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Auteur principal: Linacre, E. T.
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Langue:en
Publié: 1973
Sujets:
Accès en ligne:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED091976
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author Linacre, E. T.
author_facet Linacre, E. T.
Linacre, E. T.
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents Centre for Advancement of Teaching Education Monograph Series. No. 2. Lessons Not Lectures. Linacre, E. T. Course Descriptions Curriculum Enrichment Higher Education Lecture Method Lesson Plans Teacher Effectiveness Teaching Methods In view of the well-known disadvantages of lecturing, and the practicability of teaching without them, why does lecturing remain the standard method in universities? To increase the chances of lectures being good, they should be fewer, and to offset their deficiencies they should be regarded as only one component of a combination of methods used in teaching a particular course. The displacement of lecturing from its central position in teaching makes time available for more dialogue with students in tutorials, for more student initiative in the library, the laboratory, and the field, and for improving the whole package of teaching methods used in the course. In what follows is an account of the way in which the transition was made in the teaching of one particular course, Climatology, starting from lectures to become something quite different using extempore lecturing, prepared lecturing, notes for the student, readings, illustrations, tapes, free choice assignments, assessment of the student, and the student's assessment of the course. Appendices include the final evaluation of the course by the students, comparison of the different kinds of students and their course marks compared with other courses they have taken, and the ABCDE method of marking essays. (Author/PG)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED091976
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 1973
record_format eric
spellingShingle Centre for Advancement of Teaching Education Monograph Series. No. 2. Lessons Not Lectures.
Linacre, E. T.
Course Descriptions
Curriculum Enrichment
Higher Education
Lecture Method
Lesson Plans
Teacher Effectiveness
Teaching Methods
Centre for Advancement of Teaching Education Monograph Series. No. 2. Lessons Not Lectures. Linacre, E. T. Course Descriptions Curriculum Enrichment Higher Education Lecture Method Lesson Plans Teacher Effectiveness Teaching Methods In view of the well-known disadvantages of lecturing, and the practicability of teaching without them, why does lecturing remain the standard method in universities? To increase the chances of lectures being good, they should be fewer, and to offset their deficiencies they should be regarded as only one component of a combination of methods used in teaching a particular course. The displacement of lecturing from its central position in teaching makes time available for more dialogue with students in tutorials, for more student initiative in the library, the laboratory, and the field, and for improving the whole package of teaching methods used in the course. In what follows is an account of the way in which the transition was made in the teaching of one particular course, Climatology, starting from lectures to become something quite different using extempore lecturing, prepared lecturing, notes for the student, readings, illustrations, tapes, free choice assignments, assessment of the student, and the student's assessment of the course. Appendices include the final evaluation of the course by the students, comparison of the different kinds of students and their course marks compared with other courses they have taken, and the ABCDE method of marking essays. (Author/PG)
title Centre for Advancement of Teaching Education Monograph Series. No. 2. Lessons Not Lectures.
topic Course Descriptions
Curriculum Enrichment
Higher Education
Lecture Method
Lesson Plans
Teacher Effectiveness
Teaching Methods
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED091976