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Showing 1 to 15 of 20 results
Peer reviewedBromley, Hank – Thought & Action, 1998
Colleges and universities considering adoption of new technologies should first consider why the initiative is occurring; whether it is based on careful discussion of educational goals and means; what social visions are built into and enacted by a given technology; how context of use will shape the way the technology is used; and how different…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, College Administration, College Planning, Computer Uses in Education
Peer reviewedNoble, David F. – Thought & Action, 1998
Confusion over the role to be played by technology in college instruction is common, with administration sometimes in opposition to faculty over transformation of courses into courseware and the action of teaching into commercially viable property. The major proponents of such a transformation include vendors of network hardware, software, and…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, College Administration, Computer Uses in Education, Corporate Education
Peer reviewedRuppert, Sandra S. – Thought & Action, 1998
Interviews with 21 state legislators, leading technology activists in their states, reveal that policymakers are feeling pressured to ensure that all education sectors have access to the best in educational technology and are attempting to reconcile the costs of such innovation with the educational benefits. Findings of the study, including…
Descriptors: Attitudes, Computer Uses in Education, Cost Effectiveness, Educational Technology
Peer reviewedBowers, C. A. – Thought & Action, 1998
Decisions to incorporate computers into public schools and universities, for administrative or classroom use, follow from the unquestioned assumption that computers are the latest expression of social progress. The paradox is that neither the computer industry nor educational policymakers understand the connections between the cultural forms of…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Computer Uses in Education, Cost Effectiveness, Educational Change
Peer reviewedVan Dusen, Gerald C. – Thought & Action, 1998
Attaining the goals that higher-education reformers target (making the academy more accessible, affordable, and effective) via technology is likely to require a significant overhaul of postsecondary institutions, including the use of time, resource allocation, roles of faculty/staff, and institutional mission. Closer examination of how technology…
Descriptors: Access to Education, Change Strategies, College Faculty, College Role
Peer reviewedGardiner, Lion F. – Thought & Action, 1998
Recent research on how college students learn and what constitutes an effective educational experience is reviewed, and implications for bringing about desired changes in the undergraduate experience are discussed. Topics examined include students' ability to reason with abstractions, development of moral values, extent to which the curriculum and…
Descriptors: Change Strategies, Cognitive Processes, College Instruction, Educational Change
Peer reviewedClanton, Gordon – Thought & Action, 1997
A college teacher describes his approach to student subject-area writing, which includes assignment of several short papers to be written according to carefully prescribed guidelines (appended to the article), clear grading criteria, high expectations, availability for individual conferences, rewards for improvement, encouragement of writing for…
Descriptors: Academic Standards, Assignments, Classroom Communication, Classroom Techniques
Peer reviewedHarris, David E.; Schaible, Robert – Thought & Action, 1997
Reviews research concerning the effectiveness of Writing Across the Curriculum (WAC) in higher education, focusing on what it demonstrates about WAC's value in improving subject-area knowledge and writing skills. Concludes that the approach can be effective, but that collaborative, inclusive effort to implement it is needed, including teacher…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, College Instruction, Cooperation, Faculty Development
Peer reviewedMurphy, Diane Makar; Murphy, John T. – Thought & Action, 1997
The Americans with Disabilities Act requires reasonable accommodations for the disabled in public and private colleges and universities. Faculty must understand the difference between equal opportunity and equal treatment. Specific suggestions are made for teaching learning-disabled, mobility- impaired, visually-impaired, and hearing-impaired…
Descriptors: Academic Accommodations (Disabilities), Accessibility (for Disabled), Classroom Techniques, College Instruction
Peer reviewedTinto, Vincent – Thought & Action, 1997
If universities were serious about enhancing student learning, they would explore other ways of organizing work, including reorganization of the curriculum into learning communities that enable learning to span the disciplines, creating classrooms that promote collaborative learning experiences, and using forms of assessment that encourage shared…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, College Environment, College Faculty, College Role
Peer reviewedGozemba, Patricia; de los Reyes, Eileen – Thought & Action, 1996
The progressive gains of college faculty since the 1960s (affirmative action, ethnic studies, expansion of access to higher education, emergence of faculty unions) are threatened by social and political shifts toward conservatism. Senior, tenured faculty are challenged to use their privileged positions and the gains made in recent decades to…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, Age Differences, Aging in Academia, Change Strategies
Peer reviewedHallock, Pamela – Thought & Action, 1994
Common pitfalls for colleges and universities in hiring faculty and in career development efforts are identified, and recommendations are made for both faculty and administrators to begin to halt the attrition of minority and female faculty members. (MSE)
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Career Development, College Administration, College Environment
Peer reviewedLittle, Doric – Thought and Action, 1992
Increased willingness to speak out about sexual harassment has several implications for the academic community. Faculty must behave carefully at all times, understand the risk of having a relationship with a student, and avoid sexual overtures. Recent court decisions offer some guidelines for conduct and for determination if harassment exists.…
Descriptors: College Faculty, College Students, Court Litigation, Higher Education
Peer reviewedBurns, Margie – Thought and Action, 1992
There is an illusion that each of the thousands of women now teaching writing and other service courses for inadequate pay, benefits, recognition, and job security is doing so only because of her own choices or misjudgments. The illusion must be dispelled; exploitation is at the center of the phenomenon. (MSE)
Descriptors: Compensation (Remuneration), Females, Higher Education, Part Time Faculty
Peer reviewedThompson, Karen – Thought and Action, 1992
The process and results of establishing collective bargaining for Rutgers University's (New Jersey) part-time faculty, largely women, are discussed. Negotiations for achievement of parity with full-time faculty through pro rata benefits and salaries, the most contested issue, are described briefly, focusing on administration resistance. (MSE)
Descriptors: Collective Bargaining, College Faculty, Higher Education, Part Time Faculty
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