Skip to main content

Home/ Gwenna Moss Centre for Teaching Effectiveness/ Group items tagged teaching

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Carolyn Hoessler

Video - How to Speak: Lecture Tips from Patrick Winston - 0 views

  •  
    A comprehensive video covering a lecture from start to finish. When learning to teach, Patrick Winston recommends not copying good teachers, rather watch, think about and then adapt to create own teaching style. His talk about teaching involves considering the elements of a lecture and thinking through how to engage students. He presents several interesting strategies, and if you replace "overhead" with "powerpoint" all points are all still very applicable.
Brad Wuetherick

Disrupting Ourselves: The Problem of Learning in Higher Education (EDUCAUSE Review) | E... - 0 views

  •  
    An article in EDUCAUSE by Randy Bass. The article is about how the formal curriculum is being disrupted as "high-impact educational practices" and "the experiential co-curriculum" move from the margins of higher education into common practice. He also addresses how the current "participatory culture " and the trend toward "informal learning" are affecting the curriculum. The article concludes with recommendations for instructors on how they can change their teaching practices to "keep pace with our expanded understanding of learning." - the description provided by Christopher Price, Director, Center for Excellence in Learning and Teaching (CELT), The College at Brockport, State University of New York.
lava 2 teach

Effective Teaching When Class Size Grows - 0 views

  •  
    This article, by Todd Zakrajsek, offers some great tips for teaching large classes.
Heather Ross

Introduction to Teaching Online Playlist - YouTube - 0 views

  •  
    All of the videos from the Introduction to Teaching Online course through the GMCTE.
Ryan Banow

Three Critical Conversations about Flipped Learning | Faculty Focus - 0 views

  •  
    "Most student "complaints" about flipped learning conceal important questions about teaching and learning that are brought to the surface because of the flipped environment. Here are three common issues raised by students and the conversation-starters they afford."
Heather Ross

10 questions for teacher reflection… | What Ed Said - 0 views

  •  
    "'Have you ever written a blog post on strategies, tools or frameworks that a teacher can use to reflect on their past year of teaching?' My immediate response: ' Reflection has to happen all the way along. It's too late at the end of the year.' But here are some questions to ask yourself, as you look back, look within and look forward…"
Heather Ross

Can this Video get Teachers Started? | Creating Learners - 0 views

  •  
    Great video filled with ideas of how and reasons why to use technology in teaching and learning.
Brad Wuetherick

ISSOTL: Conferences - 0 views

  •  
    Here is the link to the current and past ISSOTL (International Society for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning) Conferences. The past conferences often feature presentations of the plenary speakers. This past year (2011) the presentation by Peter Felten and Keith Trigwell is of particular use for people working in SOTL.
Barbara Schindelka

The Hardest Job Everyone Thinks They Can Do - 1 views

  •  
    He may be talking about teaching high school but his words ring ever so true for teaching at the post-secondary level.
Brad Wuetherick

TLHE Keynote Address 1 : How Assessment Can Support or Undermine Learning - YouTube - 1 views

  •  
    Graham Gibbs' keynote at the National University of Singapore conference on teaching and learning in higher education. Graham has written many books that we own in the GMCTE library, and is very well known for his work on assessment.
Heather Ross

CTE Teaching Tips: Ten Questions to Ask When Designing a Blended Course - 1 views

  •  
    "A blended course often reduces face-to-face "seat time" so that students can pursue additional teaching and learning activities online. These ten questions (adapted from the University of Wisconsin's Hybrid Course website ) are a good starting point when thinking about blended course redesign."
Tereigh Ewert-Bauer

"Teaching to Fail" - 2 views

  •  
    "For the last decade or so, I've put my students' grades where my mouth is. Instead of just touting the importance of failing, I now tell students that if they want to earn an A, they must fail regularly throughout the course of the semester..."
Heather Ross

Fourth-Grade Lessons - 0 views

  •  
    A university professor relates how teaching fourth-grade helped prepare her for her role in higher education.
Ryan Banow

Pedagogy Unbound - 0 views

  •  
    "A place for college teachers to share practical strategies for today's classrooms." Wiki style site for instructors to find and share practical strategies for teaching.
Ryan Banow

Group-based midterms at UBC - 0 views

  •  
    ""Usually with an exam, feedback will come as a mark and then many students will throw the exam away," says Brett Gilley, a former Science Teaching and Learning Fellow in the Carl Weiman Science Education Initiative, and an instructor with UBC's Vantage College and the Department of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences. "Here, we're making them review the exam while they still care about the answers to the questions.""
Heather Ross

Rubrics: An Undervalued Teaching Tool - 0 views

  •  
    "Rubrics offer an effective way to guide thinking and learning in any writing-intensive course."
Heather Ross

Deep Learning vs. Surface Learning: Getting Students to Understand the Difference | Fac... - 0 views

  • Until teachers stop relying on questions that can be answered with details plucked from short-term memory, there isn’t much chance that students will opt for the deep learning approaches.
  • But it is terribly important that in explicit and concerted ways we make students aware of themselves as learners. We must regularly ask, not only “What are you learning?” but “How are you learning?” We must confront them with the effectiveness (more often ineffectiveness) of their approaches. We must offer alternatives and then challenge students to test the efficacy of those approaches. We can tell them the alternatives work better but they will be convinced if they discover that for themselves.
Heather Ross

How Teachers Use Skype in the Classroom | TIME.com - 1 views

  • But the vast majority of the lessons posted on Skype in the Classroom come from teachers who want to Skype with classes abroad to expose their students to different languages and cultures — a necessity in a global economy. Think back to the old-fashioned pen pal, the tradition of writing handwritten letters to someone in another part of the country or the world. Skype in the Classroom adds video to that exchange to give students a much fuller view of pen pals’ worlds.
  • Teachers may need to buy a webcam and external speakers for their computers to Skype, but the service is free to download, so it seems like a low-cost tool for educators — especially at schools where budget constraints may limit field trips and funding for guest speakers. Twenty-six states are providing less funding per student to schools districts than they did last year, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.
  • Skype has 14 partnerships that help connect teachers with experts at Microsoft (which owns Skype), Penguin Books and the New York Philharmonic, to name a few. NASA’s Digital Learning Network partnered with the Internet phone service last month because web conferencing is dramatically cheaper for teachers to set up than video-conferencing systems, which can cost tens of thousands of dollars, according to Lead Education Specialist Caryn Long and fellow Education Specialist David Alexander. NASA would give out grants to certain schools so that they could purchase the video technology, but Long and Alexander hope their team will be able to reach more students nationwide via Skype, and therefore get more youngsters revved about STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics) — especially at a time when the STEM workforce is growing faster than the workforce overall. This month, NASA has started offering to teach aeronautics and “pulsar algebra,” which combines math with the study of stars.
Heather Ross

100 Inspiring Ways to Use Social Media In the Classroom - Online Universities.com - 1 views

  •  
    "Social media may have started out as a fun way to connect with friends, but it has evolved to become a powerful tool for education and business. Sites such as Facebook and Twitter and tools such as Skype are connecting students to learning opportunities in new and exciting ways. Whether you teach an elementary class, a traditional college class, or at an online university, you will find inspirational ways to incorporate social media in your classroom with this list."
Heather Ross

Applying the Seven Principles for Good Practice to the Online Classroom | Faculty Focus - 0 views

  •  
    "Almost 25 years have passed since Chickering and Gamson offered seven principles for good instructional practices in undergraduate education. While the state of undergraduate education has evolved to some degree over that time, I think the seven principles still have a place in today's collegiate classroom. Originally written to communicate best practices for face-to-face instruction, the principles translate well to the online classroom and can help to provide guidance for those of us designing courses to be taught online."
‹ Previous 21 - 40 of 108 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page