Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Oxbridge tutorial system was established in the 1800s at the University of Oxford and the University of Cambridge in the United Kingdom. [1] It is still practised today, and consists of undergraduate students being taught by college fellows, or sometimes doctoral students and post-docs [2]) in groups of one to three on a weekly basis.
Lecture Notes in Physics; Lectures and Conversations on Aesthetics, Psychology, and Religious Belief; Lectures from Colombo to Almora; Lectures in Geometric Combinatorics; Lectures of the Three Degrees in Craft Masonry; Lectures on Aesthetics; Lectures on Faith; Lectures on Government and Binding; Lectures on History and General Policy ...
Many university courses relying on lectures supplement them with smaller discussion sections, tutorials, or laboratory experiment sessions as a means of further actively involving students. Often these supplemental sections are led by graduate students , tutors , teaching assistants , or teaching fellows rather than senior faculty .
At the two campuses of St. John's College, U.S. and a few other American colleges with a similar version of the Great Books program, a "tutorial" is a class of 12–16 students who meet regularly with the guidance of a tutor. The tutorial focuses on a certain subject area (e.g., mathematics tutorial, language tutorial) and generally proceeds ...
Lectures and Conversations on Aesthetics, Psychology, and Religious Belief (German: Vorlesungen und Gespräche über Ästhetik, Psychoanalyse und religiösen Glauben) is a series of notes transcribed by Yorick Smythies, Rush Rhees, and James Taylor from assorted lectures by Ludwig Wittgenstein, and published in 1966. [1] The lectures, at which ...
[1] In addition to his normal lectures, Sommerfeld also lectured in specialized courses, including courses in atomic physics that form the subject of another of his books: Atomic Structure and Spectral Lines, which was published in 1919. [10] The world-famous textbook is known as the "Bible of atomic physics". [11]
The Tanner Lectures on Human Values is a multi-university lecture series in the humanities, founded in 1978, at Clare Hall, Cambridge University, by the American scholar Obert Clark Tanner. [1] In founding the lecture, he defined their purpose as follows: [2] I hope these lectures will contribute to the intellectual and moral life of mankind.
The Rational Strength of English Law 1952 A. L. Goodhart: English Law and the Moral Law 1953 Sir Carleton Kemp Allen: The Queen's Peace 1954 C. J. Hamson: Executive Discretion and Judicial Control: An Aspect of the French Conseil d'Etat 1955 Glanville Williams: The Proof of Guilt: A Study of the English Criminal Trial 1956 Sir Patrick Devlin ...