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Online Instructional Resources
Teaching Methods: Teaching Disciplinary ThinkingIntroduction
Each discipline offers students both content knowledge and ways of knowing and reasoning specific to the discipline. This section provides information on developing students’ disciplinary thinking. The links below contain specific strategies for teaching disciplinary thinking, research into how students learn disciplinary thinking, and disciplinary thinking in the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning.
“Strategies for Teaching Thinking and Promoting Intellectual
Development in Online Classes,” William Peirce, Prince George’s
Community College, 2001. Teaching Disciplinary Thinking Through Small Group Activities
(Princeton University, McGraw Center, The Scholar as Teacher Tip Sheet No. 23). “Beyond Coverage: Teaching Disciplinary Thinking in the Introductory
Course,” Lendol Calder, Augustana College. Reported in Teaching
Concerns, a publication of the University of Virginia Resource Center, Spring
2004. “Ways of Thinking and Practising in Biology and History: Disciplinary
Aspects of Teaching and Learning Environments,” Dai Hounsell
and Charles Anderson, University of Edinburgh. Disciplinary Styles in the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, Carnegie
Foundation’s Gallery of Teaching and Learning. See also Teaching Critical Thinking and Writing Across the Curriculum on this website.
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