Word: instructors
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Dates: during 1950-1959
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Television as an educational transmission system has many advantages. One good instructor can teach via television a very large number of students who need not be in one place or even, for that matter, on the University campus. Experiments, equipment, and situations which cannot normally be shown students can be televised to them. By television, undergraduates can visit and observe clinics, experiments, and situations from which they are usually excluded. Small objects can be enlarged, and large classes may be given advantages of observation now reserved to small laboratory sections...
...systems. Comparisons were made in each of three televised courses, General Chemistry, General Psychology, and the Psychology of Marriage, between three different groups of students: 1) those receiving lectures in the television receiving rooms, 2) those receiving lectures in the originating room, i.e. the same room as the instructor with television equipment present, and 3) those receiving lectures in the same room as the instructor with no television equipment (the control group...
...added that a "good coach must be a mastermind of football and be able not only to outguess and outsmart his opponents, but above all, he must qualify as the very best type of instructor, able to impart his knowledge of all phases of the game to the eager beavers who make up his squad...
Zbigniew K. Brzezinski, instructor in Government, said, "The Polish situation poses for the Soviet leadership an almost insoluble problem. To use force against the Poles might mean a crisis in international communism, e.g., a renewed defection by Tito, difficulties with the Italian Communist party, possibly even strained relations with Mao Tse Tung...
...disapproving of the ban, Robert A. Fieldmesser, instructor in Sociology, saw potential harm in banning or allowing the steady dating practice. He affirmed, however, that if "steady" couples are "not too steady, it's not too serious...