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Authentic Inquiry

This page includes examples of Web-enabled authentic inquiry from


TopAccounting

Group Project: Not-for-Profit and Government Organizations

Kevin Michel and Frank Fronhoffer, Accounting 410 (Accounting for Not-for-Profit Organizations and Governments), University of Maryland University College

This assignment asks study groups to use the Web and other resources to gather information about particular issues relating to not-for-profit organizations and then discuss findings and present a position paper outlining the conclusions reached in the online class conference. The assignment also pays particular attention to evaluating Web-based sources of information. Position papers are required to paraphrase and discuss rather than quote verbatim the concepts, ideas, and arguments found on the Web; only in appropriate contexts may direct quotes be used.

The assignment, part of a course delivered entirely online, suggests ways to mine the Web for relevant documentation and typical practices and to use collaborative learning as a means of inducing accounting students to adopt practitioner stances in evaluating their profession. As the assignment makes clear, actuarial skills are only one part of that profession; to succeed in a contemporary business environment, accounting students must also learn to think critically, work in teams, and make group decisions.

This example features the use of Web sites.


TopAmerican History

Women and the American Experience (course homepage)

John McClymer, History 113 (Women and the American Experience), Assumption College

This course takes as its premise the idea that students learn best when asked to do what actual historians do. Designed as an intermediate-level undergraduate survey course, the class uses a combination of textbooks and online primary sources. There are a great number of assignments encouraging students to read sources in the context of their times and to ask questions about 19th century cultural ideas and concepts. For instance, one assignment asks students to choose one poem and one illustration from Godey's Lady's Book, a magazine immensely popular in the 1850s, and analyze which best illustrates the notion of the "woman's sphere" in that era. Another assignment has students visit the Silent Ladies site at the University of New Orleans and choose two actresses of the silent film era who embody the sexuality that Parker lampooned in her poem "The Flapper."

This course and its assignments suggest many ways to supplement the shorthand information of textbooks with a lively range of online readings and sources and to teach students to think of themselves as historians by allowing them to discover multiple points of entry into the topics covered.

McClymer's case study for this course, a contribution to the American Studies Crossroads Project, provides further information about his approach to authentic inquiry and learning.

This example features the use of Web sites and images.


TopMacroeconomics

Economics Stock Project Web Information

Jay Kaplan, Introduction to Macroeconomics, University of Colorado at Boulder

This assignment asks students to use Yahoo's stock symbol lookup as a means of finding out information about a public company and basing projections about that company's future circumstances on the findings. In particular, the assignment asks students to calculate the company's price to earnings growth ratio (PEG) over a 10-year period and use it to determine whether purchasing the company's stock would be a wise investment decision.

This assignment suggests ways to use the Web to give students hands-on experience of economic concepts in action. By thinking in the role of investors, students learn to connect textbook knowledge with real-world practices and thereby enhance their understanding of the macroeconomic sphere.

Kaplan's courses on Macroeconomics (Econ 2020) and Microeconomics (Econ 2010) contain further examples of using online resources to connect theoretical knowledge with real-world practices.

This example features the use of Web sites.


TopSociology

Doing Sociology on the World Wide Web

Robert E. Wood, 50.920.207 (Introduction to Sociology), Rutgers University Camden Campus

This interactive assignment asks students to answer 27 questions about Web resources that pertain to sociological learning and research and submit their answers to the professor. The tour leads through a series of sites and databases containing information on subjects like demographics, literacy, household income, sociology resources on the Web, and the local economy. Students are required to use each site to find answers to questions. For example, in Question 20 they examine the University of California's Survey Documentation and Analysis (SDA) Archive and find out if "(reported) happiness increases with (reported) class position."

This assignment introduces sociology students to key online resources in their field and suggests ways of using Web-based resources to teach rigorous research and evaluation skills in any discipline.

This example features the use of scripts, Web sites, and text.


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