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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 all 14 results
Asera, Rose – Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, 2008
Strengthening Pre-collegiate Education in Community Colleges (SPECC) was organized by The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching in partnership with The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation to increase student learning in developmental--or basic skills--classes. However, their concern was not just the success of students in classes…
Descriptors: Research Design, Community Colleges, Action Research, Organizational Change
Huber, Mary Taylor – Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, 2008
The author discusses how faculty inquiry can inform and support classroom teaching and learning, as well as allow for better designed courses and programs. "Faculty inquiry" is a term that encompasses a range of practices that engage teachers in looking closely and critically at student learning for the purpose of improving their own courses and…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, College Faculty, Inquiry, Reflective Teaching
Breen, Molly – Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, 2008
The author reports on recent efforts by community college faculty to make the teaching and learning from their classrooms more visible. Spurred on by numerous reports that point to the urgency around basic skills education, faculty members at California community colleges are working together to improve teaching of basic skills, using a variety of…
Descriptors: Community Colleges, Basic Skills, College Faculty, Multimedia Materials
Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, 2008
This report offers suggestions for starting and supporting faculty inquiry groups on individual campuses. Topics include: (1) The Power of Inquiry; Challenging Questions and Powerful Evidence; (2) The Power of Community: Inquiry as a Collaborative Process of Improvement; (3) Suggestions for Starting and Supporting a Faculty Inquiry Group; and (4)…
Descriptors: Inquiry, Guidelines, Research Reports, Community Colleges
Bond, Lloyd – Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, 2007
Through an examination of one institution's efforts to strengthen teaching and learning on campus, the author makes a strong case for the use of common examinations as a powerful form of assessment as well as a fruitful context for faculty deliberations. Providing a continuing occasion for faculty inquiry and discussion, insuring grade…
Descriptors: Test Results, Student Evaluation, Grade Inflation, Grading
Colby, Anne – Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, 2007
Young people in the United States today are much more likely to be involved in volunteer work of an apolitical sort than in politics. As part of a study on political engagement, the author and other colleagues surveyed students at a diversity of colleges and universities and asked them why they and many of their peers are so much more likely to…
Descriptors: Incentives, Democracy, Graduation Requirements, Service Learning
Ehrlich, Tom; Colby, Anne – Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, 2006
The authors propose an alternative course for faculty and campus leaders to navigate through the politicized Academic Bill of Rights debate. Liberal education and the values of the academy are about the need to seek and consider alternative conceptions, stances, and views and to consider them respectfully. If a campus is to commit itself to open…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Study, Student Attitudes, Politics of Education, College Faculty
McCormick, Alexander C. – Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, 2005
The Carnegie Foundation has developed a new set of lenses for viewing American higher education that broadens description of U.S. colleges and universities. By expanding the Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education from a single typology to a set of distinct classifications representing several ways to think about how colleges…
Descriptors: College Faculty, College Students, Undergraduate Study, Graduate Study
Merrow, John – Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, 2005
Prompted by a student comment that college lacked intellectual challenge, the author and colleagues sat in on an English class described as "a brain dump." The teacher had assigned students to write parodies of "The Road Not Taken," knowing that to do the assignment well, they would have to read and understand Frost's poem. The instructor was…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Educational Attainment, Writing Assignments, College Role
Hutchings, Pat – Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, 2005
It is hard to find a campus today that does not collect student evaluations of teaching. Not everyone, it is true, puts full stock in the results, but it is hard to argue with the idea that students have important perspectives to contribute. The writer advocates that listening to students is a good idea that does not go far enough. Describing…
Descriptors: Student Evaluation, Student Evaluation of Teacher Performance, College Faculty, College Students
Hutchings, Pat; Huber, Mary Taylor – Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, 2005
This essay posits the emergence of a "teaching commons"--a conceptual space in which communities of educators committed to inquiry and innovation come together to exchange ideas about teaching and learning and use them to meet the challenges of educating students. The October gathering of the International Society for the Scholarship of Teaching…
Descriptors: Scholarship, Foreign Countries, College Faculty
Hutchings, Pat – Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, 2004
A Carnegie Foundation researcher has been exploring the different forums for work on teaching and learning in higher education, and has uncovered an array of such occasions, bringing faculty together by department or discipline, across the campus, and in national networks and scholarly communities. Energetic conversations and communities have…
Descriptors: Scholarship, Service Learning, Teaching Methods, Academic Achievement
Merrow, John – Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, 2004
These days it seems as if nearly everyone in college is receiving A's, making the Dean's List, or graduating with honors. What is more interesting is that college students in general are spending fewer hours studying, while taking more remedial courses and fewer courses in mathematics, history, English, and foreign languages. Students everywhere…
Descriptors: College Students, Remedial Instruction, Grade Inflation, Educational Objectives
Huber, Mary Taylor; Cox, Rebecca – Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, 2004
The authors comment on incentive systems that impede serious scholarly work on teaching and learning. The hallmark of academic freedom is the opportunity it affords faculty members to pursue innovative or unconventional scholarship. Over the past decade or so, teaching initiatives in higher education are gaining visibility, innovation is on the…
Descriptors: Faculty Evaluation, Incentives, College Faculty, Scholarship