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Campbell, Stephen R.; Handscomb, Kerry; Zaparyniuk, Nicholas E.; Sha, Li; Cimen, O. Arda; Shipulina, Olga V. – Online Submission, 2009
Geometry is required for many secondary school students, and is often learned, taught, and assessed more in a heuristic image-based manner, than as a formal axiomatic deductive system. Students are required to prove general theorems, but diagrams are usually used. It follows that understanding how students engage in perceiving and reasoning about…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Brain, Cognitive Processes, Geometry
Ashbrook, Peggy – Science and Children, 2007
Teachers can spark interest in a science topic by using "science tickets"--special objects offered to children as a way to transition to the science room or into a small group to do a science activity. Objects ranging from ordinary (shells, leaves, or sticks) to unusual (photos, crystals, or plastic worms) appeal to young children's curiosity and…
Descriptors: Science Activities, Visual Learning, Teaching Methods, Visual Stimuli
Bisland, Beverly Milner – Social Studies, 2010
One way that people learn, remember and communicate is visually. We combine past experiences with new visual information to construct meaning. In this study, elementary teachers introduced their students to the peoples and places of the ancient silk routes using illustrations from two children's picture books, "Marco Polo," written by…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Action Research, Visual Learning, Elementary School Teachers
Olson, Valerie Dong – College Teaching Methods & Styles Journal, 2008
Instruction of competent psychomotor skill necessitates an eclectic approach. The principles of learning, complemented with learning styles and sensory modalities preferences, provide a background for teaching physical skills. The use of the psychomotor domain of Bloom's Taxonomy as a map and corresponding behavioral objectives foster the mastery…
Descriptors: Psychomotor Objectives, Psychomotor Skills, Teaching Methods, Behavioral Objectives
Heynen, Craig – Strategies: A Journal for Physical and Sport Educators, 2008
Visual representation and viewing are integral parts of language arts, communication, and physical education. Time constraints often limit a self-contained classroom teacher, or even the language arts teacher's ability to adequately address all areas of language arts. Therefore, it is important to include language arts in other content areas.…
Descriptors: Physical Education, Language Arts, Self Contained Classrooms, Learning Experience
Clark, Ruth Colvin; Mayer, Richard E. – Performance Improvement, 2008
A learner-centered approach is a central feature of instruction based on a constructivist learning model. However, there is some confusion regarding the requirement for behavioral activity as a prerequisite for a learner-centered environment. We offer evidence in this article that some types of behavioral activity can interfere with cognitive…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Active Learning, Learning Processes, Teaching Methods
You, Zhuran; Jia, Fenran – Teaching and Teacher Education: An International Journal of Research and Studies, 2008
Based on the hypothesis that learning preferences tend to vary over cultures, this study compared and contrasted the learning approaches and learning styles between Chinese and American pre-service teachers in an attempt to know more about the learning/teaching landscapes in these two countries as "teachers teach the way they learned"…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Cognitive Style, Teaching Styles, Visual Learning
Berent, Gerald P.; Kelly, Ronald R.; Aldersley, Stephen; Schmitz, Kathryn L.; Khalsa, Baldev Kaur; Panara, John; Keenan, Susan – Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education, 2007
Focus-on-form English teaching methods are designed to facilitate second-language learners' noticing of target language input, where "noticing" is an acquisitional prerequisite for the comprehension, processing, and eventual integration of new grammatical knowledge. While primarily designed for teaching hearing second-language learners, many…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, College Students, Deafness, Grammar
Furniss, Gillian J. – SchoolArts: The Art Education Magazine for Teachers, 2007
In the United States, the likelihood that an art teacher may teach a child with autism in an inclusive classroom is high, since one out of every 166 children in the country is diagnosed with autism. Federal law mandates that every child has the right to a free and appropriate education. Some children with autism have exceptional artistic abilities…
Descriptors: Federal Legislation, Autism, Artists, Art Teachers
Schneps, Matthew H.; Rose, L. Todd; Fischer, Kurt W. – Mind, Brain, and Education, 2007
The central and peripheral visual fields are structurally segregated in the brain and are differentiated by their anatomical and functional characteristics. While the central field appears well suited for tasks such as visual search, the periphery is optimized for rapid processing over broad regions. People vary in their abilities to make use of…
Descriptors: Reading Difficulties, Dyslexia, Visual Learning, Brain
Zhengtao, Li – Frontiers of Education in China, 2006
So far, pedagogy has not formed its own unique visual angle and thinking mode to understand humans and the world in general; consequently, it is always counting upon other subjects, which is the root of the crisis in pedagogy. Focusing on the "visual angle" and "thinking mode", this article puts forward a new proposition…
Descriptors: Teaching (Occupation), Teaching Methods, Foreign Countries, Educational Research
Wang, Lihui – International Education Journal, 2007
In this study, the Felder learning styles inventory was administered to students who were non-English majors in a Chinese University. Descriptive statistics identified that participants do vary in their preference for particular learning styles with a great variety of learning style preferences distributed unevenly among the sample population. A…
Descriptors: Majors (Students), Cognitive Style, Second Language Learning, English (Second Language)
Morris, Elizabeth – Improving College and University Teaching, 1970
Descriptors: Chalkboards, Higher Education, Instructional Materials, Teaching Methods
Goldstein, Mymon – Psychol Rep, 1969
Descriptors: Algebra, Intellectual Experience, Learning Theories, Teaching Methods
Lerner, Neal – Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 2007
The use of visual representation to learn science can be traced to Louis Agassiz, Harvard Professor of Zoology, in the mid-19th century. In Agassiz's approach, students were to study nature through carefully observing, drawing and then thinking about what the observations might add up to. However, implementation of Agassiz's student-centered…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Science Education, Science Instruction, Visual Learning