Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- SoTL (56)
- Pedagogy (11)
- Information literacy (9)
- OER (9)
- Higher education (7)
-
- Open educational resources (7)
- Teaching (7)
- Community college (6)
- Information Literacy (6)
- Games (5)
- Assessment (4)
- CUNY Games Conference (4)
- Community College (4)
- EPortfolio (4)
- Game design (4)
- Interactive pedagogy (4)
- Online learning (4)
- Undergraduate research (4)
- COVID-19 (3)
- COVID-19 pandemic (3)
- College students (3)
- Digital pedagogy (3)
- Diversity (3)
- Open Educational Resources (3)
- Open education (3)
- Place-based learning (3)
- Self-efficacy (3)
- Teacher education (3)
- Academic libraries (2)
- Adult learners (2)
Articles 151 - 156 of 156
Full-Text Articles in Education
Learning Communities And The Future Of The Humanities, Phyllis E. Vanslyck
Learning Communities And The Future Of The Humanities, Phyllis E. Vanslyck
Publications and Research
According to Profession's 2005 Presidential Forum, one reason for dwindling enrollment in the Humanities is lack of interdisciplinarity. Learning communities, courses clustered around a common theme and taught to the same group of students are a powerful example of a kind of interdisciplinarity that is flourishing on more than five-hundred campuses in the United States.This essay looks closely at the expanding learning community movement and its relevance to revitalizing the Humanities.
How To Incorporate External Activities Into Courses For Your Students’ Benefit, Marissa Moran
How To Incorporate External Activities Into Courses For Your Students’ Benefit, Marissa Moran
Publications and Research
No abstract provided.
Writing Intensive Courses In Theatre, Alisa Roost
Writing Intensive Courses In Theatre, Alisa Roost
Publications and Research
Most professors believe writing matters. Through writing our students are better able to synthesize ideas, communicate those ideas, and make connections across fields. While it can take significant time to grade all the assignments, it can threaten coverage of material, and our students rarely appreciate it, writing assignments can be crafted to reduce grading, add depth to coverage, and spark interest. What follows is an overview of how I incorporate writing into my theatre courses and some ways of crafting engaging writing-intensive courses.
The Face Of The Future: Engaging In Diversity At Laguardia Community College, Gail O. Mellow, Phyllis E. Vanslyck, Bret Eynon
The Face Of The Future: Engaging In Diversity At Laguardia Community College, Gail O. Mellow, Phyllis E. Vanslyck, Bret Eynon
Publications and Research
Non-traditional, first generation, college students are changing the face of higher education in the United States. More than one third of today's students are minorities, eighty percent of those are employed and attending school part-time and more than one quarter are single parents. Diversity at LaGuardia means many things besides culture, ethnicity or nationality.It also refers to age, social background, fluency in English, academic expectations, learning styles and academic preparation. We argue here that we need to rethink curriculum in relation to this new understanding of diversity.
Learning As We G(R)O(W): Strategizing The Lessons Of A Fledgling Rhetoric And Writing Studies Department, Jane Hindman
Learning As We G(R)O(W): Strategizing The Lessons Of A Fledgling Rhetoric And Writing Studies Department, Jane Hindman
Publications and Research
Published in one of the first collections to focus on independent writing programs, A Field of Dreams. The volume offers a complex picture of the experience of the stand-alone. Included here are narratives of individual programs from a wide range of institutions, exploring such issues as what institutional issues led to their independence, how independence solved or created administrative problems, how it changed the culture of the writing program and faculty sense of purpose, success, or failure.
Repositioning Ourselves In The Contact Zone, Phyllis E. Vanslyck
Repositioning Ourselves In The Contact Zone, Phyllis E. Vanslyck
Publications and Research
This essay investigates ways students respond to cultural differences and cultural conflicts presented in literary texts and considers effective pedagogical strategies for dealing with such issues in the classroom. How can we encourage an exploration of cultural issues that texts embody and critique in a way that encourages an understanding of ways values are culturally constructed?