- Connect a course topic from recent weeks to something real and lived in Wisconsin to encourage your students to recognize the relevance, value, and applicability of your course content.
- Paul and Kirthi, in the end of their article, subtly point out the value of struggle in the learning process. Consider the opportunities for struggle provided in your courses. How do you initiate that struggle? Do you provide support during their process of managing such difficulty (a necessity for students to stick with the struggle and move forward)? What do students gain at the other end of the struggle?
- Notice that Paul's example of his effective teaching is collaborative--a project developed with a colleague. Do you collaborate with colleagues to develop effective learning activities? To analyze and improve student understanding? If not, reach out and make such connections with campus or departmental colleagues.
Monday, November 28, 2011
UWC Showcase: Real-World Applications
Monday, November 14, 2011
Engaged Learning Workshop: Final Questions
- What types of activities and/or projects would fit your course's learning goals best?
- What types of activities and/or projects would fit your teaching and research interests best?
- Think of a problem or question that would engage students in your class.
- What kind of project would best fit that question: in-class activity? Longer project? Community-based learning? Online simulations?
- What resources would you need to develop that project? Are they available? If not, how might you obtain them (campus funding, collaborations, grant writing)?
- What other barriers might there be to successfully implementing your idea?
- Who might be a good collaborator on this project: another faculty member on your campus? Someone in the community? Someone at another campus?
- What excites you about your discipline? How are you currently sharing that excitement with the students?
- What hints or tips for engaging students can you share with your colleagues? Please share them!
Sunday, November 6, 2011
Respond to "Effective Teaching and Learning" Chapter
1. The first guideline states to start with questions about
nature. Each discipline has specific central questions that form the core of
the discipline. For one (or more) of your courses, think about what the central
questions are that you want your students to be able to discuss, struggle with,
and ultimately understand by the end of the course.
2. The next guideline provides suggestions for engaging students actively. How have you engaged students in your courses in the past? What worked? What didn’t work? For both questions, why or why not?
3. The guidelines suggest that STEM instructors “deemphasize the memorization of technical vocabulary.” Do you think this is a sound approach? Why or why not? Are there ways to introduce technical vocabulary without turning students off of science?
4. The chapter suggests that science teaching should reflect the scientific process as much as possible. Have you attempted this with your beginning students? How can we encourage curiosity and avoid dogmatism while giving students a foundational knowledge in the discipline(s)? And for those not in science fields, how do you teach in ways that reflect your disciplinary processes and require students to perform your disciplinary processes? In other words, how are you practicing your field’s signature pedagogies?
5. The last point in the chapter centers around a key struggle for anyone teaching an introductory course in a transfer institution: the notion that teaching must take its time. In our courses, we wish to take the time to ensure in-depth understanding of the subject, but we also must teach enough breadth of the topic so that students are prepared to go on to upper-level courses. How do you approach the breadth vs. depth dilemma in your courses? In other words, how do you balance the pressure toward “coverage” with the desire to “uncover” a few major ideas or principles that students will retain years from now?
2. The next guideline provides suggestions for engaging students actively. How have you engaged students in your courses in the past? What worked? What didn’t work? For both questions, why or why not?
3. The guidelines suggest that STEM instructors “deemphasize the memorization of technical vocabulary.” Do you think this is a sound approach? Why or why not? Are there ways to introduce technical vocabulary without turning students off of science?
4. The chapter suggests that science teaching should reflect the scientific process as much as possible. Have you attempted this with your beginning students? How can we encourage curiosity and avoid dogmatism while giving students a foundational knowledge in the discipline(s)? And for those not in science fields, how do you teach in ways that reflect your disciplinary processes and require students to perform your disciplinary processes? In other words, how are you practicing your field’s signature pedagogies?
5. The last point in the chapter centers around a key struggle for anyone teaching an introductory course in a transfer institution: the notion that teaching must take its time. In our courses, we wish to take the time to ensure in-depth understanding of the subject, but we also must teach enough breadth of the topic so that students are prepared to go on to upper-level courses. How do you approach the breadth vs. depth dilemma in your courses? In other words, how do you balance the pressure toward “coverage” with the desire to “uncover” a few major ideas or principles that students will retain years from now?
Considering the Implications of (Dis)Engagement
Think about how you talk about a liberal arts
education.
- When you discuss a liberal arts education with your students, advisees, and colleagues, what disciplines do you talk about?
- Do you explicitly include the STEM disciplines and their role in the liberal arts?
Think back to your own college experiences.
- What inspired you to pursue your field of study?
- What type of institution did you attend?
- What surprises or obstacles did you encounter as you began your college career?
- How were you encouraged or helped in overcoming those obstacles?
- What type of peer network did you have?
- How much individual contact did you have with faculty?
- Who did you turn to when you needed encouragement or support in general?
- What aspects of the type of educational system you experienced would help your current students succeed?
- What aspects would likely turn your students away from your field, particularly those of you in the STEM disciplines?
- What types of obstacles do you observe your students facing that may be different than what you and your peers faced?
Monday, October 31, 2011
Engaged Learning: Reflect & Interact
Review the practices of engaged learning described in these introductory materials: creating a learning community in your classroom, challenging students effectively, involving the affective and/or psychomotor domains and not just the cognitive, engaging the facets of knowledge construction associated with perspective and empathy, and using some high-impact practices.
How do you already do any of these successfully?
Which one(s) do you want to try to improve, and how might you do that?
Sunday, October 16, 2011
Podcast with Joe Foy: Reflect & Interact
Ask students--even if in the minutes before class
starts--what movies they've seen lately, what TV shows they watch, what music
they like. Explore their common answers sometime soon, search online for quick
descriptions, or ask colleagues and friends for information.
How might they be useful illustrations or analogies for
course concepts or disciplinary representations?
UWC VTLC Podcast 2 (10/17/11): Conversation with Dr. Joe Foy
Hi, colleagues. Welcome to the first UWC VTLC podcast of the 2011-12 academic year. You can listen on your computer by clicking here or always on the title above, or you can subscribe via iTunes and listen there or on your MP3 player.
Labels:
podcast,
pop culture,
reflection,
teaching
Sunday, October 2, 2011
Online Teaching & Learning White Paper: Reflect & Interact
- How does the "Online Teaching and Learning" white paper encourage you to think about the principles guiding how you teach--both face-to-face and online?
- How can you make online technologies facilitate the best of your approaches to teaching and learning?
- What ideas offered here will you try, and how so?
Post a comment below.
Sunday, February 27, 2011
UWC VTLC Podcast 1 (2/28/11): Conversation with Dr. Cyndi Kernahan
Hi, colleagues. Welcome to the first UWC VTLC podcast! You can listen on your computer by clicking here or always on the title above, or you can subscribe via iTunes and listen there or on your MP3 player. (See instructions to the left.)
Nancy
Wednesday, February 9, 2011
UWC VTLC Podcast Test
Hi, everyone. Listen to this brief test to make sure you have your technology ready to listen to and potentially subscribe to the UWC VTLC Podcast.
Nancy
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