A NEW APPROACH TO TEACHING MATHEMATICS AT THE UNIVERSITY TODAY - THE TIME OF COVID 19

Author(s):  
Vaclav Kohout
1979 ◽  
Vol 63 (429) ◽  
pp. 61-65
Author(s):  
Jerry Rottier

Author(s):  
Corrado Poli ◽  
Ian Grosse ◽  
Beverly Woolf

Abstract This paper describes multimedia based manufacturing tutors currently under development at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. The purpose of these tutors to assist the user in better visualizing and understanding the relationship between part design and the ease or difficulty of creating the tooling needed to produce the part. Evaluation of these tutors by both freshman and junior engineering students is discussed as well. A finite element analysis tutor, also under development, is briefly described.


2020 ◽  
Vol 24 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bridget Grogan

This article reports on and discusses the experience of a contrapuntal approach to teaching poetry, explored during 2016 and 2017 in a series of introductory poetry lectures in the English 1 course at the University of Johannesburg. Drawing together two poems—Warsan Shire’s “Home” and W.H. Auden’s “Refugee Blues”—in a week of teaching in each year provided an opportunity for a comparison that encouraged students’ observations on poetic voice, racial identity, transhistorical and transcultural human experience, trauma and empathy. It also provided an opportunity to reflect on teaching practice within the context of decoloniality and to acknowledge the need for ongoing change and review in relation to it. In describing the contrapuntal teaching and study of these poems, and the different methods employed in the respective years of teaching them, I tentatively suggest that canonical Western and contemporary postcolonial poems may reflect on each other in unique and transformative ways. I further posit that poets and poems that engage students may open the way into initially “less relevant” yet ultimately rewarding poems, while remaining important objects of study in themselves.


This article is devoted to the features and benefits of a professionally-oriented approach to teaching a foreign language in non-linguistic high schools on the example of engineering education. According to the latest standards of higher education (FSES 3++), students must have sufficient knowledge of a foreign language for business communication in oral and written forms. However, teachers of high schools face a number of difficulties in the formation of a foreign language communicative competence offuture engineers, namely: a constant decrease of a number offoreign language practical classes in a curriculum of a high school and a weak motivation of students. In our opinion, a professionally-oriented approach to teaching helps to solve these problems and make the process of learning a foreign language more intensive, focused and effective. That is, now, the development of strategies, methodological models and tools for teaching English, with a focus on professional communication, is an actual task for an English teacher at the University. This article presents some methods and techniques that stimulate students of engineering faculty to professionally oriented communication in English. Much attention is paid to both active teaching methods used during practical English classes, and individual work, which allows students to get more useful information and skills within the practical classes given, and also allows students to develop the need for individual knowledge acquisition and comprehension, thereby providing the increased interest of communication in a foreign language and increasing motivation to learn a foreign language.


1955 ◽  
Vol 46 (7) ◽  
pp. 255-257
Author(s):  
Jack R. Frymier

2015 ◽  
Vol 39 (2) ◽  
pp. 197-204 ◽  
Author(s):  
Resa M. Jones ◽  
Ian J. Wallace ◽  
Alice Westerberg ◽  
Kristyn N. Hoy ◽  
John M. Quillin ◽  
...  

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