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Brase, Gary L.; Du, Meixuan – Teaching of Psychology, 2023
Introduction: Psychology instructors face decisions about adopting new approaches to lectures, readings, and assessment in their courses. Statement of the Problem: These choices about course structure can be both intimidating and confusing in terms of the costs and benefits for different options. Literature Review: As framed by anecdotal and…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Psychology, Teaching Methods, Reading Assignments
Ruswick, Brent – History Teacher, 2015
Like many history teachers, Brent Ruswick struggles for ways to lessen his dependence on textbooks while also teaching students to read their textbook with the critical eye of a historian. It is a struggle he has come to appreciate more keenly as, in addition to teaching the standard college-level introductory history courses, he also teaches the…
Descriptors: History Instruction, Introductory Courses, College Students, Critical Reading
Sadaghiani, Homeyra R. – Physics Teacher, 2012
To engage students in a more meaningful discussion of course material and prompt their higher thinking skills, most instructors expect students to read the course textbook for initial exposure to the course content before class. However, as many instructors are aware, most students do not read their textbook throughout the quarter. At California…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, College Science, Web Based Instruction
Park, Seung Won – TechTrends: Linking Research and Practice to Improve Learning, 2013
General education classes involve extensive course readings. College instructors have a limited time to cover every detail of the materials students are supposed to learn in class; thus, they expect students to learn through course readings. However, many college students demonstrate a low level of engagement in course reading tasks. Existing…
Descriptors: Web Sites, Electronic Publishing, College Instruction, College Students
Klein, Lisa Lundgren – Arts & Activities, 2011
Art teachers are always looking for new ways to bring reading opportunities into the classroom--without just reading chapters in a textbook. This assignment helps broaden the knowledge of students in areas that teachers may not have time to explore during art classes. It also gives students something to work on if they have finished their project.…
Descriptors: Studio Art, Art Activities, Reading Assignments, Integrated Curriculum
Brunner, Judy – Education Digest: Essential Readings Condensed for Quick Review, 2009
Reading instruction at the secondary level is important, and it is necessary. Students need to be taught how to organize ideas, question authors' conclusions, make predictions, draw inferences, and use and apply the information they learn to a variety of situations. Getting students excited about reading expository text is possible, and it…
Descriptors: Reading Assignments, Reading Instruction, Expository Writing, Academic Achievement
Brunner, Judy – Principal Leadership, 2009
Day after day, teachers hand out reading assignments; students ignore them; and both groups spend another day at school discouraged, less than enthusiastic, and bored. While principals struggle with stagnant test scores, teachers wonder how they can possibly work more diligently toward instructional outcomes. Getting students excited about reading…
Descriptors: Reading Achievement, Reading Skills, Reading Motivation, Teaching Methods
Nokes, Jeffery D. – Middle Grades Research Journal, 2008
Literacy is a basic element of the discipline of history and of traditional secondary history instruction. However neither the growing body of research on learning with texts nor modern learning theories support the traditional literacy practices that are taking place in many secondary history classrooms. Nor are classroom literacy practices a…
Descriptors: Learning Theories, Critical Thinking, Literacy, Fiction
Wallace, Faith H.; Clark, Karen K.; Cherry, Mary L. – Mathematics Teaching in the Middle School, 2006
This article outlines resources for reading in the math classroom including informational trade books, literature, and environmental print.
Descriptors: Nonfiction, Student Motivation, Printed Materials, Middle School Students
Academe, 2005
Professors have long assigned to their students works of which they were the author. The practice ranges from assigning commercially published textbooks they have written to having students buy a volume they have written and published or course packs made up of their own materials they have photocopied. Not only individual professors, but also…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Laboratory Manuals, Textbook Selection, Reading Material Selection
Howard, Jay R. – Teaching Sociology, 2004
In the process of collecting assessment data in the author's introductory sociology course, he made a startling and disappointing discovery. For the most part, students simply were not bothering to read the basics version of the introductory survey textbook that he assigned. This discovery presented him with two related challenges. First, he had…
Descriptors: Sociology, Introductory Courses, Undergraduate Students, Data Collection
Croner, Patrick E. – Science Education Review, 2003
Many students have difficulty in science because they are passive readers, readers who receive information without understanding. Passive readers begin reading assignments without thinking about the subject. Their counterparts, known as active readers, interact with text to construct meaning. They make predictions, ask questions, generate…
Descriptors: Content Area Reading, Science Instruction, Metacognition, Active Learning