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Rossman, Allan J.; Burrill, Gail – Journal of Statistics Education, 2019
Gail Burrill is a Mathematics Specialist in the Program in Mathematics Education at Michigan State University. She previously served as secondary teacher and department chair. She was President of the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics and is currently President of the International Association for Statistical Education. She is a Fellow…
Descriptors: Interviews, Specialists, College Faculty, Mathematics Education
Karimi-Aghdam, Saeed – Online Submission, 2020
James P. Lantolf is George and Jane Greer Professor Emeritus of Language Acquisition and Applied Linguistics and former director of the Center for Advanced Language Proficiency Education and Research at the Pennsylvania State University, USA. He is currently Adjunct Professor of Applied Linguistics in the same academic unit at Xi'an Jiaotong…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Sociocultural Patterns, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction
Gershon, Walter S.; Bilinovich, Carrie; Peel, Amanda – Canadian Social Studies, 2010
This autobiographical piece of collaborative discensus (Gershon, 2008; Gershon, Peel & Bilinovich, 2009) presents the authors' interwoven perspectives about the challenges they faced as they talked about race in a pre-service social studies class. Their work here serves two main purposes. First it is an opportunity for a teacher and two former…
Descriptors: Social Studies, Race, Teaching Methods, Biographies
Henshon, Suzanna E. – Roeper Review, 2010
This article presents an interview with Ann Robinson, a professor of educational psychology and founding director of the Center for Gifted Education at the University of Arkansas at Little Rock. She is the president of the National Association for Gifted Children (NAGC), a former editor of the Gifted Child Quarterly (GCQ), and was the first Editor…
Descriptors: Gifted, Educational Psychology, Editing, Biographies
Cardellini, Liberato – Journal of Chemical Education, 2010
This interview provides glimpses of Joseph J. Lagowski and his life from the time he played with a Gilbert chemistry set, to his tenure at The University of Texas at Austin. His initial interest in chemistry was further nurtured and developed thanks to an excellent high school teacher. In the interview, Lagowski discusses his research in…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Active Learning, Educational Technology, Teaching Methods
Waller, David – College Teaching, 2008
The interdisciplinary survey inherits from more traditional survey courses the weaknesses embodied in the survey textbook. The standard textbook presentation gives students the impression that each figure's music, art, or literature is the product of the "spirit of the age." Well-chosen biographies temper that presentation by drawing attention to…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Textbooks, Biographies, Teaching Methods

Kellogg, Richard L. – Teaching of Psychology, 1981
This is a brief report on the use of biographies of five famous psychologists to stimulate student interest in psychological issues. For example, the history of Francis Galton's life is used to demonstrate the effects of 19th century attitudes, concepts, and values on the scientist's world view and his achievements. (AM)
Descriptors: Biographies, Higher Education, Psychology, Teaching Methods
Vandermeer, Philip – Indiana Social Studies Quarterly, 1980
Suggests that studying collective biographies for political history provides a means of analyzing the behavior, experience and character of many different groups. The approach improves the historian's sensitivity to the majority of historical actors and significantly expands understanding of individuals. (Author/KC)
Descriptors: Biographies, Groups, Higher Education, Historiography

Schade, Lisa – English Journal, 1996
Shows how one teacher answered student questions about how a particular piece of literature came to be regarded as worthy of in-depth examination. Proposes that students be taught about various critical approaches, including Jungian/archetypal criticism, formalism, reader-response criticism, socio-historical and biographical criticism, and…
Descriptors: Biographies, High Schools, Literary Criticism, Literature Appreciation
Lascarides, V. Celia – 2000
This paper recounts the story of education pioneer Sarah Winnemucca (1844-1891), a self-educated Northern Paiute Indian who spent her life trying to improve the living conditions and education of the Paiutes. Most of what is known about Sarah comes from her autobiography, "Life among the Piutes: Their Wrongs and Claims," first printed…
Descriptors: American Indians, Biographies, Educational History, Educational Improvement

Heginbotham, Eleanor – English Journal, 1986
A teacher discusses how she used criticism of "The Scarlet Letter," when studying the book, in her honors class. The students were also intrigued by the biographical information they learned about Hawthorne, and eager to use it in interpreting his novel. (SRT)
Descriptors: Biographies, English Instruction, Honors Curriculum, Literary Criticism

Johns, Robert W. – Theory and Research in Social Education, 1984
A conceptual framework and teaching guidelines for biographical history, i.e., centering the study of history in individual lives, are presented. Both the framework and guidelines were derived from a group of philosopher-historians representing a full monistic-pluralistic spectrum of theories: Marx, Weber, Toynbee, Ortega y Gasset, and Dilthey.…
Descriptors: Biographies, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education, History Instruction

Tait, Charles W. – OAH Magazine of History, 1985
An excellent way to teach history is by focusing on the lives of individual historical figures. History is the story of living persons, who for good or ill have made history as it is. To understand history, students must learn about the men and women who shaped events. (RM)
Descriptors: Biographies, Higher Education, History Instruction, Personal Narratives

Connelly, F. Michael; Clandinin, D. Jean – Journal of Educational Thought, 1987
Outlines a method for the study of teaching, which reconstructs the meaning of specific classroom activities for students and teachers in terms of narrative unities (i.e., the union of all that a person has been and undergone with the past of the society that shaped him/her). Contrasts narratives and biographies. (DMM)
Descriptors: Biographies, Classroom Techniques, Higher Education, Instruction

Judson, Bay – School Arts, 1984
The life of the sculptor Henry Moore is briefly discussed and characteristics of his sculpture are described. Also included are lists of recommended films and books dealing with Moore, a student's guide to looking at sculpture, and sculpture activities for secondary students. (RM)
Descriptors: Art Activities, Art Education, Biographies, Instructional Materials