7 Principles for Smart Teaching
Transcription
7 Principles for Smart Teaching
Twelfth Annual Faculty Conference on Teaching Excellence 7 Principles for Smart Teaching with Michele DiPietro and Marsha C. Lovett, co-authors of the book How Learning Works January 17, 2014 Howard Gittis Student Center Session Abstracts PLENARY SPEAKERS Room: 200C Marsha Lovett, How Learning Works: Knowledge and Application Agenda Time Session 9.00am – 9.30am Registration and Continental Breakfast (lobby & 200AB) 9.30am – 9.35am General Session, Welcome (200C) General Session, Plenary Speaker (200C) Dr. Marsha Lovett is Director of the Eberly Center for Teaching Excellence and Educational Innovation, and a Teaching Professor in the Department of Psychology, both at Carnegie Mellon. At the Eberly Center, she applies theoretical and empirical principles from cognitive psychology to help instructors improve their teaching. How Learning Works: Knowledge and Application, Marsha Lovett Michele DiPietro, How Learning Works: Motivation and Development Hai-Lung Dai, Provost and Senior Vice President for Academic Affairs, Laura H. Carnell Professor of Chemistry 9.30am – 11.00am 11.00am – 11.15am Break 11.15am – 12.30pm Morning Breakout Sessions, 1-5 (220, 217A, B, C, D) Sessions led by members of the Provost’s Teaching Academy 12.30pm – 1.15pm Marsha Lovett will begin the conference discussing the importance of helping students build and connect rich knowledge structures and supporting them in their development of mastery. In each area, we will review key research results and discuss ways to leverage them in our pedagogy. Dine and Discuss (200AB) Lunch & small group discussions at roundtables 1.15pm – 2.00pm Poster Session on Teaching Excellence (200C) 2.00pm – 3.15pm Afternoon Breakout Sessions, 6-10 (220, 217A, B, C, D) Sessions led by members of the Provost’s Teaching Academy 3.15pm – 3.25pm Break 3:25pm – 5.00pm General Session, Plenary Speaker (200C) How Learning Works: Motivation and Development, Michele DiPietro Michele DiPietro will focus on three of the principles discussed in the book. This conversation highlights the importance of student motivation, intellectual maturity, and strategic selfawareness, as they play out in the socio-emotional climate of the course. We’ll close the day discussing highlights from the research and implication for our teaching. Dr. Michele DiPietro is the Executive Director of the Center for Excellence in Teaching and Learning and an Associate Professor in the Department of Mathematics and Statistics at Kennesaw State University. He is also the immediate Past President of the Professional and Organizational Development (POD) Network in Higher Education, the premiere faculty development association in North America. Learn more about our plenary speakers at temple.edu/tlc Session Abstracts BREAKOUT SESSIONS Led by members of the Provost’s Teaching Academy (PTA) MORNING SESSIONS (1-5) 11.15am – 12.30pm 1. Motivating Students in Online Learning Elizabeth Pfeiffer, Rehabilitation Sciences, College of Health Professions Room 220 This session will explore the conditions that contribute to student motivation. Participants will learn practical strategies to help students value what they are learning and expect that they can succeed, as well as create a supportive environment in the unique context of online learning. 2. Why Don’t My Students Know This By Now? How Do Students Develop Mastery of Skills? Istvan Varkonyi, Director, General Education Program Room 217A We often encounter students in upper-level courses failing to complete a task successfully because they seem to lack a skill set they should have already mastered in lower-division course. This session will discuss why this happens and how we can address it. 3. How Can I Create a Course Climate Conducive to Learning in My Increasingly Larger Classes? Robert Pred, Statistics, Fox School of Business Room 217B Many faculty have seen dramatic increases in their course enrollments, but want to maintain an inclusive course climate that keeps students engaged. Participants will hear strategies to make the large class feel small from a faculty member with years of experience teaching auditoriums full of students. 4. Smartphones and Storytelling: Deepening Community-Based Learning with New Media Terry Halbert, Legal Studies, Fox School of Business Room 217C This session features a case-study from a community-based GenEd course about immigration. Students in this course learned interviewing and editing techniques to create digital stories about immigrants. Listen to their three-minute stories, and hear from them how this alternative to traditional research can strengthen the connections between learning in the classroom and activism in the world. Participants will dream about their own course and its possible intersection with new media and community experience. 5. Scaffolding Your Instruction to Enhance Student Learning Steven Kreinberg, Music Studies, Boyer College of Music and Dance Room 217D Are your students just not ‘getting it’ in some of your classes? Do your students nod knowingly about a topic during a lecture, only to do poorly on an assignment or an exam? Learn some methods of scaffolding your instruction that will assist students to move from performing simple tasks to those that require greater complexity and mastery. Participants will have a scaffolded music listening experience featuring Bugs Bunny as ‘The Rabbit of Seville.’ AFTERNOON SESSIONS (6-10) 2.00pm – 3.15pm 6. Making Learning Count: Cultivating Skills for Life-Long Learning Ina Calligaro, School of Pharmacy Room 220 We all hope our students will leave the University committed to being life-long learners. However, we aren’t always sure how to help students cultivate the attitudes and skills needed to be selfdirected learners. This workshop will provide the opportunity to discuss and share teaching strategies and assignments that foster the development of the metacognitive skills needed to learn independently. 7. Coursecast: The Classroom Extender Justin Shi, Computer & Information Sciences, College of Science and Technology Room 217A This session will share Temple University’s Department of Computer and Information Sciences’ lessons and experiences using the panopto.com’s video recording services for its major and minor courses. The session will explore how these recordings create opportunities for self-directed learning. Additionally, participants will hear of CIS’s current plan for streaming major courses to TU Japan. 8. Don’t be a Sage, Engage on the Stage David Ingram, Theater, School of Communication and Theater Room 217B Your classroom is a lot like a theater and you have an important role to play. This session will familiarize participants with basic theater techniques for engaging and maintaining an audience’s attention. Activities and discussion will apply these principles to the college classroom, focusing on how to engage your students in order to create positive course climate. 9. A Little Knowledge is a Dangerous Thing Gerard Brown, Foundations Program, Tyler School of Art Room 217C In teaching foundations of art, faculty must push students beyond prior conceptions of art and art making. This experience of working against (or with) prior knowledge is common in many disciplines. In this session participants will learn ways to overcome their students’ incomplete or inaccurate prior knowledge and build on what they do know to improve student learning. 10. Do I Have to Work in a Group and Who are the Students I am Grouped With? Michael Stokes, Director, Russell Conwell Center, Vice Provost for Undergraduate Studies Room 217D Group projects are a time-tested, essential part of learning and assessment, yet students often hate them and don’t share the workload equally. How can group projects become more productive and less painful for students? We’ll examine a variety of methods to increase student motivation, participation and engagement in group work. Poster Session POSTER SESSION ON TEACHING EXCELLENCE Room: 200C 1. Beyond the Graduate Student’s CV: The Academic ePortfolio as an Asset for the Job Market ‐‐ Gabriele Bauer, Director of the Institute for Teaching and Learning, Villanova University; Philip Barnes, Doctoral Candidate, University of Delaware 2. eLearning; eFeedback; eFfective? ‐‐ Margaret Biner, Professor of Business Administration, Marketing and E-Commerce, Berkeley College Online 3. Incorporating Physical Diversity and Variations of Aging into the Physical Assessment Lab: Patient Teaching Associates ‐‐ Elizabeth Blunt, Director of Nurse Practitioner Programs, Villanova University; Kelly Nestor, Clinical Instructor of Nursing, Villanova University 4. Practicing What We Preach: Inter-disciplinary Collaborative Teaching the DEC Core Courses at Philadelphia University ‐‐ Leslie Browning-Samoni, School of Business Administration: Fashion Merchandising and Management, Philadelphia University; Nioka Wyatt, Assistant Professor, Philadelphia University 5. The Implementation of a Multidisciplinary Simulation into International Business Courses ‐‐ Brian Colfer, Assistant Professor of Pharmaceutical and Healthcare Business, University of the Sciences 6. Using interdisciplinary, real-world projects to build collaboration and communication skills in an undergraduate studio course ‐‐ Kim Douglass, Assistant Professor of Landscape Architecture, Philadelphia University 7. Databases for Many Majors, Visual and Cooperative Learning: A ThreeWay Braid ‐‐ Don Goelman, Associate Professor of Computing Sciences, Villanova University 8. Flipping Introduction to Psychology: Outcomes for Student Perception of the Discipline ‐‐ Julia Heberle, Associate Professor of Psychology, Albright College 9. Consistent Online Course Structure Allows for Greater Classroom Creativity ‐‐ Tamar Klaiman, Assistant Professor of Health Policy and Public Health, University of the Sciences 10. A Constructivist Approach to Designing Collaborative Hands-on Activities for Virtual Computer Laboratories ‐‐ Abdullah Konak, Professor, Information Sciences & Technology, Penn State Berks; Mahdi Nasereddin, Associate Professor, Penn State Berks; Tricia Clark, Director, Center for Learning & Teaching, Penn State Berks 11. Integrating Ecological Literacy and Teacher Education: The Experimental Classroom ‐‐ Andrea Kornbluh, Instructor of Biological Sciences, Rowan University 12. Are Students Getting Better in Teamwork Communication? ‐‐ Sadan Kulturel-Konak, Professor of Management Information Systems, Penn State Berks 13. Creating and Structuring an Interdisciplinary High Impact University Project ‐‐ Evan Laine, Professor/Director of Law & Society, Philadelphia University 14. The Pinterest Project: Active Learning Using Social Media in the Classroom ‐‐ Kendra Lapolla, Assistant Professor of Fashion Department, Albright College, Kent State University 15. “It’s All An Act: Incorporating Drama and Visual Arts into the Teaching of Psychology” ‐‐ Susan Lawrence, Adjunct Instructor of Psychology, Ursinus College; Montgomery County Community College 16. Revamping Lexical Sets: New Ways in Teaching L2 Vocabulary in Foreign Language and English as a Second Language (ESL) ‐‐ William Longbottom, Instructor of English as a Second Language, Temple University 17. Shakespeare with Seniors: One Pedagogy Two Goals ‐‐ Jennifer Mattisoff, Assistant Professor of English, Arcadia University; Celeste Walker, Adjunct Professor of Integrated Studies, Arcadia University 18. Rubrics for ACRL Information Literacy Standards and Aligned with Middle States Accreditation Standard ‐‐ Jeanette McVeigh, Coordinator of Electronic Resources, Information Science, University of the Sciences 19. A Method of Using Evidenced-based Learning to Educate Nursing Students ‐‐ Sandra O’Sullivan, Adjunct Instructor of Nursing and Allied Health, Harrisburg Area Community College, Gettysburg Campus 20. Learning Together: A Collaborative Approach to Using Effective Tutoring Strategies in a Media Writing Classroom ‐‐ Holly Ott, Visiting Instructor, Communication/Journalism, Shippensburg University; Carrie Sipes, Assistant Professor, Department of Communication/Journalism, Shippensburg University; Rachel Bryson, Graduate Assistant, Shippensburg University Writing Studio 21. Reconstructing the Framework and Approach to Teaching Non-Science Major Chemistry ‐‐ Niny Rao, Assistant Professor of Chemistry and Mathematics, Philadelphia University; Crystal Smith, Adjunct Professor, Philadelphia University; Jeffrey Ashley, Associate Professor of Chemistry, Interim Director, Center for Teaching Innovation & Nexus Learning, Philadelphia University 22. Improving Students’ Comprehension of Biology Labs with Audio-Visual Materials ‐‐ Cinzia Sevignani, Assistant Teaching Professor of Biology, College of Science and Technology, Temple University 23. Small Group based Learning Methodology in Mathematics. ‐‐ Ruth Trubnik, Associate Professor of Mathematics, Mathematics, Delaware Valley College; Adjunct Professor, Temple University 24. The Effects of Readiness Assessment Tests (RATs) on Graduate Students’ Understanding of Key Academic Concepts ‐‐ Wendy Wachter-Schutz, Assistant Professor/Assistant Clinical Educator, MS in Occupational Therapy Program, Philadelphia University 25. Striving towards National Prominence in a Teacher Education Interdisciplinary Model at Lehigh Carbon Community College ‐‐ Melanie Wursta, Faculty/Coordinator of Teacher Education, Lehigh Carbon Community College; Carly Simon, Making Teaching and Learning Transparent Specialist, Lehigh Carbon Community College; Judy Brown DuPaul, Part-time Faculty, Teacher Education, Lehigh Carbon Community College 26. Preservice Teachers in Early Childhood/Special Education Inquiry into the Effectiveness of Learning Centers ‐‐ Jane Yingling, Professor of Education, Education, Lebanon Valley College; Elizabeth French, Professor of Education, Education, Lebanon Valley College; Student Presenters: Alyssa Miller, Ashley Artz and Denise Clausen PTA Faculty Facility Map TLC Honors Provost’s Teaching Academy Members Howard Gittis Student Center, 2nd Floor FACILITY MAP Registration: lobby outside of 200C Resources [ 2009 ] [ 2010 ] Shohreh Amini, College of Science and Technology William Aaronson, Fox School of Business Shenid Bhayroo, Center for the Arts: School of Communication and Theater (Emeritus) Rebecca Alpert, College of Liberal Arts Jean Boyer, College of Education Ken Finkel, College of Liberal Arts Steven Fleming, College of Science and Technology Terry Halbert, University College Alistair Howard, College of Liberal Arts Daniel Kern, Center for the Arts: School of Communication and Theater General Sessions & Poster Session: 200C Robert Pred, Fox School of Business Breakfast & Luncheon: 200AB Rickie Sanders, College of Liberal Arts Breakout Sessions: 220, 217, A, B, C & D Justin Shi, College of Science and Technology Find session handouts and other resources on the TLC website at www.temple.edu/tlc. Ina Calligaro, School of Pharmacy Peggy Dewolf, College of Liberal Arts (Emeritus) Luke Kahlich, Center for the Arts: Boyer College of Music and Dance (Emeritus) Susan DeJarnatt, Beasley School of Law Claudia J. Dewane, College of Health Professions Eli C. Goldblatt, College of Liberal Arts Rachael Groner, College of Liberal Arts Amy E. Heath, College of Education (Emeritus) Robin A. Kolodny, College of Liberal Arts Dominique Kliger, University College Sally Kyvernitis, College of Science and Technology Janice Laurence, College of Education Nancy E. Morris, School of Media and Communications Sarah-Kate Lavan, College of Education (Emeritus) Nathaniel Norment, College of Liberal Arts (Emeritus) Maria Lorenz, College of Science and Technology Johnathan Nyquist, College of Science and Technology Sheryl Love, College of Science and Technology Alisa Peet, Associate Professor, Medicine/General Internal, School of Medicine Lori Salem, Vice Provost for Undergrad Studies Paul Toth, College of Liberal Arts Juandalynn Taylor, Center for the Arts: School of Communication and Theater (Emeritus) Kariamu Welsh, Center for the Arts: Boyer College of Music and Dance Tsvetelin Tsankov, College of Science and Technology Chang-Hee Won, College of Engineering Amy Weigand, College of Liberal Arts (Emeritus) [ 2011 ] Li Bai, College of Engineering Natasha Davis Williams, College of Health Professions (Emeritus) Whitley Cooke, College of Liberal Arts Robert Yantorno, College of Engineering (Emeritus) Dana Dawson, Vice Provost for Undergrad Studies James C. Sellers, Vice Provost for Undergrad Studies Bess Wellborn Yates, College of Liberal Arts [ 2012 ] Steve Fleming, College of Science and Technology Carol Harris-Shapiro, College of Liberal Arts James Heckman, School of Medicine David Ingram, Center for the Arts: School of Communication and Theater PTA Faculty TLC Honors Provost’s Teaching Academy Members, continued Sheryl Love, College of Science and Technology Ann Valentine, College of Science and Technology Christine Miller, School of Podiatric Medicine (Emeritus) Pete Watkins, College of Health Professions (Faculty Guest) Emily Moerer, Assistant Vice Provost [ 2013 ] Patricia Moore-Martinez, College of Liberal Arts Robin Aronow, College of Health Professions Robin Musselman, College of Liberal Arts (Faculty Guest) Jean Boyer, College of Education Julie Phillips, Office of the Provost Gerard Brown, Center for the Arts: Tyler School of Art Shriram Pillapakkam, College of Engineering Konstantinos Chochlidakis, Kornberg School of Dentistry Jane Pontious, School of Podiatric Medicine Shawn Fagan, Vice Provost for Undergrad Studies Rickie Sanders, College of Liberal Arts Heath Fogg Davis, College of Liberal Arts Cynthia Folio, Center for the Arts: Boyer College of Music and Dance Steve Kreinberg, Center for the Arts: Boyer College of Music and Dance Elizabeth Pfeiffer, College of Health Professions Hai Qing, Kornberg School of Dentistry Catherine Schifter, College of Education Miriam Solomon, College of Liberal Arts Michael Stokes, Vice Provost for Undergrad Studies Istvan Varkonyi, Office of The Provost Connect with us Connect with TLC in person or online The TECH Center Faculty Wing, Suite 112 1101 W. Montgomery Ave. Philadelphia, PA 19122 tel: 215.204.8761 fax: 215.204.9272 email: [email protected] www.temple.edu/tlc Find us on social media @TempleTLC. #TLCFC14 Follow the conference on Twitter at #TLCFC14