A Team-Teaching Approach: Communication and Integration in Western Europe

1969 ◽  
Vol 46 (1) ◽  
pp. 114-122
Author(s):  
Hanno Hardt ◽  
Brian Goodey

Communication, which defies departmental boundaries, and geography, which also draws heavily on other disciplines, are combined by two ingenious teachers to explain cultural integration from a communication and spatial perspective.

2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (2) ◽  
pp. 167-170
Author(s):  
Wan Nurhasyimah Wan Mohd Apandi ◽  
◽  
Mohd Daud Abdul Rahim ◽  

Collaborative teaching methods is related with Pedagogy theory in academician achievement as team members (Armstrong (1977); cited in David Nunan (1992)). The definition of collaborative teaching approach is known as team teaching in classrooms practices, with a group of creative thinkers to brainstorm about ideas or other creative problems. This practice should be done continuously to be effective. However, there are some challenges that educator will face when practicing collaborative teaching in classroom. The challenges include clash of teaching hours, misconducting time management for students, percentage of rubric assessment, and confusion in terms of differing opinion from educators. Collaborative teaching also known as team teaching is an approach to educate students with two or more teachers in the classroom for a same subject (Robinson et al., 1995).


1965 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 59-64
Author(s):  
Allan W. Gurley ◽  
Randall C. Hicks ◽  
Jurelle G. Lott ◽  
M. Louise Reeves

This is a report of a systemwide in-service program which utilized three University of Georgia faculty members in a team-teaching approach. Used in the program were lectures, questions and discussions, professional books, students' textbooks and accompanying teachers' manuals, films, filmstrips, programmed materials, recent experimental studies and research, various teaching aids and devices, consultants and specialists, and a wide variety of written materials especially prepared to meet the needs of the individuals and the grade level groups.


1961 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 65-68
Author(s):  
W. Robert Houston ◽  
Claude C. Boyd ◽  
M. Vere DeVault

The extensive concern for promoting the continued education of teachers beyond the four-year college program promises to place increasingly greater demands on inservice education. Although many schools are engaged in in-service education of one kind or another, few schools have reported attempts to evaluate the effectiveness of these programs. Research in the effectiveness of various kinds of in-service programs is needed if efforts to improve understandings of teachers are to be efficient and effective in the improvement of educational opportunities for boys and girls. This is a report of the evaluation of an in-service program which utilized a team-teaching approach and the use of television, lectures, question discus. ions, and written materials.


Author(s):  
Mohammadhossein Besharati ◽  
Golnar Mazdayasna

The current study was an attempt to investigate EFL students’ attitudes regarding team-teaching approach. In addition, it explored to what extent the team-teaching approach was effective in terms of enhancing Electrical Engineering Students' English proficiency in an English for Specific Academic Purpose (ESAP) program. To this end, 60 university students studying Electrical Engineering at the faculty of Engineering in Yazd University enrolled in the ESP course participated in this study. Prior to the instruction, the students were randomly divided into two groups as control and experimental. The experimental group was instructed based on the team-teaching approach while the control group was taught based on the traditional approach. The data was gathered through a pretest, posttest, and a questionnaire. The analysis of data via independent sample t-test and descriptive analysis revealed that most of the students had a positive attitude toward utilizing team-teaching approach. Furthermore, the findings indicated that Electrical Engineering students who were taught through team teaching approach performed better than those taught by a single instructor.   


1969 ◽  
Vol 47 (2) ◽  
pp. 112-115
Author(s):  
Louise Wilder ◽  
Raymond K. Jung

2011 ◽  
pp. 538-552 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter Turchin

Most professional historians have abandoned the search for general patterns and laws of history, but not Victor Lieberman. Strange Parallels II (SP II), following on SP I, proposes that similar mechanisms governed state building in such different, and distant, regions as Southeast Asia, China, Western Europe, and Russia. During the period covered by Lieberman (c.800–1830) the general trend within these regions of Eurasia was towards increasing political and cultural integration. This overall trend was not monotonic; it was periodically interrupted by interregna – periods of state breakdown and territorial fragmentation. However, as time unfolded the interregna became shorter and less disruptive. Remarkably, during the second millennium cycles of political integration and disintegration became increasingly correlated between the widely separated Eurasian regions. Lieberman’s bold thesis is combined with truly encyclopedic scholarship and a breathtaking scope. SP II is a major achievement in comparative world history that will take future researchers years to fully digest. This review essay aims to make a first step in this direction.


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