; And Others – Journal of Medical Education, 1974
Poland has centralized academic and administrative control over the medical academies, combined the training of medical students with that of dental and pharmacy students, equalized admission ratios for men and women, and provided relatively generous stipends for its medical students. (Editor/PG)
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, International Education, Medical Education
Bringing the Sociological into the Discussion: Teaching the Sociology of Genocide and the Holocaust.

Abowitz, Deborah A. – Teaching Sociology, 2002
Illustrates how to use sociological concepts and theory in teaching about genocide and the Holocaust. Offers three examples to demonstrate how sociology can be integrated into the study of genocide and the Holocaust. Relates topics addressed in examples, such as gender issues. (CMK)
Descriptors: Bureaucracy, Course Content, Foreign Countries, Gender Issues

Nasierowski, Wojciech – Journal of Teaching in International Business, 1998
A survey of 692 business-administration graduate students in four countries (Canada, Poland, Latvia, Philippines) indicates that students from different countries assign different rankings to the importance of business-administration courses in the curriculum, group courses into different thematic groups, and prefer different instructional…
Descriptors: Business Administration Education, College Instruction, Comparative Analysis, Curriculum Design