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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

Showing 1 to 15 of 21 results
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Clarfield, Geoffrey – Academic Questions, 2013
The author of this article, a developmental anthropologist, illustrates how the instructor can use ethnographic films to enhance the study of anthropology and override notions about the scope and efficacy of Western intervention in the Third World, provided the instructor places such films in their proper historical and cultural context. He…
Descriptors: Ethnography, Cultural Context, Multimedia Instruction, Anthropology
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Zorn, Jeffrey – Academic Questions, 2013
In this article, the author reflects on the flawed writing and composition teaching he received in his early Dartmouth University days. He reports that it took extraordinary classics professors like Don Rosenthal and Jack Zarker to turn around his work, and that these professors contributed to his eventual successful career as a college-level…
Descriptors: Higher Education, College Faculty, College Students, Writing Instruction
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Weissberg, Robert – Academic Questions, 2013
In this article, the author states that "critical thinking" has mesmerized academics across the political spectrum and that even high school students are now being called upon to "think critically." He furthers adds that it is no exaggeration to say that "critical thinking" has quickly evolved into a scholarly…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Thinking Skills, Definitions, Personal Narratives
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Bieszad, Andrew – Academic Questions, 2011
In Islamic studies at universities today it has become difficult to disagree with Islam and still maintain one's credibility, safety, or ability to study in school. Academia has refused to question Islamic teachings, and has thus become a participant in promoting Islamic orthodoxy at the expense of academic integrity. The author's story begins at…
Descriptors: Muslims, Criticism, Integrity, Group Dynamics
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Justman, Stewart – Academic Questions, 2010
In this article, the author examines Louise Rosenblatt's "Literature as Exploration," a popular textbook used since 1938 (in five successive editions) in high school English classrooms across America. He discusses how the one-time college roommate of Margaret Mead managed to transform teaching literature into a form of student therapy that…
Descriptors: English Instruction, Bibliotherapy, Textbook Content, Textbook Evaluation
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Solway, David – Academic Questions, 2010
One of the major problems from which students suffer has to do with reading: reading with diligence, understanding, and, ideally, with the pleasure that attends discovery. Many students have long been hermeneutical-readers-of-a-sort. The problem has deep roots in a widely diffused media and technocyber environment that thins down and disperses the…
Descriptors: Reader Response, Hermeneutics, Literary Criticism, Reader Text Relationship
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Shudak, Nicholas J. – Academic Questions, 2010
Over the past 20 years, the literature in teacher education has built a discourse around diversity. Much of it is predicated on the vast multicultural education literature developing since the late 1970s, a literature that is very much activist- and advocacy-oriented. It is also a literature largely ignored by "traditional" academics, ostensibly…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Multicultural Education, Outcomes of Education, Teaching Methods
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Academic Questions, 2010
The pseudonymous "Great Teacher" deliberately decided to lower his teaching standards in order to raise his scores on the "Student-Generated Numerical Evaluation Form" (SNEF), achieving an ulterior goal and unfortunately proving SNEF-critics right on all counts. This article relates why he eventually decided to sacrifice pedagogical quality to…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Political Attitudes, Student Evaluation of Teacher Performance, Professional Isolation
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Kissel, Adam – Academic Questions, 2009
The University of Delaware has a zero-tolerance policy for anything remotely resembling "hate speech." As such, the school implemented a mandatory training for all 7,000-odd students in its dorms. The sessions were part of a thorough thought-reform curriculum, designed by the school's Office of Residence Life, psychologically to "treat" and…
Descriptors: Resident Advisers, Zero Tolerance Policy, Universities, Educational Policy
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Egger, John B. – Academic Questions, 2008
"Service-learning" has been adopted by many colleges and universities as a way of instilling in students an ethic of community service. Its advocates typically distinguish it from simple volunteering, which lacks an academic component, and from internships, in which students acquire practical skills. The author argues that the rationales for…
Descriptors: Service Learning, College Students, Citizenship Education, Political Issues
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London, Herbert; Draper, Mark – Academic Questions, 2008
Higher education today fails to exploit the power of emergent educational technology. If it did, the authors contend that "everyone on the planet would already have access to a top-quality college education for pennies a day acquired in less than half the traditional four years." The authors envision a college education that replaces the lecture…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Educational Technology, Learning Experience, Educational Innovation
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Booker, Michael J. – Academic Questions, 2007
Plato wrote that higher order thinking could not start until the student had mastered conventional wisdom. The American educational establishment has turned Plato on his head with the help of a dubious approach to teaching developed by one Benjamin Bloom. Bloom's taxonomy was intended for higher education, but its misappropriation has resulted in…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Classification, Thinking Skills, Teaching Methods
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Miller, Nan – Academic Questions, 2006
Theorists have usurped English composition. They have banished great literature as the residual oppression of dead white males. They control groups like the NCTE and MLA, which announce that exercises in grammar and the mechanics of writing are "deleterious" for students tantamount to "malpractice." Nan Miller reminds those theorists of the…
Descriptors: Postmodernism, Freshman Composition, State Universities, Educational Improvement
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Livatino, Mel – Academic Questions, 2006
Mel Livatino had stopped attending Conferences on College Composition and Communication (4Cs), but this year one came to his hometown, so he attended and now reports back. Where once the 4Cs had offered helpful insights into teaching kids how to write, today frivolity and radicalism reign. Professor Livatino's notes paint a very precise, largely…
Descriptors: Higher Education, English Instruction, Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction
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Ravitch, Diane – Academic Questions, 2005
America's leading historian of education recounts a lifetime in the cause of responsible school reform. Diane Ravitch's blow-by-blow description of run-ins with Afrocentrist firebrand Leonard Jeffries, misguided feminists at the AAUW, the language sensitivity police, and others offers a fascinating perspective on how the education establishment…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Social Studies, History Instruction, United States History
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