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in title, tags, annotations or urlBecoming a Better Teacher: Articles for New and Not-So-New Faculty - Faculty Focus - 11 views
Where Does Innovative Teaching Come From? - 1 views
Journal of Online Learning and Teaching - 1 views
Ken Coates discusses 'trigger warnings' on CBC's The Current | Macdonald-Laurier Institute - 0 views
How Professors Really Feel About Digital Technology [#Study] | EdTech Magazine - 1 views
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As a follow-up to their study on how professors view online learning, Inside Higher Ed partnered with Babson Survey Research Group to explore how college professors and administrators interact with technology. The survey, summarized in Digital Faculty: Professors, Teaching and Technology, posed questions about digital learning content, e-books, social media, communication, learning management software and a variety of other technology-related issues. Here are a few key points from this excellent report.
i teach | exchanging ideas on teaching - 1 views
Blended Learning in Higher Education: Framework, Principles, and Guidelines: D. Randy Garrison, Norman D. Vaughan: 9780787987701: Amazon.com: Books - 1 views
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This groundbreaking book offers a down-to-earth resource for the practical application of blended learning in higher education as well as a comprehensive examination of the topic. Well-grounded in research, Blended Learning in Higher Education clearly demonstrates how the blended learning approach embraces the traditional values of face-to-face teaching and integrates the best practices of online learning. This approach has proven to both enhance and expand the effectiveness and efficiency of teaching and learning in higher education across disciplines.
The role of listening in interpersonal influence - 0 views
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Using informant reports on working professionals, we explored the role of listening in interpersonal influence and how listening may account for at least some of the relationship between personality and influence. The results extended prior work which has suggested that listening is positively related to influence for informational and relational reasons. As predicted, we found that: (1) listening had a positive effect on influence beyond the impact of verbal expression, (2) listening interacted with verbal expression to predict influence (such that the relationship between listening and influence was stronger among those more expressive), and (3) listening partly mediated the positive relationships between each of the Big Five dimensions of agreeableness and openness and influence.
Tablet Tools for Teaching - 1 views
i teach | exchanging ideas on teaching - 0 views
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In general, research has found student evaluations of teaching to be a valid and reliable means to evaluate instruction. However, it is necessarily true that student evaluations reflect the students' perceptions and points-of-view. Therefore, it is important to view course evaluations as just one measure of teaching effectiveness-a set of data that can be used alongside peer evaluation of teaching, instructor self-evaluation, and other measures.