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jenn stevens

Why the Science of Teaching Is Often Ignored - 0 views

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    "Cleary is among those professors trying to tackle that challenge with strategic interventions. Through an elective called the Science of Learning she hopes that if students read the research on memory and learning they will adopt better strategies. These desirable difficulties include strategies like testing yourself regularly on what you've learned, rather than reading the same passage over and over with a highlighter in hand. "What we're teaching people doesn't feel good," Cleary admits. And the techniques require continual practice to be effective. "It's a horrible sales pitch." Cleary also helps other faculty members figure out how to incorporate these strategies in their teaching. Students tend not to like, say, weekly quizzes. And professors often don't want to stop in the middle of a lecture to ask students to jot down what they've learned so far. It makes Cleary uncomfortable, too. "It feels like I'm not doing anything. I'm just standing there," she says. "I should be cramming more content into my lecture.""
jenn stevens

Meet the Professor Who's Warning the World About Facebook and Google - The Chronicle of... - 0 views

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    "The classroom-management system we use, Sakai, comes with this massive surveillance infrastructure. You can see what students clicked on, and you can see what they did. Early in the semester, I show students all of the tools that follow them around, and we talk about it. I tell them, I'm not going to look. I don't want to decide whether or not you read something based on whether you clicked on the article. I don't want to play these surveillance games. I just want to see, did you write something thoughtful in the forum? We use it to start a conversation about what it means to be a student in this day and age. They usually have no idea that their professors can see every click."
Natalie Hebshie

Tony Holland Breakout Session - CVTC Faculty In-service, 8-23-17 - YouTube - 0 views

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    Pass out course evaluations early in the semester and focus on making sure students can tell you care. If you wait until the end of the semester, struggling students may have dropped out and you won't have time to adjust your teaching style. Set clear learning objectives for each unit so students know exactly what to study and feel more in control of their learning. Without those, "We were training students not to show up for class, wait until two days before the test, and then cram," Holland said. "We wondered why students didn't retain any of the information." Create 10-minute videos for each objective that students can watch and show up to class prepared to discuss. When it comes time to review, a student can read the unit objective and watch the corresponding video. Give frequent quizzes, essays, and group work so both the instructors and students know where they stand and students stay engaged. Provide early, intrusive interventions like meeting with every student who scores below a 70 on the first test.
jenn stevens

6 Common Caption Mistakes: Is Your Video Guilty of Any? - 0 views

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    This was pretty cool to read!
jenn stevens

131. Trauma-informed Pedagogy - tea for teaching - 0 views

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    This is SO GOOD, and worth reading or listening
jenn stevens

2023 EDUCAUSE Horizon Report | Teaching and Learning Edition | EDUCAUSE Library - 0 views

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    Worth reading, though the Implications essays at the end seem like the weakest part to me.
jenn stevens

Millions of Students a Year Are Required to Buy Courseware. Often, It Replaces the Prof... - 0 views

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    clickbait title not really supported by the article, but interesting read
jenn stevens

ACRL: if we are putting everything on the table -- how about "change literacy" too? - T... - 0 views

  • In Alvin Toffler’s groundbreaking book, Future Shock, he claims, “the illiterate of the 21st century will not be those who cannot read and write, but those who cannot learn, unlearn, and relearn.” When projecting our educational objectives going forward, perhaps we should consider another form of fluency: change literacy.
Adam Engel

WCAG 2.0 and PDF/UA - Your Questions Answered | PDF Accessibility and Compliance - 0 views

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    A good read that very clearly explains the connection between WCAG 2.0 and PDF/UA (which is really a set of suggestions to complement another set of suggestions because we live in the wild west).
jenn stevens

Course Workload Estimator - Rice University Center for Teaching Excellence - 0 views

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    (wish there was a space for video...)
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