Jim,
Not all that hard to do if one describes the behaviors that such people
would be engaging in during class.
Al
Al L. Cone
Jamestown College <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
North Dakota 701.252.3467 X 2604
http://www.jc.edu/users/faculty/cone
-----Original Message-----
From: Jim Clark [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Sunday, November 21, 1999 3:35 PM
Cc: TIPS
Subject: RE: Teaching uncertainty
Hi
On Sun, 21 Nov 1999, Al Cone wrote:
> in to dualistic/absolutistic thinking. An, in progress, student project
> which described professors whose behaviors typify each of Perry's three
> levels, strongly suggests than students would prefer to be taught by
> relativist as opposed to dualistic professors.
I wonder if students can tell the difference between dualistic
and committed professors (probably not unless teachers
communicate how they arrived at their committed position?), or is
there a difference (undoubtedly yes, in my mind)?
Best wishes
Jim
============================================================================
James M. Clark (204) 786-9757
Department of Psychology (204) 774-4134 Fax
University of Winnipeg 4L05D
Winnipeg, Manitoba R3B 2E9 [EMAIL PROTECTED]
CANADA http://www.uwinnipeg.ca/~clark
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