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Showing 2,551 to 2,565 of 5,002 results
Peer reviewedPyle, Christopher H. – College Teaching, 1987
Constitutional law is a good way to introduce students to fundamental debates over means and ends, over what means work and at what costs, and over what ends are not merely desirable, but may be legitimately achieved even through the application of collective force. It also offers an exciting way to teach logic. (MLW)
Descriptors: Constitutional History, Constitutional Law, Debate, Governmental Structure
Peer reviewedWeatherman, Donald V. – College Teaching, 1987
Courses on the Constitution must focus on the principles of government. Those principles and how the understanding of those principles shaped the document are appropriate subjects for consideration. The best sources for an examination of the Constitution are "The Records of the Federal Convention of 1787" and "The Federalist." (MLW)
Descriptors: College Curriculum, Constitutional History, Constitutional Law, Higher Education
Peer reviewedWarner, Stanley – College Teaching, 1987
The study of work, the experience of work, and how work is organized does not constitute an category of study within the mainstream social sciences. Students need to be introduced to the varieties of capitalist and noncapitalist models or experiments and confront the debate over organizational form versus social context. (MLW)
Descriptors: Capitalism, Case Studies, College Instruction, Democracy
Peer reviewedKloss, Robert J. – College Teaching, 1987
The ways in which teachers conceptualize their institutions and their students are interrelated and will control the process of learning. Teachers must assume a different metaphorical stance toward their students in order to facilitate their education. Two metaphorical roles are described. (MLW)
Descriptors: Athletic Coaches, College Instruction, Figurative Language, Higher Education
Peer reviewedSvinicki, Marilla D.; Dixon, Nancy M. – College Teaching, 1987
The experiential learning model of Kolb provides a framework for examining the selection of a broader range of classroom activities than is in current use. Experiential learning cycle, experiential learning as instructional design, and student as actor versus student as receiver are discussed. (MLW)
Descriptors: College Instruction, College Students, Experiential Learning, Higher Education
Peer reviewedBecker, Lovice M. – College Teaching, 1987
Excerpts from "Five Reports on Undergraduate Education" are presented. Advice on what college teaching should be is the focus. 70 references. (MLW)
Descriptors: Bibliographies, College Curriculum, College Instruction, General Education
Peer reviewedKemp, Jerrold E. – College Teaching, 1987
Some practical situations that provide an understanding of how actions that faculty members take effect the quality of instruction are examined. Administrators need to recognize and support a plan for improving instruction through both faculty development and instructional development. (MLW)
Descriptors: Administrators, College Administration, College Faculty, College Instruction
Peer reviewedReinsmith, William A. – College Teaching, 1987
Humanities courses in the discussion format can clarify existential problems of the human condition that face students. The craft of teaching lies in assisting the learner out of ignorance into an increased awareness of what it means to be humanly alive. The teacher as catalyst is described. (MLW)
Descriptors: Change, College Instruction, College Students, Controversial Issues (Course Content)
Peer reviewedFreie, John F. – College Teaching, 1987
Critical thinking is seldom effective at encouraging students to challenge and examine preconceived positions. There is a tendency to use the rigorous questioning methods to defend preconceived positions and deflect the serious consideration of alternatives. An exercise that focused on the Cuban missile crisis is described. (MLW)
Descriptors: Beliefs, Change, College Instruction, College Students
Peer reviewedAnthes, Susan H.; Crowe, Lawson – College Teaching, 1987
A collaborative course, "The Human Encounter with Alcohol," offered to freshmen at the University of Colorado College of Arts and Sciences is described. The idea was to offer a subject that would intellectually interest students, as well as provide a subject suitable for freshmen level library research. (MLW)
Descriptors: Alcohol Education, Bibliographies, College Freshmen, College Instruction
Peer reviewedToppins, Anne Davis – College Teaching, 1987
A unit on adult learning with an exercise based on the theories of Malcolm Knowles and Allen Tough is described. After students in the class see that they actually planned and directed much of their significant adult learning, they are eager to join in the process of modifying course objectives. (MLW)
Descriptors: Adult Learning, College Instruction, Course Objectives, Graduate Students
Peer reviewedGregory, Marshall – College Teaching, 1987
Memory is the primary mechanism of modern education. Despite memory's importance in other ways, it is not the primary tool for solving problems, making theories or plotting courses of action. Students should be taught how to separate trivial from important information by using critical judgments, ethical standards, and logic. (MLW)
Descriptors: Attitudes, Educational Change, General Education, Higher Education
Peer reviewedMandel, Barrett J. – College Teaching, 1987
Three elements of the reading process--presence, mediation, and ego response--help students discover their own ontological, intellectual, and psychological role in bringing forth literature's meanings. Students experience a dramatic shift in their ability to make sense of literature as they become increasingly conscious of these three elements.…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Instruction, College Students, Emotional Response
Peer reviewedParilla, Robert E. – College Teaching, 1987
The issue of the relationship between teaching and scholarship in the community college is discussed and a revival of scholarly activities at the community college is argued. A program to encourage faculty scholarship at Montgomery College, Rockville, Maryland, is described. (MLW)
Descriptors: College Faculty, College Instruction, Community Colleges, Higher Education
Peer reviewedRollins, Sidney P. – College Teaching, 1987
Through the use of a marketing model to begin an instructional development program at Bryant College, Smithfield, Rhode Island, more than 50 percent of the faculty have been involved after only one year. Sources of the model, the model and communications, and implementing a marketing model are discussed. (MLW)
Descriptors: College Faculty, College Instruction, Communication (Thought Transfer), Faculty Development


