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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 453 results
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Choi, Charles W.; Honeycutt, James M.; Bodie, Graham D. – Communication Education, 2015
Imagined interactions (IIs) constitute a type of social cognition that can reduce fear of communication. Through the mental preparation enabled by IIs, an individual can reduce disfluencies and mitigate the anxiety that arises from a speech. Study 1 indicated that rehearsal influences the reduction of silent pauses but not vocalized pauses. In…
Descriptors: Social Cognition, Interpersonal Communication, Imagination, Interaction
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Brownell, Judi – Communication Education, 2014
Elwood Murray (1897-1988) was a pioneer in communication education. Beginning in the 1930s, he applied nontraditional methods in the speech classroom to encourage students to internalize and apply what they learned, and to view knowledge holistically. Drawing on the work of Kunkel, Moreno, Lewin, and Korzybski, Murray focused on developing skills…
Descriptors: Change Agents, Intellectual History, Recognition (Achievement), Communication Strategies
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Valenzano, Joseph M., III; Wallace, Samuel P.; Morreale, Sherwyn P. – Communication Education, 2014
The basic communication course, with its roots in classical Greece and Rome, is frequently a required course in general education. The course often serves as our "front porch," welcoming new students to the Communication discipline. This essay first outlines early traditions in oral communication instruction and their influence on future…
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Communication Strategies, Speech Communication, Intellectual History
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Vrchota, Denise – Communication Education, 2011
This study proposes to expand the scope of oral communication across the curriculum research by exploring oral genres in a dietetics curriculum from the perspective of the dietetics faculty. The goals of this qualitative study, couched within the communication in the disciplines framework, are to identify the oral genres integral to the study and…
Descriptors: Speech Communication, Interpersonal Communication, Curriculum Research, Dietetics
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Morreale, Sherwyn; Backlund, Philip; Hay, Ellen; Moore, Michael – Communication Education, 2011
This comprehensive review of the assessment of oral communication in the communication discipline is both descriptive and empirical in nature. First, some background on the topic of communication assessment is provided. Following the descriptive background, we present an empirical analysis of academic papers, research studies, and books about…
Descriptors: Speech Communication, Communication Research, Educational Trends, Program Evaluation
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Morreale, Sherwyn P.; Pearson, Judy C. – Communication Education, 2008
This study provides a rationale for the claim that communication instruction is critical to students' future personal and professional success. Thematic analysis of 93 journal and newspaper articles, reports, and surveys provide evidence of the centrality of communication in developing the whole person, improving the educational enterprise, being…
Descriptors: Speech Communication, Speech Curriculum, Interpersonal Competence, Interpersonal Communication
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Witt, Paul L.; Behnke, Ralph R. – Communication Education, 2006
This investigation included two studies relating anticipatory public speaking anxiety to the nature of the speech assignment. Based on uncertainty reduction theory, which suggests that communicators are less comfortable in unfamiliar or unpredictable contexts, two hypotheses were advanced on the presumption that various types of assignments in a…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Public Speaking, Assignments, Speech Communication
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Hyun, Eunsook; Davis, Genevieve – Communication Education, 2005
This qualitative study examined emerging inquiries and dialogue of five- to six-year-old kindergartners (9 boys and 9 girls) taking place around computers as they engaged in a mapping project in a technology-rich classroom in the U.S. Discourse analysis of young children's conversations in a technology-rich classroom shed light on their…
Descriptors: Speech Communication, Discourse Analysis, Technological Literacy, Student Development
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Darling, Ann L.; Dannels, Deanna P. – Communication Education, 2003
Reports the results of practicing engineers' descriptions of the importance of oral communication. Suggests that engineering practice takes place in an intensely oral culture and while formal presentations are important to practicing engineers, daily work is characterized more by interpersonal and small group experiences. Notes that communication…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Communication Research, Communication Skills, Engineering
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Keaten, James A.; Kelly, Lynne; Finch, Cynthia – Communication Education, 2000
Presents a follow-up study to further assess the extent to which reticent participants subscribe to beliefs outlined in prior research and to further test the ability of the Penn State program to alter those beliefs. Reveals significant pretreatment differences between reticent and comparison group participants on 7 of 16 beliefs. Shows…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Communication Apprehension, Communication Problems, Communication Research
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Keaten, James A.; Kelly, Lynne – Communication Education, 2000
Presents a theoretical statement on the nature of reticence that affirms, in part, Gerald M. Phillips' conceptualization in prior research but, grounded in new empirical data, refines and revises the construct. Proposes a new definition and a six-component model of reticence. Discusses theoretical and treatment implications. (SR)
Descriptors: Beliefs, Communication Apprehension, Communication Problems, Communication Research
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McCroskey, James C.; Beatty, Michael J. – Communication Education, 2000
Argues that evidence is accumulating that genetics plays a major role in human communication behavior. Looks at the importance of neurological systems in communication behavior, and at the role of cerebral functioning. Addresses implications of the "communibiological perspective" for communication instruction. Argues that, rather than aiming to…
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Communication Apprehension, Communication Research, Curriculum
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Condit, Celeste Michelle – Communication Education, 2000
Responds to J. McCroskey and M. Beatty's article in this issue. Argues that debates over relative importance of nature versus nurture are misguided because the relative influence of genetic and environmental components varies depending on specific genes and environments under consideration and their specific interactions. Explores what these…
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Communication Apprehension, Communication Research, Curriculum
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Beatty, Michael J.; McCroskey, James C. – Communication Education, 2000
Replies to C. M. Condit's response to the authors' article on communibiology in the same issue of this journal, arguing that some of her challenges to communibiology are seriously flawed. (SR)
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Communication Apprehension, Communication Research, Curriculum
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Condit, Celeste Michelle – Communication Education, 2000
Replies to Beatty and McCroskey's response to this author's response and challenges to their articles in this issue and elsewhere on communibiology. Explains why taking biology seriously in human communication does not entail either the belief that biology is genetically determined or that human biological systems are immutable. (SR)
Descriptors: Biological Influences, Communication Apprehension, Curriculum, Genetics
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