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Sun, Qi – New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, 2019
This chapter presents mindfulness relaxation activities used in a first-year seminar, discusses Eastern ancient meditation methods as alternative Western contemplative inquiry, and suggests teaching practices in adult and higher education for holistic education and well-being.
Descriptors: Metacognition, First Year Seminars, Western Civilization, Teaching Methods
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Stoller, Aaron – Issues in Interdisciplinary Studies, 2020
While the scholarship of interdisciplinarity has grown prolifically in the last thirty years, the discourse primarily frames interdisciplinarity as an instrumental research construct. In this article, I will argue that this framework should be expanded to consider how interdisciplinary engagement can support education for democracy. The article…
Descriptors: Democracy, Interdisciplinary Approach, Educational Philosophy, Guidelines
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Kuh, George; O'Donnell, Ken; Schneider, Carol Geary – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2017
2017 is the anniversary of the introduction of what are now commonly known as high-impact practices (HIPs). Many of the specific activities pursued under the HIPs acronym have been around in some form for decades, such as study abroad, internships, and student-faculty research. It was about ten years ago that, after conferring HIPs at Ten with…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Higher Education, Equal Education, Disproportionate Representation
Association of American Colleges and Universities, 2016
This report summarizes key findings from a national survey among chief academic officers at Association of American Colleges and Universities (AAC&U) member institutions and explores how institutions are defining common learning outcomes, trends related to general education design and the use of emerging, evidence-based teach­ing and learning…
Descriptors: General Education, Design, Outcomes of Education, Teaching Methods
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Addo, Akosua Obuo; Castle, Eric E. – Higher Education Studies, 2015
Curricula content and structure that encourages interdisciplinary learning, inter-level organization, cross-institutional study supports innovation and inspires new ideas about curricular design in higher education. The purpose of this article is to discuss a collaborative effort of two classes on different campuses to map play in the culturally…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Ethics, Interdisciplinary Approach, Curriculum Design
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Scott, Victoria Groves; Weishaar, Mary Konya – Journal of Effective Teaching, 2008
Increased focus on assessment of student learning, within college classrooms, has lead many professors to routinely employ classroom assessment techniques as a means to make adjustments in teaching during the instructional process. This article describes a technique, Talking Drawings, which was developed by a high school teacher as a teaching…
Descriptors: Evaluation Methods, Measurement Techniques, Teaching Methods, Feedback (Response)
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Fidler, Paul P.; Neururer-Rotholz, Julie; Richardson, Sharon – Journal of the First-Year Experience & Students in Transition, 1999
Examined the effects on teaching techniques of faculty (n=68) at the University of South Carolina who taught a freshman seminar after completing a training workshop. Many faculty reported that they had transferred the new teaching techniques learned in preparation for the freshman seminar to their discipline-based courses. These included lecturing…
Descriptors: College Faculty, College Freshmen, Faculty Development, First Year Seminars
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Bruss, Kristine S. – Journal of College Student Development, 1996
Although the case teaching method is most prominent in graduate schools, the technique is well suited to freshman seminar courses that seek to promote student development and self-discovery. Discusses how cases have been developed and integrated into Freshman Seminar 101, a required one-credit course at a private liberal arts college. (JPS)
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Case Method (Teaching Technique), College Environment, College Freshmen
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Weisskirch, Robert S. – Academic Exchange Quarterly, 2003
Asserts that the use of journals in a service-learning course is a way to motivate first-year students to be more introspective and reflective and to document changes they undergo during their experience. Finds that students will reflect on how service-learning affects their evolving identities and their clarification of career goals. (Contains 14…
Descriptors: Colleges, Experiential Learning, First Year Seminars, Higher Education
Weaver, Laura H. – 1984
Acknowledging that in this age of technology students need to learn how to integrate the values of both the humanities and science/technology, this paper describes a special nonclassroom, noncredit program to that end for college freshman honors students at the University of Evansville (Indiana). Following an introduction, the paper discusses the…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, First Year Seminars, Higher Education, Honors Curriculum
Brown, Byron – 1994
Traditional views of critical thinking instruction focus on teaching students to develop skeptical responses to the texts they read. Genuinely powerful and generative forms of critical thinking, however, require students to read creatively as well. To balance the rigor of analysis and exorbitance of creativity, a freshman honors seminar was…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Course Objectives, Creative Thinking, Critical Reading
Cohen, Robert D.; Jody, Ruth – 1978
To help schools recruit and retain their students without lowering academic standards, a full semester freshman seminar designed to train new college students in the skills they will need is proposed. The importance of this approach in light of the growing competition among colleges and universities to attract students is discussed. Increased…
Descriptors: Administrator Guides, Admission (School), Annotated Bibliographies, College Freshmen