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Showing 376 to 390 of 507 results Save | Export
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Horn, Ernest – Elementary School Journal, 1962
Problems in handwriting research are related either to the total design of classroom instruction or to specific factors (e.g., position, letter formation). Problems of general design to be researched are the relation of handwriting practice to a student's general writing, identification of the most productive methods of practicing writing problems…
Descriptors: Handwriting, Handwriting Instruction, Handwriting Materials, Handwriting Skills
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Pufahl, John – Journal of Teaching Writing, 1986
Describes a teaching strategy using Apple IIe computers in a sequence of individual conferences. Includes asking questions while scrolling through the paper, showing students how to elaborate ideas by entering suggested changes and prompts in capital letters during the conference, and using a spelling checker to prompt revision (e.g., by compiling…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Computer Uses in Education, Courseware, Freshman Composition
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Hudson, Pamela – Learning Disability Quarterly, 1997
Sixth and seventh grade students (n=18) with mild to moderate learning disabilities (LD) were taught social studies by using instructional sequence techniques. Results found LD students performed significantly better when these techniques (breaking new material into small units of information and providing frequent student practice and teacher…
Descriptors: Drills (Practice), Educational Principles, Feedback, Instructional Effectiveness
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Bartel, Lee R. – Music Educators Journal, 1990
Suggests that the bias linking guitars to popular culture has needlessly limited approaches to teaching guitar. Examines how each of five current programs develops different music skills. Advocates a comprehensive, multifaceted program capable of emphasizing student skills in melody, harmony, perception, creativity, and performance over six years…
Descriptors: Applied Music, Cultural Influences, Curriculum Development, Music Activities
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Lerner, Linda D.; Richey, Linda H. – College Teaching Methods & Styles Journal, 2005
The case study is an excellent method for teaching and assessing students' knowledge and skills. Using two examples, we present a step-by-step approach for analyzing cases and evaluating students. The advantages and disadvantages of using cases are discussed and methods for identifying cases are presented.
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Case Studies, Case Method (Teaching Technique), Evaluation Methods
Davis, Michael J.; Jensen, Mary – 1984
This learning module, which is intended for use in in-service training for vocational rehabilitation counselors, deals with writing a task analysis. Step-by-step guidelines are provided for breaking down a task into small teachable steps by analyzing the task in terms of the way in which it will be performed once learned (method), the steps to be…
Descriptors: Behavioral Objectives, Counselor Training, Disabilities, Inservice Education
Kanawha County Schools, Charleston, WV. – 1985
In the 1984-85 school year, the 3-year Honors English course was initiated at Stonewall Jackson and Charleston High Schools in Kanawha County, West Virginia. Focusing on its humanities approach to language arts instruction, this curriculum guide outlines a sequential, thematic program designed to provide students with an historical background of…
Descriptors: Curriculum Guides, English Curriculum, English Instruction, High Schools
Martin, David S. – 1987
Ninety-one hearing-impaired students entering Gallaudet University received systematic cognitive instruction focusing on specific generalizable skills, in the contexts of their regular college classes. The students were given practice in skills of organization, comparisons, analysis, classification, following instructions, temporal relationships,…
Descriptors: Classification, Cognitive Processes, College Students, Deafness
NORRIS, JOHN M., JR. – 1966
THE IMPORTANCE OF THE ROLE OF READING IN A STANDARD TWO-SEMESTER FRESHMAN ENGLISH COURSE IS EMPHASIZED IN A DISCUSSION OF THE BASIC CONCEPTS, PURPOSES, ORGANIZATION, RESEARCH, AND METHODOLOGY OF THE COLLEGE FRESHMAN ENGLISH PROGRAM. INCLUDED IN THE DISCUSSION ARE AN EXAMINATION OF WHAT ENTERING FRESHMEN SHOULD KNOW TO SUCCEED IN COLLEGE ENGLISH, A…
Descriptors: Colleges, Course Organization, Educational Objectives, Educational Philosophy
Georgia Univ., Athens. English Curriculum Study Center. – 1968
This compilation of resource materials for the teaching of written composition in grades K-6 is based on the assemptions that the desire to write frequently results from the enjoyment and stimulation derived from reading what another has written; that children's literature offers the pupil contact with master writers; and that this contact may be…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, English Instruction, Figurative Language, Instructional Materials
Ornstein, Jacob – 1970
This paper reviews the historical development of programed instruction from the works of S.L. Pressey and B.F. Skinner to the concept of program-assisted instruction. A categorical listing of both the limitations and the capabilities of programed instruction is included. (RL)
Descriptors: Autoinstructional Aids, Branching, Computer Oriented Programs, Evaluation
Stinaff, Russell D. – 1973
The problem of structuring sequences of instructional stimuli such that learning is optimized is modelled as a sequential decision problem with an imbedded mathematical model of learning providing a criterion function. Three types of optimization methods for such a representation are investigated for the specific case of paired-associate learning…
Descriptors: Algorithms, Computer Oriented Programs, Computer Science, Educational Research
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Jordan-DeCarbo, Joyce – Music Educators Journal, 1986
Edwin Gordon took the sequential levels of learning outlined by Gagne and adapted them to audiation (the ability to hear music for which the sound is not physically present) and musical learning. His method of teaching music is discussed. (RM)
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Educational Philosophy, Educational Practices, Educational Principles
Park, Ok-choon – Journal of Computer-Based Instruction, 1984
Describes the theoretical backgrounds and empirical findings of three experimental studies in which computer-based response-sensitive strategies were investigated using concept learning tasks. The strategy applied focused on discrimination learning, generalization learning, and classification skill development in concept learning. A general…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Concept Teaching, Discrimination Learning, Epistemology
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Moreira, Marco A.; Santos, Carlos A. – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 1981
Two approaches to the content of thermodynamics were used in an introductory college physics course: traditional organization and organization based on Ausubel's learning theory. The influence of these organizations on engineering student's (N=58) cognitive structure was investigated using a word association test analyzed through hierarchical…
Descriptors: College Science, Conventional Instruction, Engineering Education, Higher Education
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