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Lisa Spiro

"Pathways to Teaching" discussion with Trinity alumni & students, Wed Oct 26th | Jack D... - 0 views

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    "Join the Educational Studies Program for a discussion about different pathways to teaching on Wednesday October 26th, 2011, from 6:30-8pm, in Terrace B and C, Mather Hall, at Trinity College. See comments below from alumni and students who plan to participate, and add your own. Also, check out the "Pathways to Teaching" advising page on the Educational Studies Program website."
Rebecca Davis

Lafayette LAF - 1 views

  • Here are six academic areas that cry out for potential collaboration across the liberal arts college sector and between the liberal arts colleges and research universities. 1.  Liberal arts colleges must aspire to internationalize their curriculum, teach the less commonly taught languages and invigorate or create new programs in geopolitical areas such as Latin America, the Middle East and North Africa, South and East Asia. 2.  Liberal arts colleges want the flexibility to explore intellectual themes that connect departments and disciplines but do so without creating new majors and without adding new faculty. 3.  Liberal arts colleges seek to provide undergraduate research opportunities for students outside the sciences integrating teaching and research across the curriculum presents a complicated set of financial, pedagogical and logistical challenges. 4.  Liberal arts colleges want to support faculty members’ integration into the digital humanities into their teaching and scholarship.  In order to accomplish this goal, colleges need access to communities of practice and institutional infrastructure that build capacity and that address the challenges of training, standards, critical mass, interoperability and sustainability. 5.  Liberal arts colleges also need to use digital technology to create new teaching resources such as virtual labs and to create truly interactive learning platforms for use in introductory courses in subjects such as statistics, mathematics and modern language. 6.  Liberal arts colleges need to create arts-based campus cultures that embrace the making of art as an integral component of the life of the mind and a complementary means of connecting different bodies of knowledge.
Rebecca Davis

Less elite colleges, well versed in confronting problems, think they can teach elites a... - 0 views

  • The group is also starting to share some academic programs. Despite stretching a geographic area of more than 300 miles, five colleges in the consortium -- University of Charleston, Bethany College, Davis & Elkins College, Emory & Henry College and West Virginia Wesleyan College -- are launching a shared remedial math program next year.
  • Small colleges across the country have formed several partnerships to share faculty in certain fields. Languages have proven particularly popular. This week a group of five liberal arts colleges in Texas announced that they would be teaching languages across the institutions using video conferencing software. The Wisconsin Association of Independent Colleges and Universities, many of which are regional in orientation and don’t show up high on the U.S. News rankings, also has some resource sharing programs in place.
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    "there's nothing like a crisis to make you rethink who your friends are, which was evident in the conference itself and organizers' calls for further discussion about these issues. It is also evident among those institutions that have had a longer and deeper struggle, which have begun integrating in significant ways. The Independent College Enterprise, a group of nine small colleges in West Virginia, Virginia, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Massachusetts, has been collaborating on administrative services since the late 1990s. The group pooled resources to purchase shared administrative software, which the presidents in the organization estimate to have save each campus millions of dollars since it was purchased."
Lisa Spiro

Cross-campus Virtual Classrooms Bring Massey 'Wow... | Stuff.co.nz - 0 views

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    "Futuristic virtual classrooms have become a reality for students who can now share their learning using video technology at two of Massey University's campuses. Massey's prototype Video Link Teaching (VLT) rooms are a one-off design by a Wellington developer for use across the university's three campuses in Palmerston North, Wellington and Albany. "
Rebecca Davis

To cut costs, W.Va. colleges to share faculty  - News - The Charleston Gazett... - 1 views

  • UC officials say the arrangement allows the university to replace adjunct faculty members with an expert in American history.
  • Blended learning, a process of teaching that combined face-to-face classroom teaching with computer-mediated activities, has been on the rise at universities throughout the country.
  • Ninety-three percent of higher-education instructors and administrators say they are using blended learning strategies somewhere in their institution, according to the 2005 book "Handbook of Blended Learning." Seven in 10 expect more than 40 percent of their schools' courses to be blended by 2013.
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    UC officials say the arrangement allows the university to replace adjunct faculty members with an expert in American history.
Rebecca Davis

An interview with Ryan Fowler (RU Classics PhD 2008) about Sunoikisis, a national conso... - 1 views

  • The possibility of compounding different variations of perspectives and viewpoints is extraordinary.
  • we have found that over time this can lead to more hires, as more classes are offered and student interest is given an opportunity to grow
  • there are ways to focus on a use of technology that is supplementary to what it is good professors already do, rather than as a replacement for it (or them).
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  • It’s like graduate school without the egos, competition, or exams.
  • As a cooperating group, we look to each other as resources for invited lectures, lecturing possibilities, and opportunities for research collaboration.
  • By teaching to our strengths, and adding so many positive perspectives into the creation of a class, the resulting course is better than any course a single one of us could offer alone
  • “My God, why would anyone write a syllabus any other way?”
Lisa Spiro

Emory University | Tech-niques: Teaching with technology at Emory » ECIT - 1 views

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    "Chance encounters between two Shakespeare enthusiasts led to a widely successful course this spring on the bard, taught by Cavanagh and supplemented via Skype by a veteran actor and lecturer."
Rebecca Davis

2 Projects Seek to Bring Costly Genetics Lessons Into Liberal-Arts Classrooms - Adminis... - 0 views

  • Both projects, says Deborah E. Allen, the NSF grant manager who worked with them, aim to "capture authentic research experiences within biology courses" at the undergraduate level
  • The hope is that a project like Mr. Boyle's can bring some of the same benefits to a larger number of students.
  • Mr. Boyle's project is a direct descendant of a project that a Davidson College biology professor, A. Malcolm Campbell, has been running for a decade. In Mr. Campbell's project, called the Genome Consortium for Active Teaching,
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  • "There's a benefit of working in a community," Mr. Campbell says. In many cases, "you're the only one doing this on your campus, and it's always so much easier to have a network of people so that when you get in a jam you can send out an e-mail."
Rebecca Davis

Emory University | Tech-niques: Teaching with technology at Emory » Blog Arch... - 0 views

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    Chance encounters between two Shakespeare enthusiasts led to a widely successful course this spring on the bard, taught by Cavanagh and supplemented via Skype by a veteran actor and lecturer.
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