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Full-Text Articles in Education
Round Robin, Dorothy E. Smith
Round Robin, Dorothy E. Smith
Reading Horizons: A Journal of Literacy and Language Arts
Letters to the editor.
Can Reading Failures Be Eliminated By 1980?, Homer L.J. Carter
Can Reading Failures Be Eliminated By 1980?, Homer L.J. Carter
Reading Horizons: A Journal of Literacy and Language Arts
A letter from the editor.
A Multi-Media Approach To Reading, Lucetta A. Johnson
A Multi-Media Approach To Reading, Lucetta A. Johnson
Reading Horizons: A Journal of Literacy and Language Arts
As a new teacher in the Allegan Public Schools one of the primary goals for the year was to present reading activities to the children in as many interesting ways as possible to enrich their reading experiences. A multi-media approach was chosen to accomplish this goal and to encourage the children to love books. By multi-media approach (1) is meant an approach that uses as many printed and audiovisual forms of communication as possible. The program used consisted of the following media, which are by no means all that are currently available: Basal Readers, Library Books, Film Strips, Educational Television, …
Future Teachers Look At Reading Instruction, Dolores Warner
Future Teachers Look At Reading Instruction, Dolores Warner
Reading Horizons: A Journal of Literacy and Language Arts
The goal of this study was to determine the nature of the initial reading instruction received by these students and their attitude toward reading, comparing that with the methods of reading instruction for which they express value.
Reading Readiness, Dorothy E. Smith, Joe R. Chapel
Reading Readiness, Dorothy E. Smith, Joe R. Chapel
Reading Horizons: A Journal of Literacy and Language Arts
One of the most difficult tasks facing the kindergarten or first grade teacher is to recognize the degree of readiness to read which her young students have attained by the time they face her on that first September morning. A great deal has been written on the subject of reading readiness, which is as it should be, since it is so important a subject. However, much that has been written is inaccurate, and most of it is incomplete.
We Suggest, Eleanor Buelke
We Suggest, Eleanor Buelke
Reading Horizons: A Journal of Literacy and Language Arts
Postman, Neil, and Weingartner, Charles Teaching as a Subversive Activity New York: Delacorte Press, 1969. Pp. xv + 219.
The Role Of The Undergraduate College In Social Change, Kenneth E. Boulding, John Weiss
The Role Of The Undergraduate College In Social Change, Kenneth E. Boulding, John Weiss
Perspectives (1969-1979)
Panel 1 presented at the Association for General and Liberal Studies' Annual Meeting at Colgate University, October 30th through November 1st, 1969.
All social change, without exception, involves a process in human learning. Social change, indeed, is an evolutionary process in the field of the "noosphere," especially if we include in this those human artifacts which are the result of imprinting human knowledge on the material and social world.
We ought to be clear at the start that the academic disciplines and the undergraduate college have not had any great impact on social change. Historically, social change in our culture …
Environmental Components Of Liberal Education, George G. Stern, Daniel Lago, Samuel D. Johnson
Environmental Components Of Liberal Education, George G. Stern, Daniel Lago, Samuel D. Johnson
Perspectives (1969-1979)
Panel 2 presented at the Association for General and Liberal Studies' Annual Meeting at Colgate University, October 30th through November 1st, 1969.
The elements of such a curriculum for man can be derived from the evidence of early childhood. Manual dexterity, social interaction, esthetic response, and linguistic capacity constitute four sources of spontaneous gratification in early life. If the student were taken as the integrating center of a curriculum composed of successively more complex forms of these four elements, permitting his own inductive capacities to lead him on from one level to the next, a form of education would emerge …
A Proposal For A Long-Range Project For The Association For General And Liberal Studies, Malcolm Correll
A Proposal For A Long-Range Project For The Association For General And Liberal Studies, Malcolm Correll
Perspectives (1969-1979)
Retiring President's Address presented at the Association for General and Liberal Studies' Annual Meeting at Colgate University, October 30th through November 1st, 1969.
Perspectives Vol. 1 No. 3
Perspectives (1969-1979)
This issue of Perspectives is devoted entirely to the proceedings of the Association for General and Liberal Studies' Annual Meeting which was held at Colgate University, October 30 through November 1, 1969.
Where To Begin In Changing Undergraduate Education, Charles Frankel
Where To Begin In Changing Undergraduate Education, Charles Frankel
Perspectives (1969-1979)
The keynote address for the Annual Meeting of the Association for General and Liberal Studies at Colgate University, October 30-November 1, 1969.
The Challenge To Make Undergraduate Curricula Relevant To Students’ Needs, David S. Pacini, Francis D. Smith
The Challenge To Make Undergraduate Curricula Relevant To Students’ Needs, David S. Pacini, Francis D. Smith
Perspectives (1969-1979)
Panel 3 presented at the Association for General and Liberal Studies' Annual Meeting at Colgate University, October 30th through November 1st, 1969.
The challenge for the liberal arts curriculum rests in the willingness of its leaders and teachers to again address the existential condition of which we are a part. We must be far more willing to probe the symbolic nature of men, and society, to unearth the dimensions of man for which students crave. We must address ourselves to the presupposition of a culture which is in many ways diffe rent from our own. Liberal arts education must take …
Science As A Liberal Study, James E. Trosko
Science As A Liberal Study, James E. Trosko
Perspectives (1969-1979)
Panel 4 presented at the Association for General and Liberal Studies' Annual Meeting at Colgate University, October 30th through November 1st, 1969.
Many educators recognize that, although elements ( facts, etc.) are needed in order to express or create, these things alone are not enough . Since connections of the mind are probably made from some sources of discipline, the phrase, in and of itself, expresses some truth. However, this facile phrase is too often used to mean the instructor who knows the substance of his discipline extremely well, can use that substance, and that alone, to educate his students. …
Science And Social Relevance, Gerald Holton
Science And Social Relevance, Gerald Holton
Perspectives (1969-1979)
Featured Address presented at the Association for General and Liberal Studies' Annual Meeting at Colgate University, October 30th through November 1st, 1969.
Having struggled myself with various experiments in General Education over the years, what I'd like to talk about today are not any of the successes but rather some of the problems, particularly the problems that I see coming to us faster and faster in this business of bringing education in science to students who, many of them, are turning away from science and all it stands for.
A Proposal For Modifying General Studies Science*, Ollin J. Drennan
A Proposal For Modifying General Studies Science*, Ollin J. Drennan
Perspectives (1969-1979)
The dominant thrust of General Studies activities lies in the direction of awakening and deepening the student's individual awareness to the welfare of man-individually and collectively-in the 1970's and beyond.
The State Of The Association For General And Liberal Studies, Horatio M. Lafauci
The State Of The Association For General And Liberal Studies, Horatio M. Lafauci
Perspectives (1969-1979)
To serve the profession thus, the Association must broaden its membership base. First, however, it must broaden the base of involvement by increasing and extending opportunities for direct engagement of the membership at large; second, it must develop and provide services which will be of interest and value to present and potential members; and third, it must be prepared to accept a leadership role in extending and refining the processes of general-liberal education and undergraduate teaching.
A Most Promising Start, Henry Winthrop
A Most Promising Start, Henry Winthrop
Perspectives (1969-1979)
Environment for Man. The Next Fifty Years, Edited by William R. Ewald, Jr.; Bloomington and London: Indiana University Press, Pub. 1967. 308 pages.
The Aim Of Liberal Education, Henry H. Crimmel
The Aim Of Liberal Education, Henry H. Crimmel
Perspectives (1969-1979)
I. The Crisis of Liberal Education and a Prerequisite for Its Resolution
II. The Failure of Current Definitions
III. The Aim Defined Free of Dogma
IV. The Aim Specified
V. The First Dimension: The Liberal Sciences
VI. The Second Dimension: The Liberal Arts
VII. The Third Dimension: Philosophy
VIII. The Irony in the Present Crisis
IX. The Pre-Emptive Claim of Liberal Education
Anatomy Of An Anatomy Cult, Claude S. Phillips
Anatomy Of An Anatomy Cult, Claude S. Phillips
Perspectives (1969-1979)
The Sexual Revolution of the last half-century has produced in advanced societies a new curiosity about the varieties of cultural forms dealing with erotic matters. It may be a little surprising, therefore, for our readers to find that there is still a major culture with unusual sexual attitudes and practices which is almost unknown. The Nacirema Tribe, which was discovered by Professor Horace Miner.
Editorial Note, F. Theodore Marvin
Editorial Note, F. Theodore Marvin
Perspectives (1969-1979)
Editor Note for Vol. 2 Issue 2
Needed For The 1970'S: An Educational Policy For The Social Sciences*, Claude S. Phillips Jr.
Needed For The 1970'S: An Educational Policy For The Social Sciences*, Claude S. Phillips Jr.
Perspectives (1969-1979)
The list of efforts at intercultural education is almost limitless. The impact of these efforts has been so meager as to be startling. Conferences are still being convened to study the problem of how to incorporate intercultural studies into the educational system.
Conflict And Change In The Academic Community, Sidney Hook
Conflict And Change In The Academic Community, Sidney Hook
Perspectives (1969-1979)
The direction of change which holds the greatest promise for deepening, enriching and developing the great humanistic and scientific legacies of university education is by liberalizing the curriculum and processes of teaching and learning in the light of the ideals of the liberal arts tradition. These legacies may stem from the contributions of socially privileged and elite groups of the past. Today our technology makes it possible for all men and women who are willing and able, to partake of them, to contribute to them, and to find meaning and enjoyment in them. The liberal arts tradition is strengthened by …
Only In Our Learning-The Purpose Of An Academic Community, Harris L. Wofford Jr.
Only In Our Learning-The Purpose Of An Academic Community, Harris L. Wofford Jr.
Perspectives (1969-1979)
The search for truth is indeed the highest purpose of an academic community; it is truth as a question that can make man free. This is the vision without which people perish. Without it, we in our multiversities may win the world but lose our souls. Yet it is this basic idea of a community of scholars that is in clear and present danger.
Science & Technology In Education: What Kind Of A Marriage Is This?, Franklin G. Fisk
Science & Technology In Education: What Kind Of A Marriage Is This?, Franklin G. Fisk
Perspectives (1969-1979)
Science as a human activity can help give us answers to adequate technologies in the classroom, but only if the nature of the scientific enterprise is properly recognized for what it is: A human approach to the world of sense experience with certain definite but necessary biases involving the creative use of hypothesis and theory in conjunction with valid generalizations and accurate data. All this is science, man is a part of it, and I firmly believe that science is one of man's most successful attempts to understand the world in which he lives.
The Course Curse, Dale Porter
The Course Curse, Dale Porter
Perspectives (1969-1979)
The course is the backbone of American higher education. Curricula built around sequences or selections of courses are almost universal in our colleges and universities. Attempts to move outside the course structure are still regarded as experimental or as exceptions to the rule, and their achievements are not generally understood unless translated into the language of course requirements. For example, when students demanded the opportunity for political involvement in the November campaigns, university officials obliged them-with a course. When college teachers think of educational reform they think of changing the content or the scheduling of courses, or at most the …
A Plan To Improve Reading Instruction For The Superior Student In First Grade, Jo Ann Nieuwkoop
A Plan To Improve Reading Instruction For The Superior Student In First Grade, Jo Ann Nieuwkoop
Reading Horizons: A Journal of Literacy and Language Arts
Teachers often become so concerned about children who are having difficulty that the needs of the superior students are neglected. Bright students often learn early to work independently; because of this, teachers "put them on their own." All of the students in the classroom need guidance in their development, but good readers need a different kind of guidance than that required for the average or slow learners. It is important for superior students to develop and mature physically, emotionally, socially as well as mentally so that they may become well developed personalities who will be better able to make worthwhile …
Echoes From The Field, Joe R. Chapel, Ronald A. Crowell
Echoes From The Field, Joe R. Chapel, Ronald A. Crowell
Reading Horizons: A Journal of Literacy and Language Arts
Two years ago a group of reading teachers at the college level met for the purpose of discussing current problems in helping college students read better. As a result of this meeting, the Michigan College Reading Association was established. The basic purpose of the organization is to serve as a channel of communication between people in the field so that members can get acquainted, discuss ongoing programs, exchange ideas and information, and investigate issues of mutual concern. Through this association members hope to encourage reading programs at the college level as well as to improve their own programs and teaching …
Did You See?, Dorothy J. Mcginnis
Did You See?, Dorothy J. Mcginnis
Reading Horizons: A Journal of Literacy and Language Arts
No abstract available.