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Martina Vasil; David Dockan – Music Educators Journal, 2023
One way to build a comprehensive, inclusive, and equitable music education is through the inclusion of popular music in curricula. However, it can be challenging for teachers to bring popular music into the classroom for many reasons. We suggest that since many teachers are educated in the Orff Schulwerk approach, this can be one way to teach…
Descriptors: Music Education, Teaching Methods, Faculty Development, Elementary School Curriculum
Cacicio, Sarah; Shell, Alison R.; Tare, Medha – Adult Literacy Education, 2022
In the hours following the 2020 COVID-19 outbreak and subsequent shutdown, educators across the nation were suddenly tasked with teaching online. As Jen Vanek describes in "Supporting Quality Instruction: Building Teacher Capacity as Instructional Designers (Part 1 of 3)" (EJ1344704), the majority of educators had to quickly learn and…
Descriptors: Adult Educators, Adult Education, Teaching Methods, COVID-19
McDaniel, Kathryn N. – Clearing House: A Journal of Educational Strategies, Issues and Ideas, 2014
Too often, students reach college without the learning, critical thinking, and literacy skills they need to succeed in higher education. Recent educational trends that promote teaching to the test, short reading and writing assignments, group work, and technological resources contribute to students' difficulties transitioning to college-level…
Descriptors: Reading Skills, Teaching Methods, Attention, College Preparation
Trumbull, Deborah – Studying Teacher Education, 2009
Sandy Schuck's cross-sectional self-study (see EJ863273) examines her work as a teacher educator. She views herself as responsible for helping elementary school teachers to develop as teachers who will enact a reformed approach to mathematics. Schuck presents a wonderful tangle of findings and challenges, framings, and reframings. As a teacher…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Independent Study, Teacher Educators, Reflective Teaching
Smith, Holly – Teaching in Higher Education, 2008
The author, a programme leader for a Post Graduate Certificate in Learning and Teaching in Higher Education (PGCLTHE), hears a complaint from her colleagues that undergraduate students require "spoon-feeding". Accepting structuralism's argument that language does things, not just describe them, the author examines "spoon-feeding" in more depth.…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Independent Study, Figurative Language, Teaching Experience
Montessori Life: A Publication of the American Montessori Society, 2007
This article presents an excerpt from a typed manuscript of one of many lectures Maria Montessori delivered in 1915 in San Francisco, San Diego, and Los Angeles. In this particular lecture, Montessori talked about how teachers can make a profound change in their way of teaching. Instead of doing the traditional lecture, teachers can learn how to…
Descriptors: Montessori Method, Lecture Method, Montessori Schools, Teacher Role
Nelms, Ben F. – English Journal, 2008
As heated as the controversy is and has been, most opponents of homework actually support at least a modest amount of "independent study," and the most ardent advocates are likely to emphasize moderation in the amount of homework and emphasis on the quality of independent assignments. In this article, the author focuses on this troublesome issue…
Descriptors: Homework, Independent Study, Grade 8, Teacher Educators
Rakow, Susan – National Middle School Association (NJ1), 2007
The author of this article observes that sometimes educators are so overwhelmed by the needs of struggling learners that they believe they do not have time for the gifted, talented, high achieving, and high potential students. However, those students are just as desperate as any other students for good teachers to help them progress. Middle school…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Online Courses, Interest Inventories, Gifted
Corno, Lyn – Educational Psychology Review, 2006
In this commentary, Corno discusses Vollmeyer and Rheinberg's evidence from the perspective of related work in educational psychology. Relevant new terms provide background for understanding connections between the language used by Vollmeyer and Rheinberg and that of educational psychologists. The author uses results from research on teaching for…
Descriptors: Criticism, Educational Psychology, Independent Study, Teaching Methods
Loughran, John – Journal of Teacher Education, 2007
This article explores the nature of self-study of teacher education practices by examining what self-study is and how it might be conducted and reported. In working through these ideas, the article makes an argument for the need for learning through self-study to be documented in ways that might not only be accessible to others but also meaningful…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Teaching Methods, Independent Study, Expectation
Meyer, Susan – New Directions for Continuing Education, 1985
The author investigates the problems that newcomers face at conferences and offers clear guidelines for conference planners and newcomers alike. She discusses professional socialization, using relationships, making presentations, volunteering, volunteer participation as self-directed learning, broadening networks, experiential learning, planning…
Descriptors: Conferences, Experiential Learning, Independent Study, Networks
Foster, J. Edwin – Audiovisual Instruction, 1979
Teaching/studying has two distinct functions: (1) it is memory causal and (2) it provides conditions for remembering. (CMV)
Descriptors: Audiovisual Aids, Educational Philosophy, Independent Study, Instructional Materials
Riggins, Cheryl G. – Education Digest: Essential Readings Condensed for Quick Review, 2006
Good education begins with an objective assessment and accurate diagnosis of specific "deficiencies." Transforming assessment from a system of primarily external judgments made by others to a system driven primarily by self-correction is the new frontier for instructional leaders. In this article, the author describes how student-centered…
Descriptors: Self Evaluation (Individuals), Teaching Methods, Student Evaluation, Independent Study
Mason, John B. – 1990
Self-directed learning is reconceptualized in light of John Dewey's work. Although one would think that proponents of self-directed learning would turn to Dewey's philosophy of education to find support for the idea of self-directed learning, such is often not the case. Instead, advocates of self-directed learning frequently look to Carl Rogers…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Educational Psychology, Elementary Secondary Education, Independent Study
Sisco, Burton R. – 1984
Since the role of the adult educator has become so widely accepted as that of facilitator of learning rather than of content-transmitter, educators of adults should enhance their facilitating skills. An important concept for adult education then is self-directed learning, in which the learner plays the central role. The need for self-directed…
Descriptors: Adult Education, Adult Educators, Independent Study, Lifelong Learning