This article describes the experiences of the marketing faculty at Temasek Polytechnic in Singapore in their effort to help their students develop essential entry-level skills by transforming the marketing curriculum using problem-based learning. The article describes how the faculty selected the problem-based learning approach and the challenges associated with implementing it. Evidence of the success of the new curriculum also is provided.
This article presents the findings of a study of the interrelationships between students' individual characteristics, self-efficacy beliefs, parental involvement, university and classroom learning environments; teachers' individual characteristics, teaching efficacies, university and classroom learning environments, teacher outcomes and approaches to teaching; and approaches to learning (deep and surface learning) and self-directed learning readiness. The study was guided by a two-level integrated theoretical framework, designed to examine 'student and teacher ecological systems' and their influences on student learning and outcomes. Data was drawn from 392 students and 32 teachers situated in 44 problem-based learning classrooms from three study levels at a Malaysian private medical university. The analyses, through hierarchical linear modelling, revealed what and how personal, family, learning environment and teacher factors directly influenced approaches to learning and self-directed learning readiness. Implications for teaching in higher education are discussed.
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