Word: formats
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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Communication and learning, however cannot occur unless the educational system contains feedback. Nothing is more deadening to student-teacher interaction than the lecture structure, especially if the lectures are lazily prepared and inarticulately imparted. The lecture format also does not encourage the development of the student as a self-teacher for it demands more passivity than activity and inhibits student-student interaction in class...
...essential decisions about thematic development and continuity. The interviews reach no conclusions, and convey the mood of "Meet the Press" rather than an important political meeting. Only one veteran breaks the monotony of disconnected testimony by showing the relationship between his Vietnam experiences and his current life. The interview format is also troublesome visually. A few attempts at montage, juxtaposing shots of the long-haired, dejected veteran with his photograph as a smiling, enthusiastic recruit offer the only diversion...
...criminal action can be taken until either party involved files a format complaint with the court Battcock explained...
Sometimes one editorial writer is called upon to argue both sides of a question and write the Times's opinion as well-intellectual acrobatics that can be difficult. Pittman worries that the format could occasionally reinforce bigoted or lunatic-fringe positions by making them seem legitimate. Despite such reservations, the editors are convinced that the pro-con page is doing what an editorial page ought to do: inform and influence public debate. Says Patterson: "You disarm the reader. Communication is the art of getting what you say received, not just saying...
...PICTORIAL HISTORY OF ENGLISH ARCHITECTURE by John Betjeman. 112 pages. Macmillan. $12.95. British Poet Laureate Betjeman has long been an amateur of architecture. Here he transcends the book's rather tired format to produce an essay that is sublimely confident of its delights and prejudices. Betjeman loves tiny Saxon churches whose masons "captured holy air and encased it in stone." Noting that some of his illustrations of modern buildings are "cautionary examples," he ends with a plea for the survival of the profession of architecture. "We should wish him well," Betjeman writes of the architect, "for he should...