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| AULRE Main Site >> HEA Archive Materials >> Section 4 >> Discourse Journal | |
| Discourse Journal: Volume 5:1 - Index | |
| Editorial: Paul Tomassi: 1963-2005 | |
| Content | |
Interview with Jonathan Lowe - David Mossley This is a transcript of an interview conducted with Professor Jonathan Lowe - pp. 17-28 |
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Web-based Exercises and Benchmarked Skills A report on the mini-project 'Creating Web-based Exercises for Theology and Religious Studies Students' - Rob Gleave This report describes the experiences of one lecturer in creating web-based exercises for theology and religious studies students - pp. 29-49 |
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Why medical ethics should not be taught by Philosophers - Christopher Cowley This article argues that medical ethics should not be taught by philosophers - pp. 50-63 |
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Kant on Teaching Philosophy - George MacDonald Ross This article looks at Kant's approach to teaching philosophy, and relates what he says to current theories of good practice in university education - pp. 65-82 |
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On Teaching Political Philosophy through Original Texts - Jerry Spring This paper reports on a project that successfully introduced second-year university students to political philosophy through reading, discussing and writing about classic texts - pp. 83-106 |
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How to Assure Student Preparation and Structure Student-Student Interaction - David W. Concepcion This article argues that assignments that structure students' interactions (with the text and each other) with detailed procedures sustain student preparation by minimising miscommunication and conferring intrinsic rewards. It presents a Read- Write-Discuss cycle as one example of this type of assignment - pp. 107-119 |
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Engaging Student Relativism - Gerald J. Erion This paper looks at strategies for dealing with student relativism in the classroom - pp. 120-133 |
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Seeing Both Sides of an Issue: Teaching an Online Moral Issues Course - Sergia K. Hay Although there are currently obvious advantages to teaching philosophy in physical classrooms, there are specific things online instructors of philosophy can do in order to make their courses equally effective as face-to-face courses, and this paper explores some of them - pp. 134-141 |
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Epictetus Teaching Philosophy - Ioannis S. Christodoulou This paper explores the non-transparent dynamics of the academic teaching of ethics - pp. 142-150 |
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Teaching the Philosophy of Aquinas - Linda L. Farmer This article outlines the challenges one teacher has encountered, and the methods of addressing them that have worked with students, in making Aquinas' philosophy more accessible, more intelligible and, sometimes even, rather enjoyable to learn - pp. 151-158 |
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