April 27th, 2011
jsucus

How Am I Doing - Teacher Evaluation beyond Bubble-In Surveys: Student Engagement

We’re not making an argument against the standard surveys of students assessing teaching performance.  However, the Center has always advocated that faculty desirous of becoming better teachers needed more feedback, earlier and in different forms.  This is the first post in short series highlighting ways for faculty to know how they’re doing as teachers.

1. On a large-ish lecture course I get lots of questions during lecture.  It is actually quite hard to get students to pipe up during a big lecture class. [..] I usually will stop after discussing a difficult concept and ask if there are any questions. They key here is to wait a full minute before proceeding since it is rare that students can both digest what you just said and come up with a question. [..] After a few lectures, if you are lucky, hands simply start popping up at all times without the “awkward minute o’ silence”. Then you know you’ve got ‘em.
2. Lots of people show up to office hours with elaborate questions and what-ifs about the material.  I take showing up to office hours as a sign of being interested enough to make sure you really understand the material. [..] I find that the average office hour visitor is part of the hard-core clique of students that are just curious.
3. Students send unsolicited emails with scientific papers they found and wanted to get my take on them. Or with general more philosophical questions.  Sure, a lot of “studies” the students ask me about are either based on popular press articles or related to some new alternative woo (eg. “Prof, this paper says they found the medical basis of Reiki!”). But you can use this to teach the students how find the primary source material on their own, and to teach them about differentiating science from pseudoscience.
4. After the term is over students send you emails thanking you for the course.
»via Anonymous/Taking It to the Bridge

Of course, items 3-4 are almost as much a barometer of student interest in the course itself as in teaching performance.  We’d expect to see more of this behavior in upper-level courses.  However, the key is really engagement.  At Jackson State, SIRS data over time indicate a strong correlation between high scores in engagement variables and overall rating of the course.  While 3-4 may be too much to ask for in your core course, look for other signs that students are engaging with the content and skills that the course emphasizes.

April 27th, 2011
jsucus

Doing More with More: Teaching Sociology Resources.  This screencast explains step-by-step how to register for the Teaching Sociology Group/Listserv.  The group includes teaching resources including sample assignments, projects and syllabi as well as a community of sociology instructors and professors who can answer your questions.

April 27th, 2011
jsucus
I find most educational-technology conferences are a lot like an episode of the X-Files with a cast made up entirely of Fox Mulders. Everyone wants to believe. There are a lot of technology cheerleaders and a lot of iPad sightings, and no one seems to notice that Dana Scully—the skeptical, pragmatic agent designed to bring Mulder back down to Earth—has gone missing.

The Instructional Technology X-Files: Enchanted iPads, Magical Clickers, and Online Courses that Beat Face-to-Face (Daniel Stanford/Instructional Design and Development Blog) 

[Nota Bene: “Scully” is persuaded that class performance is improved by adaptive release, i.e. requiring students to complete quizzes and online assessment before new instructional materials are provided.]

April 20th, 2011
jsucus

What characteristics students want from their instructors
Is it surprising that #1 is respect? And that respect is more important than the faculty member’s command of the subject?

»via gjmueller:

What characteristics students want from their instructors

Is it surprising that #1 is respect? And that respect is more important than the faculty member’s command of the subject?

»via gjmueller:

Reblogged from in the cloud
April 20th, 2011
jsucus

Using the World Peace Game To Teach Complex Lessons (John Hunter, TedTalks). This TedTalk also includes video of the game and snippets of student participants (4th graders) discussing it.  Simulations (face-to-face and computerized) are a staple of social science pedagogy.  It would be interesting to use how useful they are in other disciplines.

April 19th, 2011
jsucus

Sample Transcript Illustrating University of North Carolina’s Contextual Grade Reporting.  The transcript shows the median grade for students in all sections of the course; percentile rank among students’ grades in that section of the course; and “schedule point of average”, i.e. a projection of the average student’s grade in the course designed to indicate difficulty level. Faculty are provided similar information in an individual report.

» A Stab at Deflating Grades (Inside Higher Ed)

» Of Grade Reform and Deliberation (Andrew Perrin, Scatterplot)

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The Center promotes the thoughtful integration of teaching, learning and scholarship at Jackson State University. It encourages faculty research productivity with its research and travel grants and facilitates discussions of faculty development.

 

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