
Teaching in Higher Ed (Bonni Stachowiak)
Explore every episode of Teaching in Higher Ed
Dive into the complete episode list for Teaching in Higher Ed. Each episode is cataloged with detailed descriptions, making it easy to find and explore specific topics. Keep track of all episodes from your favorite podcast and never miss a moment of insightful content.
Pub. Date | Title | Duration | |
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26 Mar 2015 | What to do before you act on all you've captured | 00:39:14 | |
Bonni and Dave Stachowiak discuss what to do before you act on all you’ve captured.
PODCAST NOTES:
Episode #32 talked about capture. All the places where we capture what it is we need to do (either because of others’ demands, or freeing up our mind of the “clutter” of stuff that needs doing).
Clarify and organize
Before we do any of it… we need to:
Clarify - process what it means
Organize - put it where it belongs
For each item we have captured, we ask:
What action needs to take place?
Follow this GTD guide
If it isn’t actionable, are you going to need it in the future for reference?
Avoid becoming a digital hoarder
How I store files related to class content and specific classes
Don’t get carried away with folders, especially email, because as we read more on our mobile devices, pretty long to scroll through.
Dropbox debuts file commenting; rolls out "badge" for collaborating on Microsoft documents
Evernote/OneNote: another place not to get carried away with folders. Work, personal, reference + any shared notebooks (i.e. bondbox)
Actionable tasks
Put it into a trusted system, so you can consider it in relation to all your other priorities.
goodreads
IMDB
Dave's Coaching for Leaders episode #180: Do this for a productive week
Only set due dates for things that actually have due dates
RECOMMENDATIONS:
Bonni recommends:
Read/re-read the revised Getting Things Done, by David Allen
Buy a set of their guides
Check out Scannable app
Dave recommends:
Ulysses app | |||
18 Sep 2014 | How to get students to participate in discussion | ||
The reading has been assigned. You have prepared the questions, in advance. As you ask them, you are met by blank stares. This week on Teaching in Higher Ed: How to get students to participate in discussion with Dr. Stephen Brookfield.
Podcast notes
My guest this week is Dr. Stephen Brookfield. His career has spanned decades, with a focus on helping those of us in higher ed more effective at facilitating learning.
Guest information
Dr. Stephen Brookfield
His band: The 99ers
Playing music... brings a completely different part of your being into existence. I love that I have this very visceral and emotional side, right front and center in my life, which is a nice contrast to the cognitive element of thinking about teaching.
His bio
Teaching as a Way of Teaching: Tools and Techniques for Democratic Classrooms, by Dr. Stephen Brookfield
Definition of terms
Discussion
It isn't people talking. You can actually have silent techniques, like when you use the chalk talk technique.
When a majority of learners are involved in exploring some topic that is of mutual concern to them. In exploring that topic, they're trying to gauge its multiple shades... by taking into account other people's views on it...
Teaching with discussion
Creating the conditions under which that kind of "to and fro"ing can take place.
Assessing discussion
Class participation grading rubric
Techniques for engaging with discussion
Allows for thinking time
Structured silence
TodaysMeet
Susan Cain's Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Won't Stop Talking
50 Great Ways to Get People Talking (coming in 2015)
Actualizing democracy
Critical incident questionnaire (been using it for 22 years now: out of thousands of responses - "We really appreciate when you tell us why we're doing what we're doing.")
The Skillful Teacher: On Technique, Trust, and Responsiveness in the Classroom
Modeling discussion when teaching
Recommendations
Google voice + hangouts (Bonni)
"Try to find some way of researching how your students are experiencing your teaching." (Stephen)
Maximize the value of Teaching in Higher Ed
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25 Sep 2014 | Biology, the brain, and learning | ||
Biology, the brain, and learning
Guest
Dr. Joshua Eyler, Director of the Center for Teaching Excellence at Rice University
His Bio on Rice University's Center for Teaching Excellence
His Blog
Follow Josh Eyler on Twitter
Initial interest in the field of teaching and learning as a scientific enterprise
What the Best College Teachers Do, Ken Bain
Brain-based learning
Amazing discoveries, but some limitations
Gulf was created between the scientists and educators
Cherry-picking results
Too limiting, looks primarily at neuroscience and cognitive psychology
The New Science of Teaching and Learning: Using the Best of Mind, Brain, and Education Science in the Classroom, Tracey Tokuhama-Espinosa
Framework for a biological basis of learning
Bolster what we are learning from neuroscience to also include evolutionary biology and human development
Context about anything that we are learning.
The journey of an educator
Doesn't see students as subjects of experiments
Understanding teaching and learning as a science, really created a bridge
Prior knowledge - biological construct
Mental models
Learning from failure
The expert blind spot
Making assumptions about prior learning
Advice for next steps
Mind, brain, and education at Harvard's graduate school of education
The Art of Changing the Brain: Enriching the Practice of Teaching by Exploring the Biology of Learning by James E. Zull
What I find exciting is that we're starting to ask different kinds of questions now. -Josh Eyler
Guest post Josh wrote on MassMedievil.com
Finally, nothing but a breath, a comma, separates us from our students–for we do not teach medieval literature, medieval art, medieval history, or medieval archaeology; we teach students about these subjects, about new ways to see their world through the lens of the past. Our field will continue to live and breathe only insofar as we dedicate ourselves to teaching it. And here I look to the wisdom of my dissertation director, Fred Biggs, who once told me that *everything* is a teaching activity—writing, presenting, publishing, but especially our work in the classroom, where we will teach hundreds and even thousands of students over the course of a career. The work we do with our students will push back the boundaries of our knowledge about the Middle Ages ever further, but to accomplish this we need to tear down the tenuous hierarchies of our classrooms—professor/student, expert/novice—and move forward together as fellow learners, engaging in projects together, teaching each other, finding meaning together in this moment—our own pause, our breath, our comma.
Movie clip: "student/teacher... learners... not much really separates us." - Josh Eyler
Empathy is the foundation for all good teaching. - Josh Eyler
Video clip of professors reading aloud negative student evaluations
There's a vulnerability in the teaching/learning interaction. Students put themselves in a very vulnerable place, willingly, when they say, 'I don't know that; please help me learn that.' It's almost sacred that they're doing that. We have to take that and value it very highly. - Josh Eyler
Recommendations
Bonni's:
Overcast - a powerful yet simple iphone podcast player
Josh's:
IMDb: Wit (2001)
A renowned professor is forced to reassess her life when she is diagnosed with terminal ovarian cancer.
Faculty Focus newsletter
Tomorrow's Professor from Stanford University | |||
02 Oct 2014 | What happens when we study our own teaching | ||
Guest
Dr. Janine Utell
Bio
Blog
Profile on Academia.edu
Study your own teaching
Be a reflective practitioner
Collect data on yourself
Involve the students
Teaching is something that is happening all of the time. - Dr. Janine Utell
Bonni used Remind service/app to connect with her students to see if the song sung at the start of this This American Life episode was still in their heads, the day after we listened to it in class
The Dip
The Course of a Course, by James Athernon
The trouble with course evaluations
Failure can be a good thing to value. Failure, in terms of what didn't work for me, but also failure on the students' part. - Dr. Janine Utell
Importance of taking risks in studying our own teaching and assessment
Recommendations
Bonni's recommendation
Use the B key when presenting with Keynote or PowerPoint
Janine's recommendations
Dear Committee Members: A Novel, by Julie Schumacher
Teaching Naked: How Moving Technology Out of Your Classroom Will Improve Student Learning, by Jose Antonio Bowen
Jose Bowen on Twitter | |||
09 Oct 2014 | How technology is changing higher education | ||
Audrey Watters joins me for episode 18 of the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast to talk about how technology is changing higher education.
Podcast notes
Audrey Watters
on Twitter
Kassandra in Greek mythology
Kassandra on Urban Dictionary
Alan Levine @CogDog
University of Mary Washington's Maker Space
The mythology
Science and technology obsession
We tend to not look at the past very well, in considering EdTech
The history of teaching machines
Predates computers
Patents in late 1800s building devices that would teach people
Teachers would be freed from lecturing and could be freed up to mentor and support students
Educational psychology
BF Skinner perhaps best known inventor of teaching machines
The programable web
Different model. Comes from the web.
Rather than being just the recipients of knowledge, [students] now can be active contributors... building and sharing their own knowledge in a meaningful way. - Audrey Watters
Constructing knowledge and sharing it with a network
Reevaluating what we expect students to know and do
How do we assimilate, how do we process, how do we share knowledge?
Easier to participate as an academic in these new networks
Privacy implications
I know you you are and I saw what you did by Lori Andrews
These digital tools demand our attention in a different way. - Audrey Watters
There is a level of vulnerability that learning always involves, but it does take on a different level when we do it in public. - Audrey Watters
The downside of having all student work live within the LMS
Distractions abound
Push notifications change what's being demanded of us
The Colbert Report
Walter Mischel talks about his book "The Marshmallow Test"
Audrey Watters writes about the new Apple Watch
Digital literacy
Mozilla's digital literacy project
University of Mary Washington's A domain of one's own
Video that describes the Domain of One's Own initiative
Where to get started
Mozilla's digital literacy
Audrey Watter's EdTech Guide
For educators
For technology professionals
Privacy and politics
More than cheerleading
Data and privacy
The women and people of color gap in the EdTech universe
Recommendations
Bonni recommends Aziz Ansari defines feminism on letterman
Audrey recommends Mindstorms: Children, Computers, and Powerful Ideas by Seymour A. Papert | |||
16 Oct 2014 | Cheating Lessons | ||
Catching a student cheating can evoke all sorts of feelings: frustration, disappointment, anger, ambivalence. In episode 19 of Teaching in Higher Ed, Dr. James M. Lang joins me to talk about lessons learned from cheating.
Podcast notes
Our reactions to cheating
Disheartening experience
Feels personal
You're the last thing on their mind. When a student is cheating... their cheating isn't an assault on your and your values. - James M. Lang
The reality of how many students are cheating in higher ed today
[Cheating] is a long term and persistent problem in higher education. - James M. Lang
The learning environment's contribution to cheating
A positive or a negative contribution
The curricula
The individual classes
Reducing the likelihood for cheating
Infrequent, high-stakes assessment
Engage in more frequent assessment (with feedback)
When students have the opportunity to retrieve knowledge from their mind multiple times, and then do something with it, the more likely they are to remember it.
Service learning: helps foster students' intrinsic motivation
Offering unique learning experiences each semester
Plagiarism vs cheating
Both fall on a spectrum from easy/opportunity cheating to more planned
Cheating and how learning works
Academic integrity as something that has to be learned
Knowledge: What is plagiarism? What's a citation/source?
Skill: Citing sources, etc.
Value: Belief that it's important and it matters
Academic integrity campaigns: Involve your students
Integrity at Lamar University Poster Project
Advice for when we inevitably still encounter cheating
Step back emotionally
Have an educational response
Report it when it happens
Other cheating lessons
Self efficacy: Carol Dweck's research on mindset (video)
Growth or fixed mindset
Fixed mindset
"I can't write."
"I can't do math."
Fixed mindset were more likely to report that they would cheat the next time
"Learning is hard, but you're capable of getting better."
"You say you worked hard on this."
Early success opportunities
Recommendations
Bonni recommends: James Lang's Fullbright Specialist Program and speaking
Jim recommends: Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience, by Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi
Dr. Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi gives a TED Talk on Flow: The secret to happiness
Lessons for us in our lives, but also for how we approach our teaching
Ending Credits
Thanks again to James Lang for joining us for this important dialog on Teaching in Higher Ed.
If you have found this show beneficial, please consider going on iTunes or Stitcher radio and rating or reviewing it. It helps others discover the show.
Also, if you have topic or guest ideas, please visit https://teachinginhighered.com/feedback | |||
23 Oct 2014 | Moving a course online and other community questions | ||
In this episode, Dave Stachowiak joins me to answer community questions.
Podcast notes
Bonni gives an update on lessons from cheating lessons episode with James Lang
Community Questions
Gilbert asks:
How do I engage students in discussion boards?
WordPress.com
A domain of one's own (talked about on episode 18 with Audrey Watters)
Use different mediums to mix it up each week
Engage in some meaningful way with at least one other person
YouTube's creator studio
A listener asks:
How do I take an in-person class and put it online?
Revisit learning outcomes
Revisit assessments
Treat content as "chunks" or assets
Leverage existing and customized content
A listener asks:
What do you elearning authoring systems do you recommend?
SCORM-compliant courses (sharable content object reference model)
Adobe Captivate
Articulate's eLearning Studio and Storyline
TechSmith's Camtasia
Screenflow
Recommendations
Dave recommends
Lift app
The name of this app has since been changed to:
https://www.coach.me/
Bonni recommends
Post-it Plus app
Show credits
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30 Oct 2014 | Role immersion games in the higher ed classroom | ||
Students voting to extend the class time? Professors reporting that students are doing the reading for the course without threats or other forms of coercion? Today, in episode 21, Dr. Mark Carnes joins me to talk role immersion games in the higher ed classroom.
Podcast notes
Dr. Mark C. Carnes, Professor of History, Barnard College
Author of Minds on fire how role immersion games transform college, published by Harvard University Press
The classroom struggle before Reacting to the Past
Your class was less boring than most.
Role immersion games
Reacting to the Past
Audio from Faculty Perspectives video (through the 2 minute mark)
Transcending disciplinary structures.
Origins of the title of Minds on Fire
What we give up as professors to make role immersion games work
Contributions from other academic disciplines to Reacting to the Past
Scalability
Aspects of playing the games
Competition
Imagining what it’s like to be someone else
“Teaching” civil disobedience
You give up the control of knowing what the classroom is going to be like. Instead, you get the drama and, often, these moments of extraordinary student performances and transformations that leave you amazed.
Queen's College class did the India Reacting class. High attendance. All focused on it.
While some skepticism is appropriate, our tried and true methods aren't that fail safe.
Structure is different, because the "slacker's" peers are counting on him/her.
They can't hide out like they can in other classes.
Becoming someone different from who you are
Recommendations
Serial podcast (Bonni)
Google "Reacting to the Past" videos (Mark)
Reacting to the Past website
Reacting to the Past consortium
Closing Credits
Review on iTunes or stitcher to help others discover the show
Weekly update /subscribe
Feedback | |||
06 Nov 2014 | Using iPads in the higher ed classroom | ||
Dr. Guy Trainin joins me for episode 22 of the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast to talk about using iPads and tablets in the classroom.
Podcast Notes
Guest
Dr. Guy Trainin
Bio
Blog
On Twitter
TechEdge on Pinterest
TechEdge on YouTube: iPads in the Classroom
Life in the classroom before the iPad
iPad integration in a higher ed classroom
Padlet
Exit Ticket
Socrative
When the professor has invested, but the institution has not
Educreations
Explain Everything
Touchcast (requires new iPad)
PollEverywhere
Supporting students with disabilities
Visual thesaurus
Visual thesaurus on the iPad
Dictionary.com iPad app
Virtual keyboard as a built in feature to support students
Anne Lamott emphasizes having "shitty first drafts" in Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life
Vernacular Eloquence: What Speech Can Bring to Writing, by Peter Elbows
The “haves” and “have nots”
Collaborative learning assignments
Augmented reality book report covers
Twitter tutorial - collaborative project with kids (imagine what is then possible with higher ed students)
Recommendations
Mine craft (Guy)
Minecraft.edu component
Feedly (Bonni)
Closing credits
Review on iTunes or stitcher to help others discover the show
Weekly update /subscribe
Feedback /feedback | |||
13 Nov 2014 | How to engage students in the classroom and online | ||
It is such a crucial part of what we do as professors... Getting students involved in discussions and helping to facilitate their learning.
Dr. Jay Howard joins me on this episode to talk about how to engage students in the classroom and online.
Podcast Notes
Guest
Dr. Jay Howard
Engaging Your Students Face-to-Face and Online (July 2015) (Jossey-Bass)
Garner multiple intelligences theory
Sociologogical approach to observing the classroom
Norms
The real norm is not that students have to pay attention. It's that they have to pay civil attention.
Elevator norms
David Karp and William Yoels from Boston College
Episode on learning names
When students feel you value them enough to try to learn their names, they'll be much more forgiving of mistakes.
Two classroom norms that do not foster discussion
Civil attention, create the appearance of paying attention
Consolidation of responsibility for student participation
Attendance 2 app
Regardless of class size, there will be around five students who will become your dominant talkers who will account for 75-95% of student comments in the typical college class.
Online discussion forums
Waiting until the deadline
Two deadlines
Break students into groups
Netiquette examples
Engage Students
You can change norms. They are not fixed.
Shifting the workload toward the students.
This helps them learn more.
Recommendations
Bonni recommends: Michael hyatt's ideal week blog post and template
Jay, author of Apostles of Rock, recommends: The Lost Dogs
Closing credits
Review on iTunes or stitcher to help others discover the show
Weekly update /subscribe
Feedback /feedback | |||
20 Nov 2014 | Cultivate creative assignments | ||
When we get creative with what we assign students, we open up a whole new set of possibilities for student engagement and learning. On today’s episode, Dr. Cameron Hunt McNabb helps us discover how to craft creative assignments that facilitate learning well.
Podcast Notes
Guest
Dr. Cameron Hunt McNabb
Her bio and university web page
Recommended as a guest by past Teaching in Higher Ed guest: Dr. Josh Eyler
Cameron's students contributed to the Medieval Disability Glossary by including their research on the word 'lame'
Teaching philosophy
...to make the familiar strange and the strange familiar...
The truth about internet slang; it goes way back (in Salon Magazine)
Cameron's teaching philosophy from her website
Creative assignments
Must meet a specific goal and be measurable
Backwards design
Understanding by Design
Identify goals first
What evidence would exhibit those goals
Explore options for assignments that would provide that evidence
** Write a paragraph in "future English"
Authentic pedagogy
Education is what survives when what has been learned has been forgotten. - B.F. Skinner, The New Scientist, May 21, 1964
About authentic pedagogy
Places an emphasis on learning that is a construction of prior knowledge and a high value on knowledge that extends beyond the classroom.
** "Real world" is not just vocational, but for every aspect of life...
Active learning
About active learning
** Intro to Shakespeare class; hired actors to come in and had students come with annotated script and then were asked to co-direct the scenes
A veteran teacher takes on the role of a student (from Wiggins' blog)
Other ideas for creative assignments
Undergraduate research: Morgan Library in New York
Louis C.K.'s Everything's Amazing and Nobody's Happy routine
The role of education: equipping us to think
Arthur Holmes, The Idea of a Christian College
Recommendations
Bonni recommends Lines from The Princess Bride that could double as comments on Freshmen composition papers via McSweeney's.net
Episode 3: Lessons in Teaching from The Princess Bride
Cameron recommends that we follow Tina Fey's advice to "Say yes" (in her memoir Bossy Pants)
Closing credits
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04 Dec 2014 | Make large classes interactive | ||
It seems that the larger classes get, the more distant our students can seem. On today’s episode, Dr. Chrissy Spencer helps us discover how to make large classes interactive.
Even if you teach classes of 20, the resources she uses in her classes as large as 200+ will be of benefit.
Podcast notes
Guest: Dr. Chrissy Spencer, teaches at Georgia Tech
Ph.D., Genetics, University of Georgia
Active learning video: Turning students into chili peppers
The interactive classroom
Learning Catalytics
Prepared in advance a few slides that help clarify commonly misunderstood concepts
Allowing students to fail or struggle with an answer
Interrupted case studies
Traditionally a set of materials where there are specific stopping points built in
Powerful, because students need to have their progress monitored and milestones achieved
Bonni's case studies rubric
Forming groups
Catme team maker
Team-based, low stakes assessments
Georgia Tech Center for the Enhancement of Teaching and Learning workshop on team based learning
Don't try team based learning half way
Start small
Switching from clickers to Learning Catalytics
Pearson's Learning Catalytics
Strength in the types of questions that can be asked
Bonni uses PollEverywhere
Flipped classroom
Khan Academy
Reinforce that reading ahead and reading in a particular way is important to making the class time in interesting ways
Process called team based learning
Lesson learned/ ignored: "start small and do things in a small and measured way"
Evernote
TopHat audience response system
Service learning
The way that students could apply learning from a content area in the real world and also give back to the community in some way (Chrissy)
Identified project partners that met certain criteria
Outside in the field
CATME tool helped to determine who had cars
Recommendations
The Dip (Bonni)
Find something that you love and bring it in to the classroom (Chrissy)
Closing Credits
Subscribe
Feedback | |||
11 Dec 2014 | Minds Online | ||
Educational technology that is designed “with the brain in mind” can be a catalyst in facilitating learning.
On today’s episode, Dr. Michelle Miller draws from her research in neuroscience and cognitive psychology and shows us how to facilitate learning for minds online.
Podcast notes
Minds Online: Teaching Effectively with Technology
How do we use our memory resources to process information
Study of human cognition and thought processes
What College Teachers Should Know About Memory: A Perspective from Cognitive Psychology (June, 2011)
Journal of College Teaching
For the Internet generation, educational technology designed with the brain in mind offers a natural pathway to the pleasures and rewards of deep learning. Drawing on neuroscience and cognitive psychology, Michelle Miller shows how attention, memory, critical thinking, and analytical reasoning can be enhanced through technology-aided approaches. (Book description)
Effective teaching
Becoming an expert in a discipline, that journey from novice to expert... (Dr. Miller)
Not just facts; rich, interconnected network of knowledge
Skill acquisition
Motivation: Can't separate motivation, emotion, and cognition
Technology in education
Avoid the gadget-based approach
Interleaved learning: Mix-up the topics you're assessing...
Applied memory findings
The testing effect
The interleaving effect
The spacing effect
Minds Online
We made the internet to satisfy our needs and desires...
The myth of the tech savvy student
Students differentiate technology use
Skills and abilities from one domain don't always transfer over to another domain very well
Emphasizing why we are using a particular technology tool
Memory in the Internet age
Expertise and knowledge cannot be fully separated
Needed for problem solving
Speed necessity
Ability to perceive the connections
Motivating online students
Face-to-face context builds our skills and approaches to heighten motivation
These techniques are missing in the online environment
Procrastination is an even bigger factor
Distractions abound
[Motivation] is not all about the points [in the online environment]. (Dr. Miller)
Recommendations
Bonni recommended Dr. Miller's book (Minds Online) and ClassTools.net’s Fakebook tool to create a fake Facebook page/timeline… Going to teach business ethics next semester and have students create one for the Enron crisis.
Michelle recommended the following books:
Smarter than you think
The Invisible Gorilla
James Lang's Cheating Lessons and other books
Scarcity
Closing credits
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18 Dec 2014 | Teaching through student research | ||
Getting students engaged in research is one of the ways we can make their learning experiences more tangible and more profound. In today's episode, Dr. Bethany Usher joins us to talk about what happens when we turn students into scholars.
Podcast notes
Guest: Dr. Bethany M. Usher
Bethany's TEDx talk: Preparing Students for the World Through Undergraduate Research
Bethany on Twitter
Students as Scholars at George Mason
Assessment resources from Students as Scholars
Students as Scholars blog with each student writing about his or her research
Challenges of getting student research to work
Recognizing that research can happen in any discipline
Getting faculty to recognize that students can make a contribution
Helping students see that research is something they can do
Setting expectations for students
Examples of this kind of research
Rebecca Nelson (now a grad student at University of Connecticut) textile exhibit; band of knitted heads
Discovered a new knotting technique and how the piece had been repaired along the way
Currently living in Guatemala, studying textile production
Rebecca's blog
Student did research on a skeleton population and was the winner of the student researcher award at Mason
Authentic research
When the faculty member and the student don't know the answer when they begin
Other guidance
Determine where to place the research in the curriculum
Continuum between classroom-based research and individual research
Both challenges and benefits to getting classroom-based research to occur
Changwoo Ahn's Wetlands Ecology class
Council on Undergraduate Research - national organization that publishes a quarterly journal with lots of resources of what works in different environments
Set out a protocol for what you expect a student to be able to do
Rubric on their website on research expectations
Recommendations
7 Tips to Beautiful PowerPoint: Visual Slide Show to inspire us to simplify our presentations (Bonni)
National Conference on Undergraduate Research; have your students attend and present at it (Bethany)
Engaging Ideas by John C. Bean (Bethany)
Closing credits
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26 Dec 2014 | How to see what we’ve been missing | ||
Fears and concerns over changes in higher education persist.
Whether it is our disdain for lecturing to a bunch of disconnected, texting and Facebooking students, or their boredom at being put to sleep by a droning professor reading from his powerpoint, something’s got to give…
In today’s episode, Dr. Cathy Davidson joins us to talk about finding the right practice, and the right tools, and being able to see what we’ve been missing in higher ed.
Podcast notes
Guest: Dr. Cathy Davidson
Cathy on Twitter
Attention
The gorilla experiment
Selective attention test video by Simons and Chabris (1999)
We have a capacity for learning constantly. -Cathy Davidson
Patients as co-learners with their physicians in the healing process
Examples of facilitation of learning, unlearning, and relearning
Students write a class constitution
What happens if you take responsibility for your own learning? - Cathy Davidson
Alvin Toffler's term: unlearning
Alvin Toffler has said that, "...in the rapidly changing world of the twenty-first century, the most important skill anyone can have is the ability to stop in ones tracks, see what isn't working, and then find ways to unlearn old patterns and relearn how to learn.
This requires all of the other skills in this program but is perhaps the most important single skill we will teach."
...Sadly, we all find gorillas in our lives. They usually come through tragedy... We have all had those moments when there's a before and an after in your life when the world looks different. The world was not different. What changed was your ability to see a world that you didn't have to see when you were priviledged not to... when you thought the world only had basketball tosses in it. It wasn't that the gorilla didn't exist; it was that you didn't see it. -Cathy Davidson
Multitasking
Fears about the calculator
Debates in state legislatures and in the senate when Motorola wanted to put a radio in the car
Radio actually helped save lives, especially in night driving, to combat the issue of falling asleep at the wheel
Brain is constantly multitasking; we just don't realize it
Flow tasks (Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi)
Brain surgery, playing chess, dancing to rock music, video game playing
Reading a book is not considered a flow task - people go off the page in 2-3 minutes; we think we are concentrating, when we are not
Unitasking
Howard Rheingold on Attention Literacy
There's always something we are missing
Index cards: Write down three things we've missed and we haven't talked about...
Tools, methods, and partners are needed to fight attention blindness
Recommendations
Field Notes for 21st Century Literacies
Social Media Literacy article by Rheingold on Educause
HASTAC is an alliance of more than 13,000 humanists, artists, social scientists, scientists and technologists working together to transform the future of learning.
The Futures Initiatives on HASTAC
Predictably Irrational and The Upside of Irrationality by Dan Ariely
NetSmart by Howard Rheingold
Thinking Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman
It's Complicated by Dana Boyd
Closing Credits
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Give feedback on the podcast or ideas for future topics/guests | |||
01 Jan 2015 | Specifications Grading | ||
There’s something wrong with the way we’re grading that isn’t being talked about nearly enough.
On today’s show, Dr. Linda Nilson shares about a whole new way of thinking about assessing students’ work and making grades mean more.
Podcast Notes
Dr. Linda B. Nilson
Director of the Office of Teaching Effectiveness and Innovation at Clemson University
Teaching at Its Best: A Research-Based Resource for College Instructors
The Graphic Syllabus and the Outcomes Map: Communicating Your Course
Creating Self-Regulated Learners: Strategies to Strengthen Students’ Self-Awareness and Learning Skills
Specifications Grading: Restoring rigor, motivating students, and saving faculty time
Specifications grading
Advocating a new way of grading from University of Pittsburgh University Times
The problem with “traditional” grading
Academic and Occupational Performance: A Quantitative Synthesis (Samson, Graue, Weinstein & Walberg)
.155 correlation meta analysis done by Sampson
2.4% of the variance in career success
2006 study by the American Institutes for Research
Fewer than 1/2 of four year college graduates
Fewer than 3/4 of two year college graduates
Demonstrate literary proficiency
Explanation of specifications grading
Bundles
Virtual tokens
Robert Talbert blog
Casting out nines
How specifications grading came to be
Benefits
Concerns
Recommendations
Bonni: PollEverywhere (new features)
Linda: Cultivate your courage by trying out things you’re afraid of... | |||
08 Jan 2015 | Teaching Naked | ||
It is easy to want to cover up in some way as professors…
In today’s episode, President Jose Antonio Bowen encourages us to become good at “Teaching Naked."
Podcast notes
Guest: Dr. Jose Antonio Bowen, President, Goucher College
Teaching Naked: How Moving Technology Out of Your College Classroom Will Improve Student Learning
Recommendations (part 1)
This episode, we start with Bonni's recommendation and ask Dr. Bowen questions from Storycorps.
Storycorps
About Storycorps
Storycorps's Great questions
Danny and Annie's animated story
Ask your colleagues the questions related to working from Storycorps
Teaching Naked
The thing that teachers do best in the classroom is to be human beings, and to get to know their students as human beings, and to make that connection between what matters to their students and what matters to them. (Jose Bowen)
Start with what matters to your students
Used to have the advantage, based on knowledge
Use class time to make genuine connections and not simply for providing information
Technology works great outside the classroom for quizzing, communication, etc.
We know more about teaching than we did when we were in school
Pedagogy needs to be our central focus, and most of us weren't trained in it
A teaching failure
Bonni admits to one of her bigger failures in teaching in the past few years
Driving the stick shift car and not always having it turn out the way we want it to
Overcoming the failures - Jose gives advice
We are opaque as to our own intellectual accent. Everybody has an accent in the way they speak, but they also have an accent in the way they think.
Academics, in particular, are bad examples of learning, because we learned in spite of the system. We're the odd balls. We're the weirdos. We're the people who liked school so much that we're still here.
Most students don't learn that way.
Failure is simply part of the game. Disconnect is just part of what happens. (Dr. Jose Bowen)
Embrace mistakes
Admit when things go wrong
Describe why you tried what you did
Model change ("I changed my mind.")
The end of the story
The Naked Classroom
Furniture moves around; no rows
No technology / screen
Index cards
Noisy
Laptops aren't typically necessary
Nobody uses a laptop while doing yoga or playing tennis (Jose Bowen)
I believe in noisy and messy classrooms. Complexity. Lots of failures. People having to confront real problems. Confront each other. Confront me... (Jose Bowen)
For beginners... need to set the stage and expectations... after that, they know how the game works.
Twitter
Jose on Twitter
Bonni on Twitter
Michael Hyatt's beginners' guide to Twitter
Bonni's resources to help you learn Twitter
Recommendations (part 2)
Jose closes the podcast episode with his recommendations.
Merlot II: Multimedia educational resource for learning and online teaching
SmashFact: Create custom study apps for your students' devices
Change is hard. It's hard for you and it's hard for your students... Keep asking your students what's working. Expect some failure. It's not a linear process.
That's the process of learning and we're all learning how to do something new: And that's how to be better, more engaged teachers. (Jose Bowen)
Closing credits
Subscribe to the weekly update and receive the Educational Technology Essentials Guide
Give feedback on the podcast or ideas for future topics/guests
| |||
15 Jan 2015 | All that cannot be seen | ||
On today’s episode, I talk about all that cannot be seen.
Photo by Jim Frazee of Southwest Search Dogs. Used with permission (he's my Dad).
Podcast notes
Mystery commercial that I really hope someone can find and send to me
Augmented reality
How Stuff Works explains augmented reality
Mashable's augmented reality stories
Yik yak chat service (For reasons explained in the podcast, I would rather not link to this particular app/service)
[EDIT: 1/15/15/ at 10:20 am]: Right after recording this episode, I listened to episode 9 the Reply All podcast by Gimlet Media. I have even less certainty now about whether or not we should stay far away from Yik Yak, or get in there and spread some positivity and make our presence known. I welcome your thoughts either privately, or in the comments, below.
Southwest Search Dogs
Online forum introductions
Our perceptions really do matter
Our expectations can shape outcomes in others…
This American Life previewed Invisiblia on an episode called: Batman
Especially the beginning re mindset on This American Life
NPR Science reporters Alix Spiegel and Lulu Miller explain to Ira Glass how they smuggled a rat into NPR headquarters in Washington, and ran an unscientific version of a famous experiment first done by Psychology Professor Robert Rosenthal. It showed how people’s thoughts about rats could affect their behavior. Another scientist, Carol Dweck, explains that it’s true for people too: expectations affect students, children, soldiers, in measurable ways. (6 minutes)
Invisibilia
Invisibilia is a series about the invisible forces that shape human behavior. The show interweaves personal stories with scientific research that will make you see your own life differently.
Assume the best… and talk through the gaps…
Episode 14 on Dealing with Difficult Students in Higher Ed
Our diverse students
Recommendation
Coach.me | |||
22 Jan 2015 | Lower your stress with a better approach to capture | 00:33:55 | |
Bonni and Dave Stachowiak talk about how to capture it all, so we can have lower stress and not have things fall through the cracks.
Podcast notes
Guest: Dr. Dave Stachowiak
What is capture?
David Allen's Getting Things Done
Why capture?
Other-generated capture
Inboxes
Have as many as necessary and no more
Academics inboxes
Email
Phone- office line
Phone-other
Inbox office
Inbox home
Inbox bag
Students after class
Tools
Drafts
Evernote
Soundever
Scannable
Zero inbox
David Allen's folders
Self generated capture
Roles
Projects
Tools
David Allen's templates
OmniFocus
RTM
Post its plus
Mindnode
Recommendations
Paprika recipe manager app (Bonni)
Amazon Fresh (Dave) | |||
29 Jan 2015 | The slide heard ’round the world | 00:34:24 | |
Bonni and Dave Stachowiak talk about how to make your PowerPoint (or other) slides more effective.
Podcast notes
2010 headlines:
"US Army makes the world's worst PowerPoint slide"
"We have met the enemy and he is PowerPoint."
Conflict in Afghanistan: Why developing a clear strategy was challenging.
PPT in the crosshairs
Edward Tufte (2006 publication) The cognitive style of ppt: There's no bullet list like Stalin's bullet list.
Can create bad PPT on tools besides PPT
Problems in higher ed
In the classroom
In online modules (flipped classroom)
At academic conferences
In the online magazine, Slate, Schuman expressed her views on just how bad it has become with PowerPoint use in education in an article called PowerPointless. She writes, “Digital slideshows are the scourge of education.”
“For class today I’ll be reading the PowerPoint word for word.” –every professor, everywhere. @collegegrlhumor
“College basically consist of you spending thousands of dollars for a professor to point at a PowerPoint and read the bullets.” @deliNeli
“Being a college professor would be easy. Read off a PowerPoint you made 10 years ago and give online quizzes with questions you googled.” –blazik
“srsly sick of all these power points. anyone can be a professor. all u need to know is how to run a power point.” @ChrisraMae17
“Y’all ever sat in a class, copied every word down of the power point, and still not kno a damn thing the professor said?” @BlkSuperMan
Richard Mayer's research shows if students w/out visuals 75% vs 89% re: bike pump
PowerPoint Slide Recommendations
Use PowerPoint slides for their intended purpose: to enhance your presentation, not deliver it.
Put less on your slides and use relevant visuals
Change your media focus at regular intervals
B key
Caffeine (for the Mac)
Caffeine alternatives (for PC/Windows)
Employ a non-linear slide structure
Choose your own adventure (episode 25 re: large classes w/ Chrissy Spencer)
Today's meet (requires laptops/smart devices)
Recommendations
Slack (Bonni)
Tapes | Screenflow | SnagIt (Dave) | |||
05 Feb 2015 | Practical productivity in academia | 00:38:13 | |
Natalie Houston discusses practical productivity in academia.
Podcast Notes
Guest: Dr. Natalie Houston
Twitter
Blog
ProfHacker posts
Opposition to the term productivity
Productivity defined
Productivity, to me, is not about doing more things faster. It is about doing the things that are most important to me and creating the kind of life I want to have...
To do something with ease is to bring a kind of comfort and grace to the task. It can also be more room [in your life]... Living a life with more ease...
Challenges and approaches for faculty
Blurring between work and non-work time
Protect quality time for your most important work/projects
Creating appropriate boundaries
Schedule blocks of time to let
Commit to avoiding digital devices before bed
Establish a bedtime for ourselves
Articulate an ideal weekend/Saturday
Enlist partner's support in fulfilling that ideal day
The idea of a sabbath day in many spiritual traditions is to set aside a day for rest.
Create transition rituals to help acknowledge the move between work and personal time
Don't force yourself to use digital tools, if analog work better; perhaps a hybrid system might work well, in some cases
Todoist
Email
Multiple touch points
Challenge with accessing email on our phones
Taking breaks
Set an alarm
A timer is my most important productivity tool. You can use a timer in so many parts of your day.
Timing a break enhances the relaxation of that break.
Recommendations
How to manage references with Zotero, by Catherine Pope (Bonni)
IDoneThis.com (Natalie)
The Rise of Superman: Decoding the Science of Ultimate Human Performance, by Stephen Kotler
| |||
12 Feb 2015 | Eliciting and using feedback from students | 00:39:01 | |
Doug McKee talks about eliciting and using feedback from students.
PODCAST NOTES
Guest: Dr. Doug McKee
[ CV ]
[ BLOG ]
WORKING OUT LOUD
John Stepper's book about Working Out Loud
Studied his own teaching and determined that those who came to class and those who watched via video did equally well in the class
I feel like I’m just breaking through now. I remember what it was like at the beginning.
ELICITING FEEDBACK
Waiting until the end of the semester to get input from our students is too late
Evaluations are valuable; but it only helps you the next time you teach the class
The Hawthorne Effect
Formal, anonymous surveys
* Customized end of semester surveys
* mid-semester surveys
* discussion boards
https://piazza.com
* in person:
* talking to students after class
* office hours
* regular lunches with students
* Reporting back about what you learned what your changing to respond
http://ictevangelist.com
* Department-wide early warning systems—We’re trying this this year to give students in all our classes a chance to air concerns to the department early enough so we can do something about them.
RECOMMENDATIONS
SpeedDial2; ultimate tab page for Google Chrome (Bonni)
Piazza (Doug)
Forgetmenot (Doug)
Finn Family Moomintroll, by Tove Jansson (Doug)
Doug's blog:
teachbetter.co | |||
19 Feb 2015 | What the best college teachers do | 00:38:02 | |
Ken Bain describes What the Best College Teachers Do...
PODCAST NOTES
Guest: Ken Bain
President, Best Teachers Institute, Ken Bain (Twitter: @kenbain1)
"Internationally recognized for his insights into teaching and learning and for a fifteen-year study of what the best educators do"
"His now classic book What the Best College Teachers Do. (Harvard University Press, 2004) won the 2004 Virginia and Warren Stone Prize for an outstanding book on education and society, and has been one of the top selling books on higher education. It has been translated into twelve languages and was the subject of an award-winning television documentary series in 2007."
He was the founding director of four major teaching and learning centers.
WHAT THE BEST COLLEGE TEACHERS DO
Many will be familiar with What the Best College Teachers Do… If not, press stop, and get your hands on it.
What’s still the same, in the >10 years since the book was published?
"Ask engaging questions that spark people’s curiosity and fascination that people find intriguing…"
What’s changed, if anything?
More definition around the natural critical learning environment
Started with 4-5 basic elements
Since then, they have identified 15 different elements...
Deep approach to learning; deep achievement in learning
[Good teaching] is about having students answer questions or solving problems that they find intriguing, interesting, or beautiful. (Ken Bain)
Learner isn’t in charge of the questions. Teacher can raise questions that the learner will never invent on their own.
Need to give learners the same kind of learning condition and environment that we expect as advanced learners.
[As an advanced learner, asking for input from colleagues]... I would expect an environment in which I would try, fail, receive feedback… and do that in advance of and separate from anybody's judgment or anyone's grading of my work. (Ken Bain)
Bonni's introduction to business students are listening to the StartUp Podcast and making recommendations to the founders in the form of a business plan
The tone that you set in the classroom matters
We often teach as if we are God. (Craig Nelson)
Need to recognize the contingency in our own knowledge.
As advanced learners in our respective fields, we are interested in certain questions, because we were once interested in another question. (Ken Bain)
Another important study by Richard Light at Harvard asked: What are the qualities of those courses at Harvard that students find most intellectually rewarding?
When he published his initial results:
High, but meaningful standards… important to the students beyond the scope of the class.
Plenty of opportunity to try, fail, receive feedback… try again… all in advance of an separate from any grading of their work
As a historian, could begin with: “What do you think it means to think like a good historian.” Think, pair, square, share… Would then have an article on hand that someone else had written on the topic. Ask them to look at that article to compare their own thinking with that.
Collaborative Learning: Higher Education, Interdependence, and the Authority of Knowledge, by Kenneth Bruffee
What people are doing when they learn something is joining a community of knowledgeable peers. (Kenneth Bruffee)
Essential to this whole process is engagement
Harvard Professor: Eric Mazure, winner of the $500k Minerva Prize
Peer instruction
RECOMMENDATIONS
Think, pair, share (Bonni)
The girl who saved the king of Sweeden, by Jonas Jonason (Ken)
@kenbain1
bestteachersinstitute.org
kenbain [at] usa [dot] com
| |||
26 Feb 2015 | Developing critical thinking skills | 00:37:53 | |
Tine Reimers helps us define the term critical thinking and truly start developing our students' skills.
PODCAST NOTES
[GUEST ]
Tine Reimers
Curriculum, Teaching and Learning Specialist
Centre for Innovation and Excellence in Learning
Vancouver Island University
Critical Thinking
Defining critical thinking (and the inherent challenges when we want to improve critical thinking in our students, without actually agreeing, collectively, on what we mean)
Different disciplines define critical thinking differently than each other
Difficulty in the concrete way in how to get students to think critically in the discipline-specific way that I'm trying to develop...
HANDOUT: Taxonomy of [some] critical thinking theories
* Developmental
- what gets emphasized?
- a few of the thinkers/researchers who posit this theory
* Learning styles / bio-neurological models of thought
Article from Wired: All you need to know about learning styles...
- what gets emphasized?
- a few of the thinkers/researchers who posit this theory
* Categories of cognitive skills
- what gets emphasized?
- a few of the thinkers/researchers who posit this theory
* Processes of self (in culture and society)
- what gets emphasized?
- a few of the thinkers/researchers who posit this theory
Episode with stephenbrookfield/15
Suggestions to grow critical thinking
Invert the classroom intellectually
Give the students practice in situations of ambiguity and complexity
[Correction: I said I was listening to the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast, but I meant that I was listening to the Inside Higher Ed podcast on competency-based programs]
Each team gets a significant problem to work on
Give the same problem to all the groups in the class
Limited set of choices as right answers
Which is the best answer to this problem
Simultaneous report in the classroom
Clickers or cards in class
Why did you say D?
Next steps
Flip the classroom - all of class period is around problem solving and sticking to your guns
Rabbit holes are a way of thinking... and we don't give our students enough chances to do that type of thinking in foundational classes.
ARTICLE: First day questions for learner-centered classrooms, by Gary Smith, University of New Mexico
Michelson and Fink’s team based learning approach
Michelson’s Team Based Learning - team task design - good for any discipline that you can do…
Chrissy Spencer talking on Teaching in Higher Ed about teaching large classes
Team based learning list serve
Team based learning site
RECOMMENDATIONS
From Tine:
On Intelligence, Jeff Hawkins
Reality is Broken, Jane McGonnigal
| |||
05 Mar 2015 | Steve Wheeler talks Learning with ‘e’s | 00:36:53 | |
Steve Wheeler joins me to share about Learning with ‘e’s...
PODCAST NOTES
Steve Wheeler
Bio
Learning with 'e's
Origins of Learning with 'e's
2007 started blogging
Learning using digital technologies…
Incorporates comments from people into the book
eLearning 3.0
If Web 1.0 was the 'Write Web' and Web 2.0 is the 'Read/Write Web', then Web 3.0 will be the 'Read/Write/Collaborate Web'.
Coined by Tim Reilly of O'Reilly media - progression or evolution of the web
Web 1.0 - the sticky web
Web 2.0 - the participatory web
Web 3.0 - the read/write/collaborative web
Digital natives/immigrants vs residents/visitors
Mark Frensky - coined the phrases digital natives and digital immigrants in 2000 / 2001 - The Horizon
Digital natives
Digital immigrants
Net Generation
It's not about age; it's about context. -Steve Wheeler
Residents and visitors - coined by David S. White and Alison Le Cornu
Challenging to find a universal digital literacy tool
Every individual’s context is unique. -Steve Wheeler
I know what I need to do with the tools that are available to me and so do my students. -Steve Wheeler
We learn best when we are curious. We become curious when we don't know the answer to something. And we don't know the answer to something when we get challenged. Problem based learning is probably the most powerful method you could possibly use. -Steve Wheeler
Twitter
Initially got interested in the backchannel chatter happening at a conference.
@stevewheeler account - started with that, though his more popular account to follow is…
@timbuckteeth - avatar - Dave, the astronaut on the movie 2001: A Space Odyssey
Twitter for me is probably for me the most powerful tool for communicating I've ever used. -Steve Wheeler
Lack persistence - You need to give it time.
[Twitter] is not about the content; it’s about the conversation. -Steve Wheeler
The practice of blogging
If [professors don't blog], how else are they going to express themselves? -Steve Wheeler
Professors normally express themselves through closed, academic journals. The academic capital that most universities currently subscribe to... That's going to change.
Why Steve knows that blogging is much more effective:
Wrote an article in 2005: wasn’t published for nearly three years; revised. 36 academic citations.
At the same time, wrote another article, sent it in to an open-access journal; five people instead of two… Not only did they publish it within six weeks. The way forward for disseminating… 550k views; Almost 1,000 citations.
Blogging. People are actually reading it. Could be much harsher in their criticism. Reflect on practice more deeply. 3,000 views in a day. Don’t know how he could possibly get that kind of exposure through traditional academic journals.
US
Jim Groom (edupunk) (on Twitter)
George Siemens (on Twitter)
Steven Anderson's blog - web 2.0 classroom (on Twitter)
Sherry Terrell (on Twitter).
Amy Burvall Hawaii History Teachers channel
Audrey Watters
Alan Levine (on Twitter)
UK
Martin Weller (on Twitter)
David Hopkins' blog Don’t waste your time (on Twitter)
Helen Keegan (on Twitter)
Privacy
Audrey Watters on Teaching in Higher Ed podcast
Death of privacy - all surveilled; all followed; difficult to be a private citizen
The death of privacy has happened. It's very difficult to be a private citizen these days. -Steve Wheeler
The law is running to catch up
Difficult question to answer
School systems differ; social contexts differ; social norms differ
Steve's addition
How the maker movement is moving into classrooms
Taupaki School in Aukland - principal of the school, Stephen Lethbridge (on Twitter)- primary plus school. 5-13… through making things. Papert's Constructionist theories. Learning the curriculum subjects in a fun, challenging, exciting way.
Makey Makey
Arduino
Rasberry Pi
Recommendations
| |||
12 Mar 2015 | Spring break recharge | 00:16:56 | |
Bonni Stachowiak shares about a few things she's doing over Spring break to recharge. Spoiler alert: It is mostly all about getting caught up and staying caught up for me.
Podcast notes
Differing perspectives on Spring break
a) give assignments for students to work on over the break
b) grade student work
c) recharge/refresh for the rest of the semester
Efficiency
Sign ups
Doodle
The Best Day
Time Trade
Google forms
Grading
Mac Power Users episode 240
TurnItIn iPad app
Answering student questions
Forum set up just for Q&A (invite students to post questions there)
Screenshots (SnagIt)
Screencast (Tapes app - beware the 60 minute monthly limit, SnagIt, Screenflow or Camtasia)
What about you?
Recharge, refresh for Spring break?
Leave a message at: 949-38-learn.
Recommendations
Recharge - Kindle Voyage
Closing credits
Please call 949-38-LEARN to record a message about your Spring break recommendations and / or ideas beyond what I spoke about on this episode. | |||
19 Mar 2015 | How to take a break | 00:19:03 | |
Five faculty members share how they are spending their breaks and what recommendations they have for how to take a break...
Podcast notes
Ten things to do instead of checking email, by Natalie Houston (guest on episode #034)
How to take a break
David Pecoraro from the Student Caring podcast
Heading to Fresno for son's swim meet
Reading: Building social business, by Mohammed Yunus
Christine - teaches part time. Fighting with insurance companies over the break. Dealing with snow days.
Nicholas - teaches in Doha, Qatar (pronunciation of Likert scale)
"My spring break is already over, but I spent it learning how to use ScreenFlow so I can help my MA students learn to use Zotero better."
Doug McKee from the Teach Better podcast
Two week break from teaching at Yale
Microsoft Word in review mode
PDF expert 5 on the iPad
Screencasting with Quicktime on the Mac (record screen and do light editing)
Sandie Morgan from the Ending Human Trafficking podcast
Engaging with others in diverse communities to combat human trafficking
Expand circles of influence
Connect app
Recommendations
BusyContacts
David Allen on the Coaching in Higher Ed podcast
Closing credits
Please consider rating or reviewing the podcast via your preferred podcast directory. It is the best way to help others discover the show (gotta love algorithms).
https://teachinginhighered.com/itunes
https://teachinginhighered.com/stitcher | |||
26 Mar 2015 | What to do before you act on all you’ve captured | 00:39:14 | |
Bonni and Dave Stachowiak discuss what to do before you act on all you’ve captured.
PODCAST NOTES:
Episode #32 talked about capture. All the places where we capture what it is we need to do (either because of others’ demands, or freeing up our mind of the “clutter” of stuff that needs doing).
Clarify and organize
Before we do any of it… we need to:
Clarify - process what it means
Organize - put it where it belongs
For each item we have captured, we ask:
What action needs to take place?
Follow this GTD guide
If it isn’t actionable, are you going to need it in the future for reference?
Avoid becoming a digital hoarder
How I store files related to class content and specific classes
Don’t get carried away with folders, especially email, because as we read more on our mobile devices, pretty long to scroll through.
Dropbox debuts file commenting; rolls out "badge" for collaborating on Microsoft documents
Evernote/OneNote: another place not to get carried away with folders. Work, personal, reference + any shared notebooks (i.e. bondbox)
Actionable tasks
Put it into a trusted system, so you can consider it in relation to all your other priorities.
goodreads
IMDB
Dave's Coaching for Leaders episode #180: Do this for a productive week
Only set due dates for things that actually have due dates
RECOMMENDATIONS:
Bonni recommends:
Read/re-read the revised Getting Things Done, by David Allen
Buy a set of their guides
Check out Scannable app
Dave recommends:
Ulysses app | |||
02 Apr 2015 | Mixing it up in our teaching | 00:27:40 | |
Bonni Stachowiak shares some ideas about mixing it up in our teaching.
Podcast notes
Teaching classes repeatedly
Advantage of knowing where students typically get stuck
Dr. Chrissy Spencer spoke about this when describing her broken-up cases in episode 25, when she just “happens” to have a slide that clarifies a student’s question
Reinforcing a difficult concept
Advertising response function in my Principles of Marketing class
Not all understand the idea of the law of diminishing returns by the time they get to the course
Would be the ideal situation for an interactive online module something like the scenario manager in Excel (under data, what-if, scenario manager)
Did the typical think-pair-share
Two truths and a tie exercise
Using the Attendance2 app to facilitate the random calling on of students
Applying learning to something students know well
Lessons in PR from our university
Standard 2.2 from accreditor (whole must be greater than the parts)
Going outside
Self assessment on theory X and theory Y
What things do you see that I do that are theory X
Steps to avoid cheating on exams
Latecomers need to call to be marked present for the day
What things do you see that I do that are theory Y
Self-directed learning during the week
Bulls and bears game
PollEverywhere quizzes via cell phones in class
No anonymity any longer
However, I was then able to give them the opportunity to indicate how they would like to be treated as an employee
Recommendation
Remind app - now has text chat, but with office hours | |||
09 Apr 2015 | Storytelling as teaching | 00:35:53 | |
Aaron Daniel Annas joins me to talk storytelling on this episode of Teaching in Higher Ed.
Podcast Notes
Aaron Daniel Annas
Assistant professor of cinema arts
Faculty Director of the Vanguard Sundance Program
Storytelling
Who are stories for?
How do you distinguish between entertaining our students and educating them?
What makes for a good story?
What do we do if we aren't good at telling stories?
How do we know if we are good at telling stories?
Importance of the relevance to a course
Bringing in story in to a class without us necessarily having to be the storyteller
Bonni's storytelling bookmarks on Pinboard
Recommendations
Bonni recommends:
Biola math professor Matthew Weathers' video of April Fool’s joke
Aaron Daniel recommends:
Amazon Echo
| |||
23 Apr 2015 | Calibrating our teaching | 00:35:16 | |
Aaron Daniel Annas and I converse about how we have calibrated our teaching over time.
Podcast Notes
Calibrating our Teaching
Aaron Daniel Annas
Assistant professor of cinema arts
Faculty Director of the Vanguard Sundance Program
Reflections on year one
Bonni reflects on her first year
Taking things personally (a good lesson on how to avoid this is to hear Cheating Lessons author, James Lang, on episode #043)
Aaron Daniel reflects on his first few semesters
You're not giving someone a grade; they're earning a grade.
Calibrating your teaching
Importance of setting expectations
Stressing the whys as you raise the level of challenge
Realize they aren't likely to thank you during the process of being challenged
Bonni's post: The Dip
Atherton J.S.'s post: Course of a course
Essentialism: The disciplined pursuit of less, by Greg McKeown
Determining what hours to have direct contact with students should be allowed
TextExpander (Mac) | Breevy (Windows)
Recommendations
Aaron Daniel recommends
Kindle First, for Amazon prime members
Kindle first newsletter for amazon prime members. One free book from their editor pics each month
Get in touch with Aaron Daniel on Twitter
Closing credits
Please consider writing a review or rating the show, to help others discover Teaching in Higher Ed
Teaching in Higher ed: on iTunes and on Stitcher
Give topic or guest ideas to help strengthen the value of the podcast
| |||
16 Apr 2015 | How to care for grieving students | 00:15:59 | |
Bonni Stachowiak explores how to care for grieving students.
PODCAST NOTES
How to care for grieving students
Respect confidentiality… to a point
Point them toward their resources
Avoid assumptions… if you can
Be human
Don’t lower course requirements; let them earn their degree, not receive it through pity
Recognize the pain of the neutral zone (coined by Bridges in his book: Transitions: Making sense of life's changes)
Avoid personalizing dishonesty
RECOMMENDATIONS
Process your own grief
One wonderful book for processing one's grief and going through transitions is William Bridges' The Way of Transition: Embracing Life's Most Difficult Moments.
We resist transition not because we can't accept the change, but because we can't accept letting go of that piece of ourselves that we have to give up when and because the situation has changed. - William Bridges | |||
30 Apr 2015 | Ending well | 00:21:24 | |
Bonni Stachowiak suggests strategies for ending well.
Podcast notes
Ending well
Guard against student fatigue
Sleep deprived
Focused on the short term
Challenged by their context
Thinking a lot about context, especially after speaking with Steve Wheeler on episode #038)
Beware the temptation to vent
Josh Eyler reminded us of this on episode #016
Research shows it doesn’t help
There was that research that said cursing helps, though
Recognize their achievements
Demonstrate how the learning objectives have been attained
Have them articulate the value they have received
Administer the course evaluations professionally
All sorts of concerns over evaluations
Students don’t realize the gaps that occur in the evaluation process in higher ed
We wonder if they are in a position to properly evaluate our teaching (recent thread on the POD listserv re: what even to call course evaluations; student experience of teaching (Debra Gilchrist from Pierce College in Lakewood WA, Ed Nuhfer wrote about the importance of separating assessment (various ways to assess student learning) from evaluations of people who strive to facilitate learning.
Take more breaks
Apple Watch - standing alert
Penn state experimenting w/ Apple Watch to measure student learning this Fall
Frasier Spiers on presenting with an Apple Watch
Set timers
Natalie Houston spoke about this on episode #034
Recommendations
Bonni recommends:
We all love Ella: Celebrating the first lady of song
In particular: You are the sunshine of my life: duet with Stevie Wonder…
[ ] Contribute to episode 50 of Teaching in Higher Ed
Call and leave a message with a take-away you have from listening to the show and a recommendation for the community.
949-38-LEARN | |||
07 May 2015 | Developing metacognition skills in our students | 00:39:53 | |
Todd Zakrajsek speaks about developing metacognition skills in our students.
Podcast notes
Todd Zakrajsek, Ph.D.
Todd speaks at TEDxUNC
Metacognition
Todd's two unusually low grades in college
Our brain as a smart phone
Working out our brains
Multitasking
Music, sleep, and exercise
Defining terms
Tools
Asleep app on iOS
Android white noise app
Logitech wireless presenter
Help students draw less cognitive energy on exams by giving them a preview of what it will be like to take a test in your class
Anytime you're surprised, stop and think about why you were surprised and what just happened.
Next steps
Attend one of the Lilly Conferences
Read one of Todd's books
The New Science of Learning: How to Learn in Harmony with Your Brain
Learner-centered Teaching: Putting the Research on Learning into Practice
Todd agrees to come back to Teaching in Higher Ed later this year to share about his new book: Teaching for Learning: 101 Intentionally Designed Education Activities to Put Students on the Path to Success
Recommendations
Bonni recommends:
Dropbox's new commenting feature
Todd recommends:
f.lux
Forest app
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14 May 2015 | Using Evernote in Higher Ed | 00:39:40 | |
Scott Self and Bonni Stachowiak share how they each integrate Evernote into their classes and workflows. Even if you aren't an Evernote user, you're bound to pick up a few tips.
Podcast notes
Guest:
Scott Self
Director, University Access Programs, Abilene Christian University
Productive Nerd Blog
The landscape of options for notebook-type applications
Microsoft OneNote
Writing-specific applications, such as Ulysses or Scrivener
Circus Ponies Notebook
Guidance on maximizing the value of course assets
Linking smart post
LMS - keep the course assets out of it
Creating collaborative learning environments with Evernote
Use it in a uni-directional way, not necessarily a conversational tool...
Classroom becomes a kind of conversation around learning
Scott gives students the unique, Evernote email address to send notes to the class-specific evernote notebook
He sets permissions up so that he’s the only one who can edit the notes in the notebook - read-only
Getting started with Evernote
Scott’s posts
Evernote in Higher Ed Introduction
Evernote in the classroom
We both recommend
Brett Kelly's Evernote Essentials eBook
Big advantages of Evernote
Easy capture
On iOS - text, audio, sticky notes, documents (auto-size), photo
Web clipper
Drafts - iOS app - start typing
Email - lots of tricks to organize when you send
Search capabilities
Integration with other apps and services
Keeps one’s course out of the LMS environment - the instructor should own the material, not the LMS
Our advice
Grow with it (start with the basics and go from there)
Keep folder structure simple
Bonni uses just reference, work, and personal, along with a shared notebook and a couple required ones that store my LiveScribe pencasts
Scott has only a few notebooks. I do have one for each section of a course that I teach so that I can share lecture notes, resources, and “FYIs” with my students.
As a “Premium” user, we have access to the “Presenter” view. Scott says:
Students see my lecture notes in a clear and uncluttered presentation, and have access to the information in the shared notes. I prefer that students take notes about the lecture - rather than copying down what’s on the screen.
Use tags when you would have normally used a folder. Scott says:
Yes! The search function is so powerful, it is often faster to search for a note than to navigate through a tree of folders
Capture whiteboard brainstorms in meetings (will recognize your handwritten text). Scott says:
My students with disabilities have become infamous on campus for snapping pictures of whiteboards. This saves time (and frustration for the students with learning disabilities), and the snaps can be annotated.
Use the inbox for quick capturing and have an action in your task management system to process it however regularly you need to… Scott says:
This can be done very quickly, since you can select a number of notes and bulk process them (tagging, merging, or sending to a notebook)
When you get really geeky with Evernote
Automate agendas in Evernote
Use Drafts app to prepend / append notes on a given topic (our kids’ “firsts” notes, research ideas)
Use TaskClone to capture and sync to dos with your task manager
Katie Floyd’s Article on Evernote and Hazel
Save Kindle highlights into Evernote
Recommendations
Scott recommends
Taskclone
Chungwasoft
Scannable
Bonni recommends
The Checklist Manifesto
Closing credits
Celebrate episode 50 with us!
Please call 949-38-LEARN and leave a message with a take-away you've had from listening to Teaching in Higher Ed, and a recommendation. | |||
21 May 2015 | EdTech tools | Spring 2015 | 00:28:23 | |
Bonni Stachowiak provides an update on some of the edtech tools she experimented with in Spring 2015.
Podcast Notes
Slack
Team communication for the 21st century. Imagine all your team communication in one pace, instantly searchable, available wherever you go.
Create channels, which include messages, files, and comments, inline images and video, rich line summaries, and integration with services you use every day, like Twitter, Dropbox and Google drive.
How did we use it?
Has default channels: #general, #random… added ones for #movienights at our house (address, carpooling, etc.), and for each of the research/service learning projects. Can do private ones that no one else sees, which we did for the business ethics competition, so competitors wouldn’t be able to see the cases we were considering, etc.
Students’ feedback
Really liked it. Searchability. Ease of use.
What they didn’t like was just the number of places they have to remember to check, assuming they weren’t on the web app.
Empathy for our students
A veteran teacher turned coach shadows 2 students for 2 days – a sobering lesson learned
Piazza
Recommended by Doug on episode #035
Watch a video that shows the power of Piazza
Primarily will want to have students use their .edu address to sign up for Piazza
There are also integration options for LMSs, etc.
TextExpander snippet for students who ask a question directly to me, instead of on Piazza
OmniFocus
https://pinboard.in/u:bonni208/t:omnifocus
http://learnomnifocus.com/videos/
Project templates
Tim Stringer at Learn Omnifocus.com (http://learnomnifocus.com/about-tim-stringer/)
Recommendations
1 password
https://agilebits.com/onepassword | |||
28 May 2015 | Fifty episodes of Teaching in Higher Ed | 00:20:29 | |
Past guests and listeners celebrate significant learning from 50 episodes of Teaching in Higher Ed. Many also share their recommendations to the listening community, too.
Episode 50
Podcast Notes
***
Dr. David Yates, Director
Southeastern University Center for Excellence and Creativity in Teaching
A Department of the School of Extended Education
Cameron Hunt-McNabb on episode #24, shared how to cultivate creative assignments.
David mentioned:
Ken Bain on episode #36
Stephen Brookfield on episode #15
***
Christine
The biggest and best take away for me is the knowledge that I’m not alone in my efforts to actively engage students with activities/tasks/projects/problems during class. Thank you! Also, though I’ve used Remind for several years, I didn’t know the features of the app until you told me last night on my way to teach folks how to train their dogs!
***
Scott Self, who was on episode #48
***
Melissa from Columbia College
I am thoroughly enjoying your podcast episodes and have shared them with many of my colleagues already. I believe what I have taken away from the shows is your ease of describing the technology and pedagogical challenges, the show format with the notes and the wide variety of topics that are so pertinent to me and many of my colleagues.
I am just so thirsty for knowledge and application to help revitalize our faculty at the college and get them more excited about technology in education.
We are also very involved with the CA Online Education Initiative, piloting online tutoring at this time so this is also very timely to have come across your podcast series. You have a very unique, gentle and fun-loving attitude toward technology topics and with your guests.
I am in the process of developing a new course, Universal Design in Online Course Development, and was wondering if you would be, or have already covered universal design in one of your podcasts. I would also be interested in hearing more about instructional design. Although you may have already covered some of these topics, I will eventually hear them all.
***
Missy McCormick
Lab ideas?
Gradebook strategies, including in-progress grading… Final grades.
Critiquing student work.
Missy mentioned:
Recalibrating our teaching with Aaron Daniel Annas (#45)
***
Recommendation
Amanda Bayer’s website: Diversifying Economic Quality: A wiki for instructors and departments
Recommended by Doug McKee on his blog post
| |||
04 Jun 2015 | Vulnerability in our teaching | 00:29:16 | |
Sandie Morgan and Bonni Stachowiak talk about how vulnerability shows up in our teaching.
A former guest on Teaching in Higher Ed, Josh Eyler, gets me thinking about vulnerability in our teaching...
Podcast notes
Guest: Sandie Morgan
Luke bringing me a broken egg yesterday.
What's this, Mommy? What was inside, Mommy?
With vulnerability comes a lot of poop.
Josh Eyler talking about how vulnerable our students need to be on episode 16
Wrote a powerful post about his wife's health challenges and his vulnerability this past semester.
And so, like Carl, we are working together to turn a new page, to imagine a new life for our family—one in which we do not ignore the reality of Kariann’s illness but at the same time do not let it define our future. This is much easier to say than it is to do. How do we begin then? We are trying to make each day as good as it can possibly be without thinking too much about the bigger picture just yet. From there, I think we just keep swimming. - Josh Eyler
Questions to consider:
How do we need to be vulnerable in our teaching?
Are there boundaries on both ends?
What kind of vulnerability do you see being required when asking for and processing feedback from students?
When deciding whether to take the risk:
Is it related to the course?
Does it help model for my students the importance of failure in shaping our learning and our lives? What does it look like to integrate my experience in a way that brings real life
Can I share it and still model resilience in our professional roles?
What do I anticipate that the students' responses to it might be?
Will it help me be more approachable to my students?
Recommendations
Evernote chat (Bonni)
Countable app (Sandie) | |||
11 Jun 2015 | Respect in the classroom | 00:36:06 | |
Kevin Gannon shares ways how to respect our students in our teaching.
Podcast notes
Guest: Kevin Gannon
Kevin shares the "behind the scenes" backdrop of the photo with the alligator (above and on his blog-about page).
Book mocking college students that Kevin mentions has been retitled, it appears.
Ignorance is Blitz: Mangled Moments of History from Actual College Students
Kevin quotes Maslow:
If you only have a hammer, you tend to see every problem as a nail. - Abraham Maslow
On our perceptions of students
Our students are our allies, not our adversaries in higher ed. - Kevin Gannon
Movie dance compilation video (mentioned by Bonni): Shut Up and Dance
I didn't go to grad school to be the behavior police. - Kevin Gannon
Daniel Goleman - Social Intelligence
“Dear students” blogs on The Chronicle
Jesse Strommel’s response
http://www.jessestommel.com/blog/files/dear-chronicle.html
Everyone that comes into even casual contact with Vitae’s “Dear Student” series is immediately tarnished by the same kind of anti-intellectual, uncompassionate, illogical nonsense currently threatening to take down the higher education system in the state of Wisconsin…
Giggling at the water cooler about students is one abhorrent thing.
Publishing that derisive giggling as “work” in a venue read by tens of thousands is quite another.
Of course, teachers need a safe place to vent. We all do. That safe place is not shared faculty offices, not the teacher’s lounge, not the library, not a local (public) watering hole. And it is certainly not on the pages of the Chronicle of Higher Education, especially in Vitae, the publication devoted to job seekers, including current students and future teachers. - Jesse Strommel
Kevin’s revised “Dear student” post:
Dear Student:
You’ll get better at this. So will we.
Faculty (a.k.a. former students)
Recommendations
Bonni recommends:
Kevin's Blog, including these posts:
On student shaming: Punching down
My cell phone policy is to have no cell phone policy
Kevin recommends:
Learner-Centered teaching: Five Key Changes to Practice, Maryellen Weimer
Discussion as a Way of Teaching: Tools and Techniques for Democratic Classrooms, Stephen Brookfield and Stephen Preskill
(Bonni suggests/adds): Stephen Brookfield on Episode #015 of Teaching in Higher Ed
The Skillful Teacher: On technique, trust, and responsiveness in the classroom, Stephen Brookfield
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18 Jun 2015 | Peer instruction and audience response systems | 00:35:34 | |
Peter Newbury joins me to talk about peer instruction and using clickers in the higher ed classroom.
Early experiences with clickers
The Carl Wieman Science Education Initiative
Achieving the most effective, evidence-based science education
(effective science education, backed by evidence)
The Carl Wieman Science Education Initiative (CWSEI) is a multi-year project at The University of British Columbia aimed at dramatically improving undergraduate science education.
The CWSEI helps departments take a four-step, scientific approach to teaching:
Establish what students should learn
Scientifically measure what students are actually learning
Adapt instructional methods and curriculum and incorporate effective use of technology and pedagogical research to achieve desired learning outcomes
Disseminate and adopt what works
The Carl Wieman Science Education Initiative resources on general teaching, clickers, and peer instruction
Today's use of clickers and other audience response systems
iClicker 2 radio clickers
Colleagues use cards: A, B, C, D… Plickers…
Bonni has a set of Turning Technologies RF clickers
Whether we are using physical devices, such as clickers, or we are using more of a bring your own device / smart phone /tablet option, it's really just a tool.
“I certainly don’t want to say that in order to use peer instruction, you have to have this piece of technology. It’s not about the clicker.” #peerinstruction
“Peer instruction is not a shiny thing that comes with clickers. Clickers are one tool you can use to facilitate peer learning.”
Peer Instruction foundations
Peer Instruction Fundamentals
How People Learn (free ebook) states that experts must:
Have a deep foundation of factual knowledge
Understand those facts and concepts in a conceptual framework
Organize the knowledge in ways that facilitate retrieval and application
More on peer instruction basics:
“If I’m not making your brains work, then I’m not teaching hard enough.”
“We need to schedule time into the class where students can stop and think, and start to learn.”
“Just stop talking for a while and let the students start to think.”
Effective Peer Instruction Questions
Peter's post on what makes for good peer instruction questions? And what makes bad ones?
“If I can just ask Siri the answer to the question, that’s [not a good one for peer instruction].”
Removing barriers to learning, such as high stakes questions/exercises
"...not about getting the right answer, but about practicing how to think.” Homework question will have the opportunity to assess for correctness.
Experts vs novices
“The expert has the same content as the novice, but it’s organized [and more easily retrieved]…”
Recommendations
Bonni recommends:
Visual note taking tools site
Peter recommends:
Get yourself into a learning community. Get on Twitter.
Bonni mentioned Peter's Twitter list of Teaching / Learning Centers
| |||
25 Jun 2015 | Finding meaning in our work | 00:37:25 | |
Jonathan Malesic on finding meaning in our work.
PODCAST NOTES
Guest: Jonathan Malesic
His blog
Jon on Twitter
What typically doesn't show up on Jon's bio: The Parking Lot Movie
I learned a lot working as a parking lot attendant. I think it's made me a better worker and a better person. - Jonathan Malesic
Don’t search for “purpose.” You will fail. by Jonathan Malesic in The New Republic.
Pursuing "purpose"
Find your purpose! pic.twitter.com/m3WKV2tWAa
— Jon Malesic (@JonMalesic) May 23, 2015
The components of finding "purpose"
You love it
The world needs it
You are paid for it
You are great at it
The intersections
1/2 = Mission (you love it and the world needs it)
2/3 = Vocation (the world needs it and you are paid for it)
3/4 = Profession (you are paid for it and you are great at it)
4/1 = Passion (you are great at it and you love it)
The often unlabeled overlaps in the Venn diagram
Please don’t be a physician (you love it; the world needs it)
Burnout (the world needs it; you can be paid for it)
Kardashian (you can be paid for it; you are good at it)
Exploitation (you are good at it; you love it)
Pursuing "success"
The best productivity tool we have as faculty is not a technology; it's our personal self-investment in our work. It's our commitment to students. It's our commitment to research. It's our commitment to our institutions. - Jonathan Malesic
We can be so committed to our work that we eventually start to hate it. We have identified ourselves so strongly with it that it becomes too much of a burden for our work. - Jonathan Malesic
Students' evaluation of us and student learning doesn't necessarily match up very well with our evaluation of ourselves. - Jonathan Malesic
That's still something worth hoping for... But, it's important to tell students that [the center piece] isn't always attainable. There's a lot of meaning to be had in our work, even if we don't hit that "sweet spot." - Jonathan Malesic
Article: Job, career, vocation, life by Charles Matthews in Inside HigherEd
Other articles suggested by Jon on this topic
In the Name of Love, by Miya Tokumitsu
A Life Beyond Do What You Love, by Gordon Marino
No Time: How Did We Get so Busy?, by Elizabeth Kolbert
Recommendations
Bonni recommends:
The movie Inside Out
Jon recommends:
Series of essays published on Chronicle Vitae by Melanie Nelson
Her website also has a ton of great ideas, advice, and resources
Refuse to Choose! by Barbara Sher
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02 Jul 2015 | Approaches to calendar management | 00:28:20 | |
Bonni and Dave Stachowiak talk calendar management.
Podcast notes
Guest: Dave Stachowiak
Dave shared about his "Wayne's World" moment, coming back as a guest on the show.
Chart on Twitter about service hours invested by gender/race:
hrs/wk assoc. profs spend on service by race/gender pic.twitter.com/vf4EA7xL6L
— Tressie Mc (@tressiemcphd) June 28, 2015
Keep the calendar’s purpose central
Exceptions to only having items calendared that have to happen at a particular time
Grading, as a means of budgeting time
See the big picture
My/our set up
Mac Calendar (BusyCal)
Exchange / Outlook
Planbook
RSS Calendar Subscriptions
Preschool
TIHE from Asana
US holidays
Make it easy for your students and other stakeholders
TimeTrade for office hours and podcasting appointments
Time blocks
Support collaboration through scheduling tools
Doodle
The Best Day
Review and reflect
Weekly review - each of us goes through a review each week to help us reflect on priorities and commitments
Look back to last week
Look forward next two weeks
Monthly review - the monthly review allows for a bigger picture view of how we are tracking toward goals
Look at next month
Recommendations
Bonni recommends:
Sunrise Meet
Review on FastCompany
Overview on The Chronicle
Dave recommends:
Fantastical | |||
09 Jul 2015 | Getting to zero inbox | 00:11:01 | |
Managing email using the Inbox Zero approach.
Podcast notes
Getting to zero inbox
Be strategic about what times you check email
Use email like a real mailbox with physical mail
Leverage a to do list / task manager
Make use of snippets for commonly-asked questions (TextExpander or Breevy)
Schedule meetings with doodle or the best day
Create a hub for committees and other collaboration
Merlin Mann's video on Inbox Zero
Recommendations
Bonni recommends:
Tim Stringer's Learn OmniFocus calendar webinar (OmniFocus users)
| |||
23 Jul 2015 | Teaching with Twitter | 00:40:13 | |
Jesse Stommel, shares about how he enhances his teaching with Twitter.
Podcast notes
Teaching with Twitter
Guest: Jesse Stommel
About Hybrid Pedagogy
Twitter basics
Getting started with Twitter
Jesse's blog post: Teaching with Twitter
Twitter Pedagogy: An educator down the Twitter rabbit hole, by Kelsey Schmitz
The rules of Twitter, by Dorothy Kim
Jesse's background
When I grew up, I always wanted to have my own school... [Hybrid Pedagogy] is not really as much a repository for articles, but a space for community and for engaging. - Jesse Stommel
Was recently in Canada for the Digital Humanities Summer Institute, where he broke his ankle
On kindness
Kindness is what drives my pedagogy. It's about seeing people for who they really are and engaging with their full selves. - Jesse Stommel
Part of [kindness] is also about bringing your full self to the relationship you have with your coworkers, your students, and [other collaborators] that you use as a guiding ethic. - Jesse Stommel
What the 140 limitation does
The constraints of Twitter are also its affordances. Being asked to take an idea and put it in this constrained linguistic space of 140 characters forces us to think about and question our thinking in ways we wouldn't otherwise. - Jesse Stommel
Twitter allows for improvisation within a framework
What students should know
Twitter lets us play out our ideas
Twitter is a space for trying out ideas. It encourages us to iterate... - Jesse Stommel
[Twitter] is like a tool in the way that a pencil is a tool. A tool that lots of people can use for lots of different reasons. It becomes this platform that you can use in different ways and environments. - Jesse Stommel
Conversation with Steve Wheeler re: digital natives on episode 38
Literacies
Each person has to find a different relationship to these tools and build their own self inside of the network. - Jesse Stommel
Privacy literacy
Anyone who imagines that they can become private just with the flip of a switch is not really understanding how these networks work. - Jesse Stommel
Reflections on Teaching in Higher Ed episode 31 on the social network Yik Yak
Creative ways to teach with Twitter
Twitter vs Zombies
Pete Rorabaugh and Jesse Stommel share about Twitter vs Zombies with GamifiED OOC
The Twitter essay, by Jesse Stommel
12 Steps for designing an assignment, by Jesse Stommel (slide show that addresses some of the questions around how to grade these types of assignments)
Some things need to be public. - Jesse Stommel
Canvassers study in episode #555 of This American Life has been retracted
He was peer-reviewing my tweets before I sent each one out [at our wedding]... - Jesse Stommel
Today I'm live-tweeting my wedding to Joshua Lee. Because some things need to be public.
— Jesse Stommel (@Jessifer) June 13, 2014
I want my students to know someone in a place that is so different than the place that they are in. - Jesse Stommel
Maha Bali in Egypt on Twitter
Tweetdeck
Net Smart by Howard Rheingold
Recommendations
Bonni recommends:
Teaching with Twitter class, via Hybrid Pedagogy, taught by Jesse
Jesse recommends:
Net Smart by Howard Rheingold
Jesse on Twitter
Hybrid Pedagogy
Closing notes
Rate/review the show. Please consider rating or leaving a review for the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast on whatever service you use to listen to it on (iTunes, Stitcher, etc.). It is the best way to help others discover the show.
Give feedback. As always, I welcome suggestions for future topics or guests.
Subscribe. If you have yet to subscribe to the weekly update, you can receive a single email each week with the show notes (including all the links we talk about on the episode), as well as an article on either teaching or productivity.
| |||
23 Jul 2015 | Universal design for learning | 00:38:02 | |
Mark Hofer shares how he implements Universal Design for Learning in his teaching, so that all students have the opportunity to learn.
Podcast notes
Guest: Mark Hofer
Universal design for learning
Student, Tony, who helped Mark identify the need for Universal Design for Learning (UDL)
...gives all individuals equal opportunities to learn. - National Center on Universal Design for Learning
National Center on Universal Design for Learning
UDL on Campus
Interactive version of UDL guidelines
Printable version of UDL guidelines
Universal design in architecture
If you think about [the UDL] components as you're designing your course, you're going to wind up with better learning experiences for all your students. - Mark Hofer
Addressing concerns about UDL
We inadvertently put up barriers for our students in their learning.
Mark's compare and contrast example
Get started incorporating UDL into a course
Step 1:
What do I know that students struggle with related to this [topic or competency]?
Step 2:
What kind of options could I include to help them with [those common challenges]?
It does take students some time to get used to the idea that there may be more than one way to [accomplish] something. - Mark Hofer
Guidelines
Engagement - Mark is building his course around badges and experiences (through gamification and choice)
...goal is to try to make the learning as relevant and interesting to the learning, not just initially, but to sustain their interest in the learning... - Mark Hofer
Representation - pulling together readings, videos, interactives, where you can choose the way to learn
Action and expression - Mark is creating, for each project, 3 different options, all measured by the same rubric
While it is more [work] to select the various kinds of resources, it's paid back when in class the students are more prepared and we can go into further depth. -Mark Hofer
Getting started with UDL
Peter Newbury describes getting started with peer instruction on episode #053
Don't try to do [UDL] for every lesson, every day; it's a recipe for burnout. - Mark Hofer
Make sure all assignments aren't of the same type, over the course of a semester
"Pick a topic / concept that you know that students struggle with and try to find a range of different materials and see if it makes a difference." - Mark Hofer
Common misconception about UDL
While technology can help you implement UDL, it isn't dependent on using it...
UDL is an instructional approach and does not require technology
In relation to universal design
If you apply good accessibility practices to [course content], it will really benefit multiple learners in the process. - Mark Hofer
Recommendations
Bonni recommends:
Listen to Mac Power Users 265 on Apple Music
Mark recommends:
UDLcenter.org
Closing notes
Rate/review the show. Please consider rating or leaving a review for the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast on whatever service you use to listen to it on (iTunes, Stitcher, etc.). It is the best way to help others discover the show.
Give feedback. As always, I welcome suggestions for future topics or guests.
Subscribe. If you have yet to subscribe to the weekly update, you can receive a single email each week with the show notes (including all the links we talk about on the episode), as well as an article on either teaching or productivity.
| |||
30 Jul 2015 | The terror of teaching | 00:20:39 | |
Bonni Stachowiak shares some of her fears about teaching and ways that she often attempts to resolve them.
Podcast Notes
The Skillful Teacher, by Stephen Brookfield
Common fears
Quantity over quality
Confusion
Lacking balance
Being inadequate
Attempts to resolve fears
Carve out time for deeper connections
Use checklists and leverage Remind more
Ideal week template | Outsource (virtual assistants)/insource and say no more often
Essentialism: The disciplined pursuit of less, by Greg McKeown
Have evidence to the contrary (letters, emails, etc.)
Recommendations
Tommy Emmanuel's Tall Fidler
Closing notes
Rate/review the show. Please consider rating or leaving a review for the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast on whatever service you use to listen to it on (iTunes, Stitcher, etc.). It is the best way to help others discover the show.
Give feedback. As always, I welcome suggestions for future topics or guests.
Subscribe. If you have yet to subscribe to the weekly update, you can receive a single email each week with the show notes (including all the links we talk about on the episode), as well as an article on either teaching or productivity.
| |||
06 Aug 2015 | Practical instructional design | 00:39:17 | |
Edward Oneill joins me to talk about practical instructional design.
Podcast notes
Practical instructional design
Guest
Edward Oneill, Senior instructional designer at Yale.
Teach Better Podcast
I know a little bit about a lot of things. - Edward Oneill (and also Diana Krall, etc.)
What Edward's clients often need
intuitively-appealing ways of conceptualizing the learning process
a survey of the relevant tools & which fit their needs & capacities
Edward's special skill
...finding the points in the learning process where assessment and evaluation can be woven in seamlessly
Design approach of Edward's early courses
Successes
Made sure students had to do something every week
Ensured consistent deadlines
Weekly messages, creatively introducing them to that week
Failures
Disconnected topics, no second chances
You don't learn anything by doing it once. - Edward Oneill
Not opportunities for practice
I wanted to see it as the students' fault. It's so hard to get out of that [mindset]. - Edward Oneill
Biggest challenges in our teaching
We know our content, but we don't realize how tightly packed our knowledge is...
Edward's blog post about the Five stages of teaching
Peter Newbury - prior Teaching in Higher Ed guest on episode #053 shared about recall / connections
Rehearsal and elaboration
It's about stepping away from the center and helping [students] communicate with each other. - Edward Oneill
Methods for incorporating assessment and evaluation into the design of courses
Have shorter/smaller forms of assessment that aren't necessarily graded 100% of the time
Use their performance as your own assessment
Bonni shares about teaching with Ellen's Heads Up iPad game
Jeopardy game as form of reinforcement
Recommendations
Bonni recommends:
Parker Palmer quote
I am a teacher at heart, and there are moments in the classroom when I can hardly hold the joy. When my students and I discover uncharted territory to explore, when the pathway out of a thicket opens up before us, when our experience is illumined by the lightning-life of the mind—then teaching is the finest work I know. - Parker Palmer
Edward comments:
There is a special privilege in people letting you help them grow and change. - Edward Oneill
Edward recommends:
On Becoming a Person, by Carl Rogers
As a teacher, I need to see you as a unique learner. If I really try to understand you and try to help you grow, it is not so much about information transfer; it is a more humane kind of relationship. - Edward Oneill
When you're passionate about teaching and you focus on it and you try to improve - you do. - Edward Oneill
Closing notes
Rate/review the show. Please consider rating or leaving a review for the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast on whatever service you use to listen to it on (iTunes, Stitcher, etc.). It is the best way to help others discover the show.
Give feedback. As always, I welcome suggestions for future topics or guests.
Subscribe. If you have yet to subscribe to the weekly update, you can receive a single email each week with the show notes (including all the links we talk about on the episode), as well as an article on either teaching or productivity. | |||
13 Aug 2015 | All that is out of our control | 00:34:41 | |
Lee Skallerup Bessette joins me to talk about how to deal with and manage when stuff get's out of control in our lives, as well as how to address those situations when it happens to our students.
Podcast notes
Guest: Dr. Lee Skallerup Bessette
Faculty Instructional Consultant at the Center for the Enhancement of Learning and Teaching at the University of Kentucky
Dr. Skallerup on Twitter: @readywriting
Dr. Skallerup on Inside Higher Ed
Digital humanities
... the intersection between technology and what technology can help us do in the humanities. - Lee Skallerup Bessette
Big data, distance reading, social networking and network graphs
Digitization and archives
Making research, primary sources more available
Computational linguistics and mapping
Media studies
Digital pedagogy
We have unprecedented access to tools, to information, to interfaces, and the question that digital pedagogy attempts to answer is: 'So what? What do we do with them?' - Lee Skallerup Bessette
EdTech versus digital pedagogy
Often educational technology are almost commercially based, not to say that all of them are. - Lee Skallerup Bessette
Assignment to define digital pedagogy in 121 characters, an assignment for the Humanities Intensive Learning and Teaching 2015
Storify of the Humanities Intensive Learning and Teaching 2015 by Lee
Lee's digital pedagogy definition "Making, bending, and breaking. #hilt2015"
#hilt2015 Digital Pedagogy - Making, Bending, Breaking https://t.co/hBI5JSGQOB
— Lee Skallerup (@readywriting) July 27, 2015
Blogs at College Ready Writing on Insidehighered.com
Doing it Wrong
On Not Swimming
Reflections from a New Faculty Developer
Losing control during a course
Decided how to make this work, but learned some lessons along the way
Too much focus on "covering" the content
Disappointing results in students' un-essay projects
[When things happen outside your control], sometimes you've got to let go of some of the coverage [of course content] in order to accomplish the learning goals. - Lee Skallerup Bassette
Finding balance
Tends to happen in stages/seasons (especially regarding the kid's ages)
Husband just got tenure and those demands also needed to be taken into consideration
Blogging was one of the things that I used to try to maintain some sort of balance. It was something I did for me and my own sanity. - Lee Skallerup Bassette
Students losing control
Worked at diverse institutions
Had students research the resources available on campus to them during times of struggle
Cultural aspects to a death in the family
I saw my role as listening, so that they felt heard, and then guiding them to a place where they could be more effectively helped. - Lee Skallerup Bessette
Final advice
Sometimes it's ok to let go of some of the content. - Lee Skallerup Bessette
Recommendations
Lee recommends:
Cathy Davidson's blog post - Handicapped by being underimpaired: Teaching with Equality at the Core .
Note: Cathy was a Teaching in Higher Ed guest on episode #028
Perhaps the worst people to teach writing are the best writers. - Lee Skallerup Bessette
Bonni recommends:
Critical Digital Pedagogy Resources and Tools by Andrea Rehn
Lee inspires us for the start to the academic year:
Be hopeful. Be optimistic. And give your students the benefit of the doubt right from the start. - Lee Skallerup Bessette
Closing notes
Rate/review the show. Please consider rating or leaving a review for the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast on whatever service you use to listen to it on (iTunes, Stitcher, etc.). It is the best way to help others discover the show.
Give feedback. As always, I welcome suggestions for future topics or guests.
Subscribe. If you have yet to subscribe to the weekly update, you can receive a single email each week with the show notes (including all the links we talk about on the epi... | |||
20 Aug 2015 | Mindset | 00:30:01 | |
Rebecca Campbell shares about the power of mindset.
Podcast notes
Mindset
Guest: Dr. Rebecca Campbell
Recommended by Michelle Miller, from episode #026.
Associate Professor of Education and the Director and Department Chair for Academic Transition Programs at Northern Arizona University.
Promise me you'll always remember: You're braver than you believe, and stronger than you seem, and smarter than you think. - Christopher Robin
Background on mindset
Early introductions
Dissertation work on a piece: epistemological beliefs - where knowledge comes from.
"You either get it or you don't."
Growth vs fixed mindset
Isn't about teaching differently, but about framing the conversation differently. - Rebecca Campbell
Performance barriers
A better way of describing those things holding students back from academic achievement
How to help students achieve more of a growth mindset
Normalize help-seeking behavior: supplemental instruction, tutoring, writing centers, office hours, peers
Help seeking behavior is a big deal
The shift between high school and college is pretty big. - Rebecca Campbell
... students come and arrive with lots of incoming characteristics. None of these things have to be overcome, in order for them to be successful.
How they engage in learning. How they leverage help-seeking behaviors. << That's what defines student success.
These processes can be guided, coached, mentored and taught. - Rebecca Campbell
When we make the processes explicit, we make effort explicit and we are saying everyone can grow if you engage in the right processes. - Rebecca Campbell
We can guide students about the process of learning.
Recommendations
Bonni recommends:
TED Talk | Brain Stevenson: We need to talk about an injustice
Rebecca will be using his book for the freshman reading group this year:
Just Mercy, by Brian Stevenson
Chronicle blog post about the freshmen reading groups
Rebecca recommends:
Be kind to students. Don't make assumptions. - Rebecca Campbell
More on performance barriers
Reframing the conversation
Closing notes
Rate/review the show. Please consider rating or leaving a review for the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast on whatever service you use to listen to it on (iTunes, Stitcher, etc.). It is the best way to help others discover the show.
Give feedback. As always, I welcome suggestions for future topics or guests.
Subscribe. If you have yet to subscribe to the weekly update, you can receive a single email each week with the show notes (including all the links we talk about on the episode), as well as an article on either teaching or productivity.
| |||
27 Aug 2015 | Triumphs and failures – Day 1 | 00:28:44 | |
Bonni Stachowiak shares about the triumphs and failures in her first day of teaching this semester.
Podcast notes
Triumphs and failures of day 1
Thanks for the encouragement on the Terrors of Teaching episode #059
Mac Power Users episode on emergency preparedness
Content warnings
Rick rolls
You are an idiot
Failures
Treyvon trip up
Race is on my mind
Stephen Brookfield - The Skillful Teacher - micro-agressions
Peter Newbury on episode #053
Forgotten supplies
Planbook
Triumphs
Mostly kept pace between three sections of the same class
Kept my stuff together - cords, etc. Grid it system worked like a champ
Experience what my teaching is like, versus me talking about it (while still explaining while we go)
Continually working on just-in-time learning/demonstrations, when possible (tapes, SnagIt)
Recommendations
Bonni recommends:
[reminder] Share your own failures and triumphs [/reminder]
Closing notes
Rate/review the show. Please consider rating or leaving a review for the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast on whatever service you use to listen to it on (iTunes, Stitcher, etc.). It is the best way to help others discover the show.
Give feedback. As always, I welcome suggestions for future topics or guests.
Subscribe. If you have yet to subscribe to the weekly update, you can receive a single email each week with the show notes (including all the links we talk about on the episode), as well as an article on either teaching or productivity.
| |||
02 Sep 2015 | The weekly review | 00:28:32 | |
Bonni Stachowiak shares how she improves her productivity through a structured, weekly review.
Podcast notes
The Weekly Review
Getting Things Done, by David Allen
Your mind is for having ideas, not holding them. - David Allen
Having a system you trust
GTD Methodology Guides
LifeHacker's guide to the weekly review
GET CLEAR
Scannable
Inbox zero for all inboxes (physical and electronic)
Drafts app
Brain dump / sweep
GET CURRENT
Review task manager (I use OmniFocus)
Review calendar (last week, next 2 weeks)
Review Waiting
Review Project Lists
Review Checklists
GET CREATIVE
Review someday/Maybe List
Add new projects
Refine system
Recommendations
Bonni recommends:
Give a weekly review a try for one month... and share how it goes...
Closing notes
Rate/review the show. Please consider rating or leaving a review for the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast on whatever service you use to listen to it on (iTunes, Stitcher, etc.). It is the best way to help others discover the show.
Give feedback. As always, I welcome suggestions for future topics or guests.
Subscribe. If you have yet to subscribe to the weekly update, you can receive a single email each week with the show notes (including all the links we talk about on the episode), as well as an article on either teaching or productivity. | |||
09 Sep 2015 | Teaching lessons from Pixar | 00:41:41 | |
Josh Eyler, and Bonni Stachowiak talk about lessons in teaching from Pixar.
PODCAST NOTES
#065: Teaching lessons from Pixar
Guest:
Dr. Joshua Eyler, Director of the Center for Teaching Excellence at Rice University
Former guest on episode #016, Biology, the Brain, and Learning
Josh Eyler's Blog
Josh Eyler on Twitter
Josh’s Pixar course
The hero's journey
Loss in children’s media
WallE - environmental messages, religious messages/themes
Student-taught teaching, supported by Rice’s Center for Teaching Excellence
Heard on Twitter: Pixar favorites
Brian Croxall - Toy Story 2
https://twitter.com/briancroxall/status/641298742843441152
Shyama - Finding Nemo and The Incredibles
https://twitter.com/MedievalPhDemon/status/641254627082641408
Edna Mode
https://twitter.com/MedievalPhDemon/status/641258572383428608
Sandie Morgan
Monsters Inc.
https://twitter.com/sandiemorgan/status/641327082807672833
Cautionary note
Funny episode of Very Bad Wizards where they discuss the criticisms of the Inside Out movie, when it should have been clear to everyone that the movie wasn’t intended to actually represent how the brain works...
Opportunities to learn from our students are abundant
Finding Nemo
“If we only focus on [our role of imparting wisdom], we miss out on those moments when students can share something with us that opens our eyes to the material in a way we have never seen it before.” - Josh Eyler
Bonni shared about making assumptions on episode 63
Great teaching begins with a boundless passion for our subject
Ratatouille
Great teaching begins with a boundless passion for our subject
“Passion is sometimes an underrated part of what we do as teachers that can be really effective in reaching our students.” - Josh Eyler
Gradually reducing coaching helps students learn
Finding Nemo
David Merrill’s advice on instructional design: Instructional guidance should be gradually reduced
“In order to learn anything, we need to confront the failure of faulty knowledge, of faulty mental models. Students aren’t given enough opportunity to do that and when they are, the stakes are way too high for them.” - Josh Eyler
Mindset matters and so does proximal development
Toy Story
Mindset on episode #062 with Rebecca Campbell
James Lang on Mindset in The Chronicle
More than mindset: Josh’s writing on Vygotsky
“Understanding our intellectual development in more complex terms can help students wrap their minds around the learning process.” - Josh Eyler
The pursuit of knowledge can be heightened through curiosity
Constructivism
“Curiosity is one of our most deeply rooted mechanisms by which human beings learn.” - Josh Eyler
“It’s that curiosity - that desire to know - that we need to be cultivating in our classrooms.” Josh Eyler
The knife that solves the butter problem
Learning happens everywhere
Up
“The reality is that learning is a very big idea and it happens everywhere.” - Josh Eyler
“My wife has been very sick for the last year and I’ve learned quite a bit about courage from her. I learn so much from my three year-old daughter about how to tackle life with a toddler’s zeal.” - Josh Eyler
RECOMMENDATIONS
Bonni recommends:
Josh’s essays:
The Grief of Pain (mentioned on Vulnerability in Our Teaching)
Just Keep Swimming: A Semester of Teaching Pixar
Josh recommends:
The Pixar Theory
The Pixar Theory book
Closing notes
Rate/review the show. Please consider rating or leaving a review for the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast on whatever service you use to listen to it on (iTunes, Stitcher, etc.). It is the best way to help others discover the show.
Give feedback. As always, I welcome suggestions for future topics or guests.
Subscribe. If you have yet to subscribe to the weekly update, you can receive a single email each week with the show notes (including all the li... | |||
17 Sep 2015 | Making challenging subjects fun | 00:38:59 | |
Ainissa Ramirez shares about how and why to make challenging subjects fun.
Making challenging subjects fun
Guest: Dr. Ainissa Ramirez
http://www.ainissaramirez.com/bio.html
https://youtu.be/H5TNkGC4p3Q
“I learned that this thing of investigating and being curious around the world was the thing that people called science.” -Ainissa Ramirez
Early influences
The television show 321 contact
https://youtu.be/-4273oOYy7s
“By seeing my reflection in this young [African American] lady on television doing science, it gave me permission to say, ‘maybe I should be doing this.’”. -Ainissa Ramirez
Teachers as a big influence
Making learning fun
"When it comes to teaching, I try to come across as approachable." - Ainissa Ramirez
"I don't think I have the luxury to come off as extremely heady, because there's so much stuff that's going to prevent communication from [happening]." - Ainissa Ramirez
Service-oriented teaching approach
"I feel like it's my job to get you there. I can't get you there completely, but I can at least figure out where the gaps are and tell you where to head." - Ainissa Ramirez
More approaches for making learning fun
The importance of a hook
Experimentation vs memorization
Failure as data collection
"If we think of failures as data collection, they lose their sting." - Ainissa Ramirez
Materials research society
DemoWorks (a cook book for materials science experimentation with items you can buy at a local hardware store)
"It's the messy stuff where you learn." - Ainissa Ramirez
A call to get musicians involved in the call to make science fun
Adventures in giving a TED talk
Ainissa's TED talk
STEM education advocate via TED blog
"It's vulnerability that people really resonate with... If you're willing to be vulnerable, it is a position of power, because you'll connect with many more people." - Ainissa Ramirez
Great videos of Ainissa in action, getting people excited about science
Gina Barnett - Play the Part: Master Body Signals to Connect and Communicate for Business Success (helps you get out of your way)
Importance of having passion in our teaching
"Get back in touch with that thing that made you excited and then share that with other people. Be a beacon for that." - Ainissa Ramirez
Recommendations:
Bonni recommends:
Making invitations to learn (my experimentation with extending Remind this semester)...
Ainissa recommends:
Learn from Einstein - "If you can’t explain it to your Grandmother, you don't understand it." | |||
24 Sep 2015 | Personal knowledge management revisited | 00:28:30 | |
Bonni and Dave Stachowiak revisit the topic of personal knowledge management and discuss how our processes have evolved.
Podcast notes
Personal knowledge management revisited
James Lang's article in The Chronicle about Teaching in Higher Ed
Harold Jarche
PKM is a set of processes, individually constructed, to help each of us make sense of our world, work more effectively, and contribute to society. PKM means taking control of your professional development, and staying connected in the network era, whether you are an employee, self-employed, or between jobs.
Seek
Twitter
Peter Newbury on episode #053
Still Feedly and Newsify
Sense
Pinboard
Newsify to Pinboard
Email to Pinboard
PushPin app
Evernote lists (list of potential podcast guests, blog topics, conferences, journals)
Getting real about Pocket
Instapaper
Share
BufferApp
Canva
Deposit photos
Copyright video
Recommendations
Bonni recommends:
Mid-exam stretch break
Dave recommends:
TimeTrade
Closing notes
Rate/review the show. Please consider rating or leaving a review for the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast on whatever service you use to listen to it on (iTunes, Stitcher, etc.). It is the best way to help others discover the show.
Give feedback. As always, I welcome suggestions for future topics or guests.
Subscribe. If you have yet to subscribe to the weekly update, you can receive a single email each week with the show notes (including all the links we talk about on the episode), as well as an article on either teaching or productivity. | |||
01 Oct 2015 | Grading exams with integrity | 00:28:02 | |
Bonni and Dave Stachowiak share about ways to reduce the potential for introducing bias while grading exams.
PODCAST NOTES
Grading exams with Integrity
In today's episode, Dave Stachowiak and I share about ways to reduce the potential for introducing bias while grading exams.
Risks of bias in grading exams
Halo effect
Exam-based halo effect
Inflating favorite students' grades
Vikram David Amar calls "expectations effect"
Exhaustion factor
Techniques to reduce potential bias
Blind grading (sticky notes, LMS-based, etc.)
Grade by question, not exam
Inner-rater reliability practices
Block time for grading during peak energy hours
Be transparent and over-communicate your practices and rationale
*** Re-grade the earlier exams, to avoid what Dave spoke about...
Recommendations
Bonni recommends:
Asking your students what they want to listen to before class
Coming Home, by Leon Bridges
Dave recommends:
Coaching for Leaders episode #211: How to be productive and present
Closing notes
Rate/review the show. Please consider rating or leaving a review for the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast on whatever service you use to listen to it on (iTunes, Stitcher, etc.). It is the best way to help others discover the show.
Give feedback. As always, I welcome suggestions for future topics or guests.
Subscribe. If you have yet to subscribe to the weekly update, you can receive a single email each week with the show notes (including all the links we talk about on the episode), as well as an article on either teaching or productivity. | |||
08 Oct 2015 | Correcting mental models | 00:42:57 | |
Meg Urry shares approaches we can use to help our students correct inaccurate mental models and grasp complex information.
PODCAST NOTES:
Correcting inaccurate mental models
Guest: Dr. Meg Urry
Connect with Meg on Twitter
Interest in science
At some moment it clicked and I understood what it meant. Not only was that the moment that I started to like physics, but also the moment I realized everybody can learn physics if they get this key that unlocks the door. You don’t want to leave them in the same state that I was in… of wondering why the heck we’re doing this… You want people to get over that hump and suddenly see that this is really simple, straightforward, beautiful, and useful." - Meg Urry
Gender discrimination in the sciences
“It was very typical for me to be one of the only women in the class and the guys just sort of took over." - Meg Urry
“I always assumed that if someone claimed authority about something, that they must, indeed, know about it. It turns out lots of people do that all the time." - Meg Urry
“When I entered graduate school in 1977 at John Hopkins university, it had allowed women in as undergraduates only since 1970." - Meg Urry
It hasn’t been easy [for women]." - Meg Urry
People who feel different than the norm (who feel outside the tribe) have a harder time learning." - Meg Urry
Science faculty’s subtle gender biases favor male students
Moss-Racusin, C. A., Dovidio, J. F., Brescoll, V. L., Graham, M. J. and Handelsman, J. (2012) ‘Science faculty’s subtle gender biases favor male students’, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 109(41), p. 16474. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1211286109.
(Moss-Racusin et al., 2012)
Despite efforts to recruit and retain more women, a stark gender disparity persists within academic science. Abundant research has demonstrated gender bias in many demographic groups, but has yet to experimentally investigate whether science faculty exhibit a bias against female students that could contribute to the gender disparity in academic science. In a randomized double-blind study (n = 127), science faculty from research-intensive universities rated the application materials of a student—who was randomly assigned either a male or female name—for a laboratory manager position. Faculty participants rated the male applicant as significantly more competent and hireable than the (identical) female applicant. These participants also selected a higher starting salary and offered more career mentoring to the male applicant. The gender of the faculty participants did not affect responses, such that female and male faculty were equally likely to exhibit bias against the female student. Mediation analyses indicated that the female student was less likely to be hired because she was viewed as less competent. We also assessed faculty participants’ preexisting subtle bias against women using a standard instrument and found that preexisting subtle bias against women played a moderating role, such that subtle bias against women was associated with less support for the female student, but was unrelated to reactions to the male student. These results suggest that interventions addressing faculty gender bias might advance the goal of increasing the participation of women in science."(Moss-Racusin et al., 2012)
“Both the women and the men made this gender-biased judgment.” - Meg Urry
Early lessons in teaching
“I didn’t realize how hard these students were working.” - Meg Urry
The first year, I did straight lecture intro to physics, but, I realized something was missing.” - Meg Urry
Video of Eric Mazur sharing his teaching approaches
Article about Eric Mazur: Twilight of the lecture
Mazur Group
Making large classes interactive with Dr. Chrissy Spencer
"You listen to what the groups are saying and you can tell from that what their misperceptions are…" - Meg Urry
What they need to do is to explain it to someone else, | |||
15 Oct 2015 | Not yet-ness | 00:38:15 | |
Amy Collier joins me to talk about not yet-ness, geekiness, Jazzercise, Stevie Ray Vaughan, teaching, and learning.
Podcast notes
Guest: Dr. Amy Collier
Amy's blog
Connect with Amy on Twitter
Amy admits to some shenanigans
Stevie Ray Vaughan sings Mary Had a Little Lamb
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4cGphy7XeZk
The great thing about Lego is that it gives kids these tools and they don't have to be built a certain way." - Amy Collier
Vaughn builds Lego with instructions
https://www.youtube.com/watch?t=1&v=nMohv6GQBHc
Vaughn builds Lego without instructions
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bRXtAcHIGq4
Thoughts on education and teaching
You can work with students to do something related to what you're talking about in class, but they can find creative ways to do things you might not have predicted." - Amy Collier
...finding out what drives them, keeps them coming back, and helping them find their own voice - that's what education is about. That's where I find the most joy."
Not Yet-Ness
Amy's post on Not Yet-Ness
Jen Ross
Creating conditions for emergence
Living in that not yet-ness...
When you embrace not yet-ness, you are creating space for things to continue to evolve." - Amy Collier
By not creating space for those things, we end up creating a more mechanistic approach to education, rather than something that feels more human and more responsive to our humanity." - Amy Collier
Multidisciplinary examples
Domain of One's Own
They have this flexible interface while also connecting to a community
Messiness
How do we evolve the ways in which we understand what learning is?" - Amy Collier
More conversation is needed
Amy invites us to consider for which students not yet-ness works best and for which students might it cause some kind of disequilibrium that will cause them not to be successful in their educational experience?
More on not yet-ness
Audrey Watters: Privileged Voices in Education
Embodiment
Recommendations
Bonni recommends:
Doug McKee's advice: "Your job is to move them one step along a path. You can do that job no matter where they are when they enter your class."
Amy recommends:
Anne Lammot
“These are the words I want on my gravestone: that I was a helper, and that I danced." - Anne Lammot
We are human and our dance is one of the things that we bring to a human interaction." - Amy Collier
Closing notes
Rate/review the show. Please consider rating or leaving a review for the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast on whatever service you use to listen to it on (iTunes, Stitcher, etc.). It is the best way to help others discover the show.
Give feedback. As always, I welcome suggestions for future topics or guests.
Subscribe. If you have yet to subscribe to the weekly update, you can receive a single email each week with the show notes (including all the links we talk about on the episode), as well as an article on either teaching or productivity. | |||
22 Oct 2015 | Flipped out | 00:39:20 | |
Derek Bruff gives his unique take on the flipped classroom… what to have the students do before they enter the classroom and what to do once they get there.
PODCAST NOTES
Guest:
Dr. Derek Bruff
On Twitter
His blog
Ph.D., Mathematics, Vanderbilt University, 2003
Director, Center for Teaching, Vanderbilt University, November 2011 to present
Bruff, D. (2015). An indirect journey to indirect impact: From math major to teaching center director. In Rogers, K., & Croxall, B. (Eds.), #Alt-Academy. Online: MediaCommons
The flipped classroom
Shin, H. (2015) ‘Flipping the Flipped Classroom: The Beauty of Spontaneous and Instantaneous Close Reading’, The National Teaching & Learning Forum, 24(4), pp. 1–4. doi: 10.1002/ntlf.30027.
What are the experiences and activities we want to have our students engage in that will help them make sense of this material and have them do something interesting with it?" - Derek Bruff
Eric Mazur - learning as a 2 stage process
Transfer of information (during class)
Assimilation of that information by the students (outside the classroom)
A definition
A shift in time to that process
Class time spent on the assimilation process
The classic flipped classroom
Students encounter the info before class
Come to class already having exposure
Practice and feedback
Flipped Classroom resources
Vanderbilt flipping the classroom
FlippedClassroom.org
The Learning process
If students aren’t doing the pre-work before they come to class, the time together isn’t going to be well-served." - Derek Bruff
Concerns that the flipped classroom is doubling the work for the students.
First exposure
Effective Grading, by Barbara Walvoord
Schwartz, Daniel L. and Bransford, John D.(1998)'A Time For Telling',Cognition and Instruction,16:4,475 — 522
Diet coke and Mentos experiment
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iS2vG1o7Op4
This video is just an example of the Mentos/Diet Coke experiment; it isn't Derek's daughter
Creating times for telling
Students first need to encounter a problem, or a challenge, or something mysterious… and then that provides motivation to hear the 15 minute [explanation]." - Derek Bruff
Linear algebra course
Look at the board game Monopoly. What are the best places to buy on the board?
Markov chain modeling
Classes should do hands-on exercises before reading and video, Stanford researchers say. (2013, July 16). Retrieved 21 October 2015, from http://news.stanford.edu/news/2013/july/flipped-learning-model-071613.html
Even when you have defaults [in your teaching], you want to have good defaults..." - Derek Bruff
Peter Newbury on Teaching in Higher Ed talks about Peer Instruction
RECOMMENDATIONS
Bonni recommends:
Pictures as a means for reminders
Derek recommends:
The adventures of Babage and Lovelace | |||
29 Oct 2015 | How to use cognitive psychology to enhance learning | 00:33:37 | |
Robert Bjork on using cognitive psychology to enhance learning.
PODCAST NOTES
Guest:
Dr. Robert Bjork
Distinguished Professor of Psychology at UCLA
Learning and memory; the science of learning in the practice of teaching.
The Bjork Learning and Forgetting Lab
Common misperceptions
Belief that we work something like a man made recording device.
In almost every critical way, we differ from any such device." - Robert Bjork
How can it be that we have all these years of learning things and formal education and then end up really not understanding the process? You might just think by sheer trial and error during all of our educational experiences we would come to understand ourselves better than we apparently do." - Robert Bjork
We found all these different situations where the very same thing that produces forgetting then enhances learning if the material is re-studied again. Forgetting is a friend of learning." - Robert Bjork
The spacing effect
Delay in re-studying information
The environmental context
If you study it again, then you're better off to study it in a different place.
This is counter to the advice to study in a single place.
Retrieval practice
When you recall something, it does far more to reveal that you did indeed have it in your memory.
"Using our memories shapes our memory."- Robert Bjork
As we use our memories, the things we recall become more recallable. Things in competition with the memories become less recallable."- Robert Bjork
We should input less and output more."- Robert Bjork
Test yourself; retrieval practice
Low-stakes or no-stakes testing is key to optimizing learning."- Robert Bjork
"When I say they become inaccessible, they are absolutely not gone."- Robert Bjork
Interleaving
"In all those real-world situation where there's several related tasks or components to be learned, the tendency is to provide instruction in a block test. It seems to make sense to work on one thing at a time."- Robert Bjork
"We are finding that interleaving leads to much better long-term retention. It slows the gain in performance during the training process but, then leads to much better long-term performance."- Robert Bjork
"Forgetting is not entirely a negative process. There are a number of senses in which forgetting can be a good thing."- Robert Bjork
"The very same people who just performed better, substantially, with interleaving, almost uniformly said that blocking helped them learn better."- Robert Bjork
Desirable difficulties
They're difficulties in the sense that they pose challenges (increased frequency of errors) but they're desirable in that they foster the very goals of instruction (long-term retention and transfer of knowledge into new situations).
Interleaving vs blocking
Varying the conditions of learning and the examples you provide rather than keeping them constant
Spacing vs massing (cramming)
"The word desirable is key. There's a lot of ways to make things difficult that are bad."- Robert Bjork
The generation effect
Any time you can take advantage of what your students already know and give them certain cues so that they produce an answer, rather than you giving them an answer, you greatly enhance their long-term retention."- Robert Bjork
Incorporating generation is a desirable difficulty but people have to succeed at the generation. If they fail, it is no longer a desirable difficulty."- Robert Bjork
Errors are a key component of effective learning."- Robert Bjork
Successful forgetting
Memory relies on being in the same situation
Present it in a different context, produces longer-term learning
Encode the information differently; encoding variability
Retrieval is powerful, but depends on success to make it so
Many things are involved in remembering people's names." - Robert Bjork
Self regulated learning
The key is for us all to learn how to learn more effectively. | |||
05 Nov 2015 | Team-based learning | 00:37:52 | |
Jim Sibley shares about Team-based Learning.
Podcast Notes
Team-based learning has come up a few times on the show previously (Dr. Chrissy Spencer in Episode 25). Today, however, we dive deep into this teaching approach and discover powerful ways to engage students with Dr. Jim Sibley.
Guest: Jim Sibley
Jim Sibley is Director of the Centre for Instructional Support at the Faculty of Applied Science at University of British Columbia (UBC) in Vancouver, Canada. As a faculty developer, he has led a 12-year implementation of Team-Based Learning in Engineering and Nursing at UBC with a focus on large classroom facilitation. Jim has over 33 years of experience in faculty support, training, and facilitation, as well as managing software development at UBC. Jim serves on the editorial board of the Journal on Excellence in College Teaching.
Jim is an active member of the Team-Based Learning Collaborative and has served on its board and many of its sub-committees. He has mentored colleagues in the Team-Based Learning Collaborative’s Train the Trainer mentorship program. He is a co-author of the new book Getting Started with Team-Based Learning that was published by Stylus in July 2014. He is an international team-based learning consultant, having worked at schools in Australia, Korea, Pakistan, Lebanon, United States, and Canada to develop team-based learning programs.
Jim’s Book: Getting Started With Team-Based Learning
Jim's Website: www.learntbl.ca
More About Jim’s Personal Story:
The Stroke
Interview with Brainstream
Hiccups
Team-Based Learning Defined
A form of small-group learning that gets better with the bigger size of class you have. The idea is to discuss the question until you get to some sort of consensus.
Team-based learning could easily be called decision-based learning, because as soon as you make a decision, you can get clear and focused feedback. That’s what team-based learning is all about.
Think about a jury, where you need brainpower. Then imagine you’re presenting the verdict, and you look around and see five other juries, on the same case as you. You can bet they’ve put a lot of thought into the verdict, and if they all have a different verdict than you, you can bet they’re going to give feedback.
Team-based learning is not a prohibition on lecturing…but it’s in smaller amounts, and it’s for a reason like answering a student need or question. An activity will often make students wish they knew about something, then you teach it.
About Teams
The Achilles heel of group work are students at different levels of preparedness. Team discussion has a nice leveling effect.
Experience shows that smaller teams are the ones that have the most trouble
5-7 students is the ideal size for a group.
Big teams work because you’re asking them to make a decision, and that’s something teams are naturally good at.
Because team-based learning is focused on teaching with decisions, there is less opportunity for people to ride on the coattails of others.
Instructors don’t have to teach about team dynamics or decision-making processes because teams are naturally motivated to engage in good discussion (if their conclusion is different than every other group, there will naturally be a lot of feedback).
The Team-Building Process:
The instructor builds teams, trying to add diversity to each team.
The instructor of a large class can do an online survey for diversity of assets.
Even freshman classes can have diversity (different people are better at different subjects).
CATME has an online team maker function, as does GRumbler.
Should students ever elect their own teams?
Student-selected teams are typically a disaster, mostly because they’re a social entity, and you tend to pick people that are the same as you.
It does work when students are passionate about the project.
Team-based learning requires commitment:
| |||
12 Nov 2015 | The public and the private in scholarship and teaching | 00:38:23 | |
Podcast Notes
On today’s show, Dr. Kris Shaffer talks about two topics: public scholarship and student privacy.
Guest: Kris Shaffer
Website: kris.shaffermusic.com
Twitter: @krisshaffer
GitHub: kshaffer
We don’t have a nice, fuzzy boundary between completely private and completely public like we used to.
—Kris Shaffer
We don’t advance human knowledge by publishing something and putting it inside a fence and making it hard to get.
—Kris Shaffer
Social media is about more than just projecting my identity online; it’s about cultivating a community online.
—Kris Shaffer
And by raising a question, sometimes we advance knowledge more than by simply stating a fact.
—Kris Shaffer
Links:
www.openmusictheory.com
www.hybridpedagogy.com
Open-source scholarship on Hybrid Pedagogy
Recommendations:
Bonni:
Zotero tutorials: http://universitytalk.org/zotero/
N. Cifuentes-Goodbody on Twitter: https://twitter.com/doctornerdis
Kris:
CitizenFour: A documentary about Edward Snowden, streaming on HBO. Watch trailer here.
Hello, by Adele: Watch here. | |||
19 Nov 2015 | Celebrating 75 Episodes | 00:41:17 | |
On today’s episode, ten prior guests, as well as Dave and I, come together to celebrate 75 episodes of Teaching in Higher Ed. We look back at episodes that have had a big impact on us, take a listener question, and make recommendations.
Guests:
1) Sandie Morgan
The Eight Second Rule - Wait eight seconds to give students a change to respond
https://teachinginhighered.com/6
2) Michelle Miller
Rebecca Campbell’s - Don’t refer to students as children
https://teachinginhighered.com/62
3) Scott Self theproductivenerd.org
Rebecca Campbell - Normalize help seeking behavior by being transparent with our students
https://teachinginhighered.com/62
Mail App add-on: Act-On
4) Josh Eyler (two coming up both mentioning Cameron Hunt McNabb)
Cameron Hunt McNabb - How to bring more creative assignments to students
https://teachinginhighered.com/24
5) Janine Utell
Cameron Hunt McNabb - Creative and critical thinking and “backwards design"
https://teachinginhighered.com/24
6) Jim Lang
Amy Collier - Not-yet-ness
https://teachinginhighered.com/70
Article in the Chronicle mentioning more of Jim’s recommendations
7) Doug McKee
Zero inbox
https://teachinginhighered.com/56
The weekly review
https://teachinginhighered.com/64
Recommendation: Pinboard for read-it-later service
Pinboard
Pinner App*
Paperback Web App
8) Jeff Hittenberger
Appreciates Bonni’s vulnerability about her own teaching, that she's willing to admit her own mistakes.
Questions from a Listener:
Question: When seeking a professorship, how do you stand out from the crowd? Or, how do you find opportunities to the things you love in other career paths?
Peter Newbury from UCSD, who appeared on Episode 53, answers the question.
Recommendations:
Dave recommends:
Teaching in Higher Ed podcasts:
Guest: Anissa Ramirez
https://teachinginhighered.com/66
Guest: Meg Urey
https://teachinginhighered.com/69
Beth Buelow’s podcast:
The Introvert Entrepreneur Podcast
Episode 93: Kevin Kruse and The 15 Secrets Successful People Know About Time Management
Bonni recommends:
Podcast:
http://verybadwizards.com/episodes/75
Books:
What the Best College Teachers Do by Ken Bain
Cheating Lessons by James M. Lang
| |||
25 Nov 2015 | Making online courses work | 00:38:02 | |
In today’s episode, Doug McKee joins me to share about online courses. His Introduction to Econometrics class is taught about as close to an in-person as you can get, but without being bound by geographic barriers.
Guest: Doug McKee
Associate Chair and Senior Lecturer of Economics at Yale
http://economics.yale.edu/people/douglas-mckee
Website: http://dougmckee.net/
Teach Better blog and podcast: http://teachbetter.co/
Personal Blog: www.highvariance.net
Twitter: https://twitter.com/TeachBetterCo
Quotes regarding online courses:
We weren’t lowering the price, but we were lowering the geographic barriers.
–Doug McKee
You don’t need a big film crew, and snazzy digital effects; you just need to be clear, and communicate it well.
–Doug McKee
Students show up, and they don’t have any questions. What I do is come with questions.
–Doug McKee
Links:
Udacity: https://www.udacity.com/
Zoom: http://zoom.us/
Examity: http://examity.com/
Explain Everything iPad app: App Store Link*
Recommendations:
Bonni recommends:
Sherlock: IMDB
Doug recommends:
Poster sessions with students: Read blog post here
CS50 course: Syllabus
TeachBetter podcast: episode with David Malan | |||
03 Dec 2015 | Teaching What You Don’t Know | 00:39:01 | |
Today I welcome to the show Dr. Terese Huston to talk about teaching what you don’t know.
Guest: Therese Huston
Faculty Development Consultant, Seattle University
Author: Teaching What You Don’t Know
Seattle University faculty page: here
Personal page: www.theresehustonauthor.com
Twitter: @ThereseHuston
Therese Huston received her B.A. from Carleton College and her M.S. and Ph.D. in Cognitive Psychology from Carnegie Mellon University. She was also awarded a prestigious post-doctoral fellowship with the Center for the Neural Basis of Cognition. Therese was the Founding Director of CETL (now the Center for Faculty Development) and served as Director from 2004 to 2010. Drawing upon her background in cognitive science, she has spent the past decade helping smart faculty make better decisions about their teaching. Her first book, Teaching What You Don't Know, was published by Harvard University Press (2009).
Quotes
If I could go back to my 28-year-old self and give her one piece of advice, it would be to talk to a content expert.
-Therese Huston
I wish I had offered to take an expert to coffee once a week to brainstorm what I should be teaching.
-Therese Huston
Teaching is more than just knowing every single detail there is to know; teaching is much more about stimulating learning.
-Therese Huston
You have to be thinking, “I’ve got to do something that I know well, but if I’m going to be the best teacher I can be to my students I’ve also got to teach them some things that are perhaps outside of my comfort zone.”
-Therese Huston
No one can be an expert on this material, and what I’m going to be doing is to always look for the most recent, most important topic that I can be teaching you.
-Therese Huston
If I’m doing a good job up here, I’m going to be pushing the boundaries of what I know.
-Therese Huston
Notes
Teaching what you don’t know looks at it from two perspectives:
A subject you don’t know
A group of students you don’t understand
Things unique to people who experience minimal anxiety when teaching outside of their expertise:
They had a choice about whether or not to teach the subject
They addressed the "imposter issue" with their students
They embraced a teaching philosophy that emphasizes the idea: "I don’t need to master the material”
You have just been assigned to teach a course outside of our expertise. What are the most important steps to take in preparing to teach it?
Tell someone (deal with the imposter issue)
Find five syllabi for similar courses online
Get a timer and start practicing preparing for your class in set chunks of time.
Recommendations
Bonni recommends:
Therese’s book: Teaching What you Don’t Know*
Sonos speakers : See on Amazon*
Therese recommends:
Licorice tea: See on Amazon*
Book: Thanks for the Feedback: The Science and the Art of Receiving Feedback*
Book: Difficult Conversations*
Podcast about Book: Coaching for Leaders: Episode 143 | |||
10 Dec 2015 | The power of checklists | 00:24:59 | |
Today on episode #078 of Teaching in Higher Ed: The power of checklists
Book: The Checklist Manifesto by Atul Gawande
Good checklists, on the other hand are precise. They are efficient, to the point, and easy to use even in the most difficult situations. They do not try to spell out everything--a checklist cannot fly a plane. Instead, they provide reminders of only the most critical and important steps--the ones that even the highly skilled professional using them could miss. Good checklists are, above all, practical.
―Atul Gawande
We don’t like checklists. They can be painstaking. They’re not much fun. But I don’t think the issue here is mere laziness. There’s something deeper, more visceral going on when people walk away not only from saving lives but from making money. It somehow feels beneath us to use a checklist, an embarrassment. It runs counter to deeply held beliefs about how the truly great among us—those we aspire to be—handle situations of high stakes and complexity. The truly great are daring. They improvise. They do not have protocols and checklists. Maybe our idea of heroism needs updating.
―Atul Gawande
Definitions
A to-do list is what to do, a checklist is how to do it:
Article on lessdoing.com
A checklist is a documented process for something you’ll do daily; a to-do list is something you assembled yourself that you need to do at a certain point of your day:
Article on alphaefficiency.com
Philip Crawford, software entrepreneur on Quora, gives his definition:
Question on Quora
Natalie Houston on checklists
A checklist ensures communication and confirmation among members of a team and catches errors.
—Natalie Houston
There are Two kinds of checklists:
Read-do: read each step and perform the step, checking off as you go (like following a recipe)
Do-confirm: perform steps of the task from memory until you reach a defined pause point when you confirm that things have happened.
Advice for making checklists:
Keep it simple
Make it usable - need to be able to check things off
Try it out and edit as necessary
Read her article about checklists HERE
Checklist on Checklists
Atul Gawande lists things to consider when making a checklist:
You you have clear, concise objectives
Have you considered adding items that will improve communication among team members
When crafting the list, is the font sans serif?
Have you trialled the list with frontline users? And have you modified the checklist in response to repeated trials?
Class Checklist
See my class checklist HERE on Evernote. (I currently use an OmniFocus project template by Curt Clifton
TIHE Article: Use checklists to teach more effectively and efficiently
TIHE Article: Checklist for class planning efficiency
Article by the late Grant Wiggins: How do you plan? On templates and instructional planning
Recommendations:
Book: The Checklist Manifesto* by Atul Gawande
Task planning system: Trello | |||
17 Dec 2015 | The potential impact of stereotype threat | 00:39:29 | |
On today’s episode, I speak with Dr. Robin Paige about the potential impact of stereotype threat inside and outside of our classrooms.
Quote
When dealing with stereotypes, one of the things we can do on our campuses or in our classrooms is create a space of accountability but without saying “You’re a bad person for thinking that.”
—Robin Paige
Resources
Academic Paper by Claude Steele and Joshua Aronson: Stereotype Threat and the Intellectual Test Performance of African Americans
Recommendations
Bonni:
Podcast: This American Life episode 573: Status Update
Book: Between the World and Me* by Ta-Nehisi Coates
Course: 5 days to your best year ever course with Michael Hyatt*
Robin:
Book: Whistling Vivaldi* by Claude Steele
Blog: http://thesocietypages.org/socimages/
Tip: Use food to create a stereotype-safe environment because it becomes a thing people have in common. | |||
23 Dec 2015 | International Higher Education in the 21st Century | 00:39:25 | |
On today’s episode, I speak with Dr. Mary Gene Saudelli about developing curriculum for international higher education in the 21st Century.
Guest: Dr. Mary Gene Saudelli
Author, The Balancing Act: International Higher Education in the 21st Century*
LinkedIn
Book on Amazon*
Mary Gene is an assistant professor and director of the Center for Teaching and Learning at the University of Calgary in Quatar. More
Quote:
I create a situation where I ask my students to think about things from multiple perspectives, but also allow their voices to be honored.
–Mary Gene Saudelli
How Dubai has Changed
Recommendations
Bonni:
Book: Transitions: Making Sense of Life's Changes* by William Bridges
Book: The Way Of Transition: Embracing Life's Most Difficult Moments* by William Bridges
Mary Gene:
In difficult circumstances, stop to consider your own thoughts: When you have extreme positions, does that extreme thought mirror who you want to be as a person and what you want to believe? | |||
31 Dec 2015 | The ethics of plagiarism detection | 00:35:57 | |
Stephanie Vie discusses the ethical considerations of using Turnitin and other automatic plagiarism checkers.
Guest: Stephanie Vie
twitter: @digiret
email: Stephanie.Vie@ucf.edu
Academia: https://ucf.academia.edu/StephanieVie
Stephanie Vie researches the construction of digital identities in social media spaces as well as critical approaches to composing technologies such as plagiarism detection services. Her research has appeared in First Monday; Computers and Composition; Computers and Composition Online; Kairos: Rhetoric, Technology, and Pedagogy; and The Community Literacy Journal.
She is a Reviews Section Co-editor with Kairos; a Project Director with the Computers and Composition Digital Press; and an editorial board member of the undergraduate research journal Young Scholars in Writing.
Her doctorate from the University of Arizona (2007) is in Rhetoric, Composition, and the Teaching of English, and her dissertation, “Engaging Others in Online Social Networking Sites: Rhetorical Practices in MySpace and Facebook,” examined the use of privacy settings in these sites within a Foucauldian framework. More
Quote
The more moments you can take from an active, engaged classroom and bring them into your assignments, that’s going to significantly help reduce plagiarism.
-Stephanie Vie
Recommendations
Bonni:
Go for a walk. It’s easy to forget how great it feels walk.
Stephanie:
Book: My Freshman Year* by Rebecca Nathan
App: Wunderlist for creating to-do lists
App: Toggl for time tracking
Are You Enjoying the Show?
Rate/review the show. Please consider rating or leaving a review for the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast on whatever service you use to listen to it on (iTunes, Stitcher, etc.). It is the best way to help others discover the show.
Give feedback. As always, I welcome suggestions for future topics or guests.
Subscribe. If you have yet to subscribe to the weekly update, you can receive a single email each week with the show notes (including all the links we talk about on the episode), as well as an article on either teaching or productivity. | |||
07 Jan 2016 | Practical program development | 00:35:12 | |
Doug Grove discusses practical program development: what works and what doesn’t when building learning experiences for today’s students.
Quotes
We see a lot of benefits of synchronous class sessions, but we’re not sure every student wants that. There’s a tradeoff with flexibility.
-Doug Grove
One of the mistakes we made when developing some of these programs was trying to be all things to all students.
-Doug Grove
Every program is a little different. One of the bigger mistakes we’ve made was we just took our existing structure and placed it on any new program.
-Doug Grove
Education Technology Tools
Adobe Connect web conferencing software
Dragon Naturally Speaking for speech-to-text
Recommendations
Bonni:
Batch processing on the computer. Do “like work” all at one time.
Doug:
Book: Start with Why by Simon Sinek
Coaching for Leaders Episode 223: Start with Why Featuring Simon Sinek
Simon Sinek’s TED talk | |||
14 Jan 2016 | Talking to students about vocation | 00:36:08 | |
Tim Clydesdale talks about how we can all better support our students in navigating college and beyond by talking about vocation.
Quotes
[Vocation] is about the type of life you want to lead and the type of person you want to be.
—Tim Clydesdale
It may be that the broader sense of who you are isn’t being fully expressed in your work but it’s being expressed in many other places: in your volunteer work, or your care for a family member.
—Tim Clydesdale
Vocation is a much better way to talk to students [than career] because it captures much more of the breadth of life as it’s really lived.
—Tim Clydesdale
Resources
Article: Inside Higher Ed
Organization: Council of Independent Colleges
The Purposeful Graduate*
What are some of the mistakes universities make when attempting to develop effective programs to facilitate more conversation about vocation?
Design a program that wasn’t organic to the campus
Hiring people who didn’t have a high emotional intelligence
Recommendations
Bonni:
Keep a list of ideas for each class you have been scheduled to teach.
Tim:
Good food helps with conversation. Use a slow cooker (Crock-Pot) with a manual switch. This allows you to cook but also be engaged in conversation. | |||
21 Jan 2016 | Helping students discover interesting research topics | 00:31:30 | |
Doug Leigh on helping graduate students come up with interesting research topics.
Dr. Doug Leigh earned his PhD in instructional systems from Florida State University, where he served as a technical director of projects with various local, state, and federal agencies. His current research, publication, and lecture interests concern cause analysis, organizational trust, leadership visions, and dispute resolution. He is coeditor of The Handbook of Selecting and Implementing Performance Interventions (Wiley, 2010) and coauthor of The Assessment Book (HRD Press, 2008), Strategic Planning for Success (Jossey-Bass, 2003) and Useful Educational Results (Proactive Publishing, 2001).
Leigh served on a two-year special assignment to the National Science Foundation, is two-time chair of the American Evaluation Association's Needs Assessment Topic Interest Group, and past editor-in-chief of the International Society for Performance Improvement's (ISPI) monthly professional journal, Performance Improvement. A lifetime member of ISPI, he is also a member of the editorial board for its peer-reviewed journal, Performance Improvement Quarterly. More
QUOTES
Some of the differences between doctoral work and master’s work have to do with the amount of original data collection.
—Doug Leigh
I try to set up the expectation that when a dissertation chair is doing a good job, they’re giving a lot of feedback, and that may involve several iterations of drafting.
—Doug Leigh
Though we call them defenses, they’re not interrogations. They’re not about getting lined up to be battered with questions to prove your worth before a student is allowed into the club.
—Doug Leigh
Students who can avoid just reaffirming what’s already known are able to position themselves to do research that sticks with them as a passion.
—Doug Leigh
Resources
Murray Davis's "That's Interesting!" article at Philosophy of the Social Sciences (paywalled)
Science's 2015 Breakthrough of the Year (free), see the runners-up here (paywalled)
Doug also shares his reworking of Davis’s index that he developed for his students, along with representative examples ...
Interestingness via Organizing or Disorganizing: things which have been thought to be similar are truly dissimilar, or that things believe to be dissimilar are actually similar. Example: John A Bargh's "The Four Horsemen of Automaticity: Awareness, Intention, Efficiency, and Control in Social Cognition"
Interestingness by Composing or Decomposing: what seems to be varied and complex is really better understood simply, or something that is currently understood to be simple is actually elaborate, distinct, independent, heterogeneous, and diverse. Example: Quanta's "The New Laws of Explosive Networks"
Interestingness by Abstraction or Particularization: that which people assume are experienced by just a certain few are actually shared by all, or vice versa. Example: NYT's "Mass Murderers Fit Profile, as Do Many Others Who Don’t Kill"
Interestingness by Globalizing or Localizing: what seems to be a global truth is really just a more local one, or that something thought to be experienced just locally is actual more global. Example: Pew Research Center's Views on Science poll
Interestingness by Stabilizating or Destabilizating: what seems to be stable and unchanging is actually unstable and changing, or things thought to be unstable are surprisingly stabilit and even permanent. Example: BBC's "The Libet Experiment: Is Free Will Just an Illusion?" (video)
Interestingness by Effective or Ineffective Functioning: some aspect of the world that was believed to function effectively is actually ineffective, or vice versa. Example: Derek Muller's "Khan Academy and the Effectiveness of Science Videos" (video)
Interestingness by Re-assessment of Costs or Benefits: what seems to be bad is in reality good, or what was believed to be good is actually bad. | |||
28 Jan 2016 | Action science – Relevant teaching and active learning | 00:36:12 | |
In today’s episode, Dr. Bill Robertson introduces us to “action science” and the ways he is making his teaching relevant, creating opportunities for the most active kind of learning I can imagine.
Guest: Bill Robertson
Dr. Skateboard
Bill has a Ph.D. in Education and has been a skateboarder for over thirty-five years. He has done hundreds of demonstrations nationally and internationally in festivals, events and in academic settings.
Bill has been an educator for over twenty years. His academic areas of expertise are science education, curriculum development, and technology integration. He also teaches and does research in the areas of problem-based learning and action science.
Find him online:
Linkedin
Dr. Skateboard Website
Twitter
skateboard videos
Quotes
People who are learning a second language may know exactly what they’re talking about but might not be able to express themselves.
—Bill Robertson
The things that made me successful in skateboarding made me successful in education.
—Bill Robertson
I realized there was a lot of physics and concepts in these sports that can be expressed and could be engaging and motivating for the students.
—Bill Robertson
The skills [students] are really good at can apply to something like education … if they can master something, they can probably master something else.
—Bill Robertson
You have to find ways to integrate the interests of your learners into your curriculum.
—Bill Robertson
Resources
Teaching in Higher Ed episode 015: How to get students to participate in discussion, with Stephen Brookfield
Teaching in Higher Ed post: Sticky notes as a teaching tool
Recommendations:
From listener Pamela:
Book: Training in Motion* by Mike Kuczala. Emphasizes the importance of movement for learning (and not just regular exercise)
Bill:
Non-profit organization: Skateistan. Using skateboarding as a tool for empowerment, with a large commitment for young women in Afghanistan, Cambodia and South Africa.
Educational Portal: Edutopia. Dedicated to transforming K-12 education.
Are You Enjoying the Show?
Rate/review the show. Please consider rating or leaving a review for the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast on whatever service you use to listen to it on (iTunes, Stitcher, etc.). It is the best way to help others discover the show.
Give feedback. As always, I welcome suggestions for future topics or guests.
Subscribe. If you have yet to subscribe to the weekly update, you can receive a single email each week with the show notes (including all the links we talk about on the episode), as well as an article on either teaching or productivity. | |||
04 Feb 2016 | Get It Together | ||
Bonni shares strategies to help “get it together” during stressful times of the semester.
Quotes
Never succumb to the temptation to say you don’t have enough time to stop.
—Bonni Stachowiak
Listening might be the most important part of our jobs.
—Bonni Stachowiak
Sometimes we’re so worried about entertaining our students that we miss the opportunities for them to have creative insights of their own.
—Bonni Stachowiak
Celebration.
Celebrate what you are doing.
Song: Celebration by Kool & The Gang
Watch on Youtube
Stop. Collaborate. And listen.
Stop spinning, collaborate, and listen (which is maybe the most important part of our jobs).
Song: Ice Ice Baby by Vanilla Ice
Watch on Youtube
List of projects.
Create actionable names for your project tasks and use a system you trust.
Song: Are You Gonna Kiss Me or Not by Thompson Square
Watch video on Youtube
Back to Life … Back to reality
Get real with your aspirations
Song: Back To Life by Soul II Soul
Watch Video on Youtube
Recommendations:
Mobile App: Due
Website: http://www.dueapp.com/
Find on the App Store* | |||
11 Feb 2016 | What the best digital teachers do | 00:36:53 | |
On today’s episode, I talk with Sean Michael Morris about what the best digital teachers do.
Sean Michael Morris,
Digital Teacher and Pedagogue
www.seanmichaelmorris.com
Twitter: @slamteacher
Sean is a digital teacher and pedagogue, with experience especially in networked learning, MOOCs, digital composition and publishing, collaboration, and editing. He’s been working in digital teaching and learning for 15 years. His work as a pioneer in the field of Critical Digital Pedagogy is founded in the philosophy of Paulo Freire, and finds contemporary analogues in the work of Howard Rheingold, Cathy N. Davidson, Dave Cormier, and Jesse Stommel. He is committed to engaging audiences in critical inspection of digital technologies, and to turning a social justice lens upon education.
Quotes
There are no principles that I’m aware of in instructional design that allow for the human to creep in; it’s very mechanistic.
–Sean Michael Morris
I believe that teaching isn’t method; teaching is intuitive.
–Sean Michael Morris
Every time we step into a classroom or design a new course … we have to step back and realize we don’t know anything, that each time it is new.
–Sean Michael Morris
I approach everything by asking, “What is it that you’re wanting to get out of this?” and, “What is it that you want your students to get from this?”
–Sean Michael Morris
Recommendations
Bonni:
The courses at digitalpedagogylab.com/courses
TIHE Episode 57: Teaching with Twitter
Sean
Book: A Pedagogy for Liberation* by Paulo Friere and Ira Shor
Book: The Qualitative Manifesto* by Norman K. Denzin
Book: Complexity Theory and the Philosophy of Education* by Mark Mason
Book: Savvy* by Ingrid Law
Twitter user: Simon Ensor (@sensor63)
Twitter user: Pat Lockley (@patlockley)
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18 Feb 2016 | Top five gadgets for teaching | 00:38:22 | |
On this week’s episode, Dave and I share our top five gadgets for teaching.
Guest: Dave Stachowiak
Bonni’s twitter: @bonni208
Dave’s twitter: @davestachowiak
1. Wireless presentation Remote
Commonly referred to as a “wireless presenter”*
Logitech remotes* are reliable and fairly inexpensive
Video Downloader
2. iPad Pro
iPad Pro specs
iPad Pro on Amazon*
iPad pro case from Sena
3. Apple Pencil
Apple Pencil
4. Apple Watch
use as a non-distracting notifier
use as a timer
can seamlessly record and Send reminders to OmniFocus
TIHE article about using Due app
5. Web Cams with Zoom app
Logitech web cam with 1080p *
Sign up for Zoom*
Recommendations
Bonni: iPad app for pencasting: Doceri*
Dave: Cloud database software: Airtable* | |||
25 Feb 2016 | The research on course evaluations | 00:43:54 | |
On today’s show, Betsy Barre joins me to share about the research on course evaluations.
Guest: Betsy Barre
Assistant Director of the Center for Teaching Excellence at Rice University
After making the move to Rice in 2012, she was able to pursue her interest in undergraduate pedagogy by working with students and faculty in Rice's newly developed Program in Writing and Communication. In this role, she taught a series of disciplinary-based first-year seminars and contributed to the PWC's faculty development programming for those teaching first-year writing courses. And in July of 2014, she began her current position as Assistant Director of Rice's newly established Center for Teaching Excellence. More
Quotes
One of the biggest complaints faculty have about student evaluations is that it’s not a reflection of teaching effectiveness.
–Betsy Barre
Just because a student likes a class doesn’t necessarily mean they’re learning.
–Betsy Barre
It turns out that the harder your course is, the higher evaluations you get.
–Betsy Barre
If students think the work is valuable and something that’s helping them learn, you can give up to twenty extra hours a week of work outside of class and students will still give you higher evaluations.
–Betsy Barre
When we want to know if students have learned, one of the best things to do is just ask them if they’ve learned.
–Betsy Barre
Part of the movement in student evaluations now is to ask questions about learning, rather than questions about what the faculty members are doing.
–Betsy Barre
Notes
Article: Do Student Evaluations of Teaching Really Get an "F"?
Screencast: Student Ratings of Instruction: A Literature Review
RateMyProfessor Analysis: Gendered Language in Teaching Evaluations
Betsy’s Six Most Surprising Insights about Course Evaluations
Taken from her article “Do Student Evaluations of Teaching Really Get an “F”?”
Yes, there are studies that have shown no correlation (or even inverse correlations) between the results of student evaluations and student learning. Yet, there are just as many, and in fact many more, that show just the opposite.
As with all social science, this research question is incredibly complex. And insofar as the research literature reflects this complexity, there are few straightforward answers to any questions. If you read anything that suggests otherwise (in either direction), be suspicious.
Despite this complexity, there is wide agreement that a number of independent factors, easily but rarely controlled for, will bias the numerical results of an evaluation. These include, but are not limited to, student motivation, student effort, class size, and discipline (note that gender, grades, and workload are NOT included in this list).
Even when we control for these known biases, the relationship between scores and student learning is not 1 to 1. Most studies have found correlations of around .5. This is a relatively strong positive correlation in the social sciences, but it is important to understand that it means there are still many factors influencing the outcome that we don't yet understand. Put differently, student evaluations of teaching effectiveness are a useful, but ultimately imperfect, measure of teaching effectiveness.
Despite this recognition, we have not yet been able to find an alternative measure of teaching effectiveness that correlates as strongly with student learning. In other words, they may be imperfect measures, but they are also our best measures.
Finally, if scholars of evaluations agree on anything, they agree that however useful student evaluations might be, they will be made more useful when used in conjunction with other measures of teaching effectiveness.
Recommendations
Bonni
Think about how you administer the student evaluations.
Check out her Betsy’s screencast (see above).
Betsy
Design your own evaluation instrument and distribute it yourself, | |||
03 Mar 2016 | Take-aways from the Lilly Conference | 00:37:11 | |
On this week's episode, Todd Zakrajsek and I discuss our key take-aways from the 2016 Lilly Conference.
Guest: Todd Zakrajsek
Conference Director, Lilly Conferences California
Twitter: @ToddZakrajsek
www.lillyconferences.com
Dr. Todd Zakrajsek, Ph.D., is the former Executive Director of the Academy of Educators in the School of Medicine and an Associate Professor in the Department of Family Medicine at UNC-Chapel Hill. Dr. Zakrajsek is the immediate past Executive Director of the Center for Faculty Excellence at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and prior to his work at UNC, he was the Inaugural Director of the Faculty Center for Innovative Teaching at Central Michigan University and the founding Director of the Center for Teaching and Learning at Southern Oregon University, where he also taught in the psychology department as a tenured associate professor. Dr. Zakrajsek also sits on two educational related boards and several editorial boards for journals in the area of teaching and learning, is an international speaker requested regularly for keynote presentations and campus workshops, and has published widely on the topic of effective teaching and student learning.
Todd was previously featured on Episode 47: Developing metacognition skills in our students
See list of Bonni’s resources from the Lilly Conference: www.teachigninhighered.com/lillycon
Quotes
Teaching should be more than telling.
–Todd Zakrajsek
If a worker knows why they’re doing something, they’re much better at doing it than if it’s a mystery to them. It’s the same thing in teaching.
–Todd Zakrajsek
Any time we start looking at these concepts and saying, “Should we do this, or that? Do the students fall into this category or the other category?” we lose the richness of all the individuals in between.
–Todd Zakrajsek
Lecturing alone simply does not return the same kind of advances you get when you add in engaged, active kinds of learning.
–Todd Zakrajsek
Resources
https://twitter.com/Bali_Maha
https://twitter.com/vconnecting (virtual connecting)
Video: Father Guido Sarducci's Five Minute University
Stephen Brookfield featured on Episode 15: teachinginhighered.com/15
Taxonomy of Significant Learning by Dee Fink
The Carl Wieman Project
From The Onion: Parents of nasal learners demand odor-based curriculum
Recommendations
Bonni
Presentation polling app: Sli.do*
Todd
Book: Teaching for Learning: 101 Intentionally Designed Educational Activities to Put Students on the Path to Success* | |||
10 Mar 2016 | Choose your own adventure assessment | 00:16:43 | |
On this week's episode, I share my experiences with "choose your own adventure" assessments.
Background on choose your own adventure assessments:
TIHE Episode 58: Universal design for learning
What is it?
TIHE blog post: Choose your own adventure learning (Part 1)
TIHE blog post: Choose your own adventure learning (Part 2)
Resources
App: Scannable* by Evernote
Recommendation
Peter Felten (@pfeltenNC) from the Center for Engaged Learning at Elon University shared on Twitter: Scholarship of Teaching and Learning Annotated Literature Database
Are You Enjoying the Show?
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Give feedback. As always, I welcome suggestions for future topics or guests.
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17 Mar 2016 | Small Teaching | 00:37:35 | |
On this week's episode, James Lang shares about his book: Small Teaching
Quotes
What I started to notice was that the coaches who paid attention to these little things, and focused on small fundamentals, tended to do a lot better than the teams that didn’t.
—James Lang
I’m a big believer in the opening and closing minutes of class … I think those are really ripe opportunities for small teaching.
—James Lang
I try to do framing activities to help the students realize the value of what we’re doing.
—James Lang
Resources
Small Teaching: Small modifications in course design or communication with your students. These recommendations might not translate directly into 10-minute or one-time activities, but they also do not require a radical rethinking of your courses. They might inspire tweaks or small changes in the way you organize the daily schedule of your course, write your course description or assignment sheets, or respond to the writing of your students.
Book: The Power of Habit* by Charles Duhigg
Teaching in Higher Ed Episode 71 with Derek Bruff
Video: How to be Alone
Article: Boring but Important
MERLOT Awards | |||
24 Mar 2016 | Strength Through Habits | 00:32:38 | |
Natalie Houston talks about strength through habits.
Quotes
Habits save us tremendous time and energy, but they can also lead us to doing a lot of things mindlessly.
—Natalie Houston
Sometimes we have goals or intentions that are outdated, they’re from who we used to be.
—Natalie Houston
Habits often work really well when they’re connected to each other.
—Natalie Houston
If you successfully create one habit, it’ll be easier to create others.
—Natalie Houston
All of us have habits that we’re less than happy with and they’re there because they’re meeting some need.
—Natalie Houston
Resources
TIHE episode 34: Practical Productivity in Academia (Natalie Houston)
Natalie’s Blog: re:focus now
Natalie’s articles at the Chronicle of Higher Education
Book: The Power of Habit* by Charles Duhigg
Three Steps to Creating a New Habit
Identify why you want to create a new habit
Get very clear and specific about how you’re going to measure that behavior
Track your behavior
Recommendations
Bonni recommends:
Lee Skallerup Bessette's Bad Female Academic posts
Natalie recommends:
Music Service: Focus at Will | |||
31 Mar 2016 | Retrieval Practice | 00:34:40 | |
On today’s episode, I get the pleasure of talking with Dr. Pooja Agarwal about retrieval practice.
Guest: Pooja K. Agarwal, Ph.D.
Cognitive Scientist, Memory Expert, and Education Consultant,
Founder of RetrievalPractice.org
www.retrievalpractice
www.poojaagarwal.com
Twitter: @poojaagarwal
Pooja K. Agarwal, Ph.D. is committed to bridging the gaps between research, teaching, and policy. Passionate about evidence-based education, Pooja has conducted retrieval practice research in a variety of classroom settings for more than 10 years, in collaboration with distinguished memory scholar Henry L. Roediger, III. In addition to her career as a scientist, Pooja earned elementary teacher certification and has extensive teaching experience at K-12 and university levels. To advance the use of scientifically-based learning strategies, she contributes her expertise through collaborations with students, educators, scientists, and policymakers worldwide.
Recommendations
Bonni:
Change the culture in your classroom by asking students (in reference to retrieval practice): “What is it we’re doing right now?” and “Why are we doing it?”
Pooja:
Check out www.retrievalpractice.org for helpful resources.
Are You Enjoying the Show?
Rate/review the show. Please consider rating or leaving a review for the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast on whatever service you use to listen to it on (iTunes, Stitcher, etc.). It is the best way to help others discover the show.
Give feedback. As always, I welcome suggestions for future topics or guests.
Subscribe. If you have yet to subscribe to the weekly update, you can receive a single email each week with the show notes (including all the links we talk about on the episode), as well as an article on either teaching or productivity. | |||
07 Apr 2016 | Teaching in the Digital Age | 00:37:10 | |
In this week’s episode, Mike Truong and I discuss teaching in the digital age.
Quotes
In our instant and very distracted culture … it’s critical to learn how to pay attention.
—Mike Truong
As faculty, we need to find ways that force us to slow down.
—Mike Truong
I try to prioritize in-person interactions over virtual ones whenever possible.
—Mike Truong
It is a real discipline to turn off our devices … the default is to be connected all the time.
—Mike Truong
Resources
Tim Stringer’s blog: Technically Simple
One Button Studio at Penn State
Recommendations:
Bonni
Visit APU’s Office of Innovative Teaching and Technology and check out the section on blended learning.
Article: From Showroom to Classroom: Advancing Technology in Education
Mike
Book: Hamlet’s Blackberry* by William Powers
Book: Now You See It* by Cathy Davidson (Cathy was featured on TIHE episode 28: How to see what we’ve been missing)
Book: Alone Together* by Sherry Turkle
Book: Reclaiming Conversation* by Sherry Turkle | |||
14 Apr 2016 | The Clinical Coach | 00:40:39 | |
On today’s episode, I have the honor of talking with Dr. Jeff Wiese about how he uses coaching skills in his teaching of residents.
Guest: Dr. Jeff Wiese
Jeffrey G. Wiese, MD, is a Professor of Medicine with Tenure, and the Senior Associate Dean for Graduate Medical Education at the Tulane University Health Sciences Center. He is also Associate-Chairman of Medicine, the Chief of the Charity Medical Service and the Director of the Tulane Internal Medicine Residency Program. He has also served as the course director for the Clinical Diagnosis, Biostatistics, Advanced Internal Medicine, and Medical Education courses.
Quotes
What somebody knows is not as important to me as what they can do.
—Dr. Jeff Wiese
Years ago, we were so focused on on knowledge. Now, getting the knowledge is pretty easy. The shift of becoming a great coach is moving towards … teaching people not what to think, but how to think.
—Dr. Jeff Wiese
The way you go from good to great is finding your weakest area and improving it.
—Dr. Jeff Wiese
Training is to prevent surprise. Education is to prepare for surprise.
—James Carse
Links:
Teach Better podcast episode 27: Teaching Clinical Reasoning With Geoff Connors
Dr. Wiese's Four Developmental Phases of a Teacher
Are You Enjoying the Show?
Rate/review the show. Please consider rating or leaving a review for the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast on whatever service you use to listen to it on (iTunes, Stitcher, etc.). It is the best way to help others discover the show.
Give feedback. As always, I welcome suggestions for future topics or guests.
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21 Apr 2016 | Integrating Personal Management Techniques into Curriculum | 00:34:21 | |
Dustin Bakkie shares how to integrate effective study methods, learning tools, and personal management techniques as a part of your curriculum.
Guest: Dustin Bakkie
Lecturer at California State University, Chico
email: dbakkie @ csuchico dot edu
website: EpicHigherEd.com (coming soon)
twitter: @dustinbakkie
Quotes
The best time to learn something is right as you’re about to forget it.
—Dustin Bakkie
A lot of the time, students are just looking for someone who is on their side.
—Dustin Bakkie
Dustin’s effectiveness equations
Resources
Book: Deep Work* by Cal Newport
Coaching for Leaders podcast episode 233: Engage in Deep Work, with Cal Newport
Thomas Frank’s Collegeinfogeek.com
Leitner Review System
App: Anki flashcards
App: Attendance2*
Are You Enjoying the Show?
Rate/review the show. Please consider rating or leaving a review for the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast on whatever service you use to listen to it on (iTunes, Stitcher, etc.). It is the best way to help others discover the show.
Give feedback. As always, I welcome suggestions for future topics or guests.
Subscribe. If you have yet to subscribe to the weekly update, you can receive a single email each week with the show notes (including all the links we talk about on the episode), as well as an article on either teaching or productivity. | |||
28 Apr 2016 | The Skillful Teacher | 00:48:17 | |
Stephen Brookfield shares about his book, The Skillful Teacher, on today's episode of Teaching in Higher Ed.
Quotes
I think I internalized early in my career that my job was to talk, to profess. And that if I wasn’t talking, then I really wasn’t earning my money. I still feel that, and I fight against it constantly.
—Stephen Brookfield
Skillful teaching is whatever helps students learn.
—Stephen Brookfield
College students of any age should be treated as adults.
—Stephen Brookfield
Teachers need a constant awareness of how students are experiencing their learning and perceiving teachers’ actions.
—Stephen Brookfield
Resources
The Skillful Teacher*
Episode 15 with Stephen Brookfield: How to get students to participate in discussion.
| |||
05 May 2016 | Encouraging Accountability | 00:39:13 | |
Dr. Angela Jenks shares about her experiences encouraging accountability in her students on today’s episode of the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast.
Guest: Angela Jenks
Angela is a medical anthropologist and Lecturer, PSOE (Tenure-Track Teaching Faculty) in the Department of Anthropology at the University of California, Irvine, where she also directs the M.A. in Medicine, Science, and Technology Studies program.
Quotes
It’s not necessarily a kindness to not fulfill the requirements of the class.
—Angela Jenks
One of the challenges is holding standards while not turning the classroom into an adversarial situation.
—Angela Jenks
One of the things I focus on increasingly is very clear policies.
—Angela Jenks
I didn’t want the syllabus to turn into something that reads like a Terms of Service.
—Angela Jenks
Mentioned in Episode
Race Gender Science syllabus (inspired by Tona Hagen's "Extreme Makeover" of her History syllabus)
In Praise of Slowness* by Carl Honore
Podcast episodes on kindness:
Episode 057: Teaching with Twitter (Jesse Stommel)
Episode 052: Respect in the Classroom (Kevin Gannon)
Episode 019: Small Teaching (James Lang)
Podcast episode on Attitude:
Episode 062: Mindset (Rebecca Campbell)
Recommendations
Bonni recommends:
Allowing students to "show up.” Consider this quote from Anne Lamott (who was mentioned on Episode 070 with Amy Collier):
I had a session over the phone with my therapist today. I have these secret pangs of shame about being single, like I wasn't good enough to get a husband. Rita reminded me of something I'd told her once, about the five rules of the world as arrived at by this Catholic priest named Tom Weston.
The first rule, he says, is that you must not have anything wrong with you or anything different.
The second one is that if you do have something wrong with you, you must get over it as soon as possible.
The third rule is that if you can't get over it, you must pretend that you have.
The fourth rule is that if you can't even pretend that you have, you shouldn't show up. You should stay home, because it’s hard for everyone else to have you around.
And the fifth rule is that if you are going to insist on showing up, you should at least have the decency to feel ashamed.
So Rita and I decided that the most subversive, revolutionary thing I could do was to show up for my life and not be ashamed.
—Anne Lamott | |||
12 May 2016 | The Failure Episode | 00:42:33 | |
Eight faculty share their failure stories on this special #100th episode of Teaching in Higher Ed.
CV of Failures
Johannes Haushofer’s CV of Failures
HBR article about Johannes Haushofer
Quotes
At the time, I felt like I had to know everything in order to be a good teacher, so instead of admitting that I didn't know the answer to the student's question, I dismissed it.
—Cameron Hunt-McNabb
I think I understand way better now what kinds of issues my students think are important.
—Doug McKee
I strongly identified with that strain of perfectionism that insists that unless every student in every class feels like every moment was a rich and profound learning experience, then I have failed.
—Jeff Hittenberger
Guest Stories
1) Katie Linder
Didn’t allow discomfort in the classroom and rushed too quickly through it.
Check out the Research in Action Podcast
2) Jeff Hittenberger
Felt like he had failed at the end of each semester.
3.) Angela Jenks
Didn’t know how much the class textbooks cost.
4.) Josh Eyler
Gave quizzes just to test that students read.
Read the conversation in Storify for Twitter
5.) Michelle Miller
Didn’t take care of a problem before it escalated.
6.) James Lang
Was not clear enough in assignment criteria.
7.) Cameron Hunt-McNabb
Thought she had to know everything to be good teacher.
7.) Maha Bali
Laughed at student’s suffering … almost.
8.) Doug McKee
Didn’t understand what issues his students thought were important.
TIHE episode 045: Calibrating our teaching (Aaron Daniel Annas)
Recommendations
Books:
Janine Utell: Dear Committee Members* by Julie Schumacher
José Bowen: Teaching Naked* by José Bowen
Sean Micael Morris: Savvy* by Ingrid Law
Cameron Hunt McNabb: Tina Fey’s advice to “Say yes” in her memoir, Bossy Pants*
Amy Collier: Quotes Anne Lamott: “These are the words I want on my gravestone: that I was a helper, and that I danced,” from her book Grace (Eventually)*
Tools:
Doug McKee: Piazza*
Aaron Daniel Annas: Amazon Echo*
Teaching inspiration:
Rebecca Campbell: Be kind to students. Don’t make assumptions.
Linda Nielsen: Cultivate your courage by trying out things you’re afraid of.
Lee Skallerup Bessette: Be hopeful. Be optimistic. And give your students the benefit of the doubt right from the start.
Doug McKee: Try poster sessions with students.
Peter Newbury: Get yourself into a learning community. Get on Twitter.
Are You Enjoying the Show?
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Give feedback. As always, I welcome suggestions for future topics or guests.
Subscribe. If you have yet to subscribe to the weekly update, you can receive a single email each week with the show notes (including all the links we talk about on the episode), as well as an article on either teaching or productivity. | |||
19 May 2016 | Public Sphere Pedagogy | 00:34:55 | |
On this week's episode, Dr. Thia Wolf shares about public sphere pedagogy.
Guest: Thia Wolf
Thia is a Professor of English and Director of the First-Year Experience Program at California State University, Chico, where she has worked since 1989. Prior to her appointment in the FYE program, she coordinated a variety of writing programs, including the first-year composition program and the writing across the disciplines program. Since 2006, she has been collaborating with faculty in several disciplines to embed public dimensions in first-year classes. Her publications have focused on collaborative learning and on public sphere pedagogy. More
Quotes
Students need to have an experience when they come to college that … gives them a sense that education is for the rest of their lives, it’s to help them do things in the world.
—Thia Wolf
I noticed that the curriculum of first year students looks a lot like the curriculum in high school … I would say that it sends the “Not ready for prime time” message.
—Thia Wolf
When [students] go public with their work, they have to stand by it, and really remarkable things happen.
—Thia Wolf
We don’t give students opportunities to experience and reflect on how the curriculum is part of them and how they are affecting it.
—Thia Wolf
Resources
First-Year Experience Program at Chico State
Book in Common Program
Courses that take students' transitioning processes into account
Public sphere events where students and their course work are "center stage"
Chico Great Debate
Meet the faculty
Are You Enjoying the Show?
Rate/review the show. Please consider rating or leaving a review for the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast on whatever service you use to listen to it on (iTunes, Stitcher, etc.). It is the best way to help others discover the show.
Give feedback. As always, I welcome suggestions for future topics or guests.
Subscribe. If you have yet to subscribe to the weekly update, you can receive a single email each week with the show notes (including all the links we talk about on the episode), as well as an article on either teaching or productivity. | |||
26 May 2016 | Proactive Inclusivity | 00:27:50 | |
On today’s episode, Dr. Carl Moore and I have a dialog about proactive inclusivity.
Guest: Dr. Carl Moore
Dr. Moore is currently an Associate Professor and Director of the Research Academy for Integrated Learning (RAIL) at University of DC. Prior to his current role he served as an adjunct assistant professor in the College of Education as well as the Director of the Teaching and Learning Center at Temple University. More
Quotes
There are stages in which a person can honestly, truly feel [colorblind], but I do think that there is something to be said about honoring and respecting differences.
—Carl Moore
I have a strong sense of ethnic identity, but also a strong sense of identity of the mainstream majority, [as] an American.
—Carl Moore
Are You Enjoying the Show?
Rate/review the show. Please consider rating or leaving a review for the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast on whatever service you use to listen to it on (iTunes, Stitcher, etc.). It is the best way to help others discover the show.
Give feedback. As always, I welcome suggestions for future topics or guests.
Subscribe. If you have yet to subscribe to the weekly update, you can receive a single email each week with the show notes (including all the links we talk about on the episode), as well as an article on either teaching or productivity. | |||
02 Jun 2016 | Critical Instructional Design | 00:41:20 | |
On this week's episode, Sean Michael Morris and I discuss Critical Instructional Design.
Guest: Sean Michael Morris
Sean is a digital teacher and pedagogue, with experience especially in networked learning, MOOCs, digital composition and publishing, collaboration, and editing. He’s been working in digital teaching and learning for 15 years. His work as a pioneer in the field of Critical Digital Pedagogy is founded in the philosophy of Paulo Freire, and finds contemporary analogues in the work of Howard Rheingold, Cathy N. Davidson, Dave Cormier, and Jesse Stommel. He is committed to engaging audiences in critical inspection of digital technologies, and to turning a social justice lens upon education. More
Course: Critical Instructional Design
Critical Instructional Design course from Digital Pedagogy Lab
Quotes
[Instructional Design] makes very mechanical the non-mechanical nature of teaching. Certain processes are put into place where the spontaneity is taken out of teaching. The relationship is taken out of teaching. The care and nurture of the student is taken out of teaching.
—Sean Michael Morris
A lot of critical instructional design is questioning. It’s a matter of stepping back and observing and saying, “What are the assumptions of the LMS? What are the assumptions that I make and have been given to make about online learning? And how can I switch that up?”
—Sean Michael Morris
I think there is a direct correlation between the amount of restrictions we place on students and their lack of interest in what we’re doing.
—Sean Michael Morris
The more restrictions we place on learning, the less students have the ability to to explore it themselves.
—Sean Michael Morris
Resources
Article: Critical Pedagogy in the Age of Learning Management
TIHE episode about the “8 Recond Rule”
Are You Enjoying the Show?
Rate/review the show. Please consider rating or leaving a review for the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast on whatever service you use to listen to it on (iTunes, Stitcher, etc.). It is the best way to help others discover the show.
Give feedback. As always, I welcome suggestions for future topics or guests.
Subscribe. If you have yet to subscribe to the weekly update, you can receive a single email each week with the show notes (including all the links we talk about on the episode), as well as an article on either teaching or productivity. | |||
09 Jun 2016 | Disability Accommodations and Other Listener Questions | 00:38:43 | |
On this week’s episode, Dave and I discuss disability accommodations and other listener questions.
1) Disability accommodations
Dyslexia simulator
Neurotribes: The Legacy of Autism*
2) Online scenario manager resource
Geogebra.org
Geogebra - Spreadsheet View
3) Preparation for getting doctorate degree
Julie Wilson’s bio
www.Lynda.com
www.Zotero.org
4) “Small” approaches to reclaiming teaching as a focus
TIHE 092: Small Teaching (James Lang)
www.doodle.com
The Lean Startup* by Eric Ries
Leading Change* by John Kotter
Six ways to improve your department’s teaching climate
Are You Enjoying the Show?
Rate/review the show. Please consider rating or leaving a review for the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast on whatever service you use to listen to it on (iTunes, Stitcher, etc.). It is the best way to help others discover the show.
Give feedback. As always, I welcome suggestions for future topics or guests.
Subscribe. If you have yet to subscribe to the weekly update, you can receive a single email each week with the show notes (including all the links we talk about on the episode), as well as an article on either teaching or productivity. | |||
24 Jun 2014 | Three things my children have taught me about teaching | ||
Welcome to this episode of Teaching in Higher Ed. This is the space where we explore the art and science of being more effective at facilitating learning. We also share ways to increase our personal productivity approaches, so we can have more peace in our lives and be even more present for our students.
Guest
Dave Stachowiak, Ed.D
Strawberry Farms
Three things my children have taught me about teaching in higher ed
It’s often not about me
You never know what they’ll remember
It’s the little things that add up to something big
EdTech Tools
Canva.com
Omni Outliner
***
TeachinginHigherEd.com/survey
Show Notes teachinginhighered.com/1 | |||
27 Jun 2014 | Still not sold on rubrics? | 00:27:54 | |
Welcome to this episode of Teaching in Higher Ed. This is the space where we explore the art and science of being more effective at facilitating learning. We also share ways to increase our personal productivity approaches, so we can have more peace in our lives and be even more present for our students.
Quotes
n/a
Resources Mentioned
Introduction to Rubrics*: An Assessment Tool to Save Grading Time, Convey Effective Feedback, and Promote Student Learning.
Harold Jarche's Personal Knowledge Mastery Framework
Seek
AACU value rubrics
Kathy Schrock's Guide to Everything
Wiggins (part 2)
Sense
Delicious bookmarking site
My rubrics saved on Delicious
Evernote
Tapes
Share
Blog about them
Tweet about them
Recommendations
Remind (Bonni)
Tapes (Dave)
Note from Bonni re: Tapes. The application only includes 60 minutes of recording per month, which would not be enough for most of us educators in a typical semester, if we were using the service for a number of assignments. The app makers are not very forthright about this shortcoming in their documentation, when you purchase it. They indicated to me on Twitter that they are exploring options for expanding what's available, but as of this recording, no solution has been communicated. | |||
30 Jun 2014 | Lessons in teaching from The Princess Bride | ||
This is the space where we explore the art and science of being more effective at facilitating learning. We also share ways to increase our personal productivity approaches, so we can have more peace in our lives and be even more present for our students.
Lessons in Teaching from The Princess Bride
The Princess Bride on Facebook - official site
Store (selling magnets... if only today's fridges were magnetic)
Princess Bride party game
IMDB: The Princess Bride
Test your knowledge: The Princess Bride quiz
From: "Who played the grandson?" (Fred Savage) to "What town is Inigo Montoya from?" (huh?)
The Wonder Years
You keep using that word. I do not think it means what you think it means.
Help students break things down. visualization. pencasts.
As you wish.
Pay attention to wishes... dreams... going to take a lot to get there. grit. resilience.
From Psychology Today:
"Resilience is that ineffable quality that allows some people to be knocked down by life and come back stronger than ever. Rather than letting failure overcome them and drain their resolve, they find a way to rise from the ashes. Psychologists have identified some of the factors that make someone resilient, among them a positive attitude, optimism, the ability to regulate emotions, and the ability to see failure as a form of helpful feedback."
Beware of ROUSs (rodents of unusual size)
Politics in higher ed. power. French and Raven's five bases of power.
From MindTools:
"One of the most notable studies on power was conducted by social psychologists John French and Bertram Raven, in 1959." They identified five bases of power:
Legitimate – This comes from the belief that a person has the formal right to make demands, and to expect compliance and obedience from others.
Reward – This results from one person's ability to compensate another for compliance.
Expert – This is based on a person's superior skill and knowledge.
Referent – This is the result of a person's perceived attractiveness, worthiness, and right to respect from others.
Coercive – This comes from the belief that a person can punish others for noncompliance.
EdTech Tools
HaikuDeck (Bonni)
Pinboard (Dave) | |||
05 Jul 2014 | Your teaching philosophy: The what, why, and how | ||
How to formulate, refine, and articulate your teaching philosophy.
Podcast notes
The academic portfolio: A practical guide to documenting teaching, research, and service by J. Elizabeth Miller
Miller provides examples of the narrative from actual promotion and tenure portfolios.
What is a teaching philosophy?
Why we teach. Why teaching matters.
Not just a formula for teaching structure, but the rationale behind the structure.
Why is having a teaching philosophy important?
Helps guide our teaching methods. Needed in the job hunting process. Typically part of the promotion/tenure process at most universities.
How to identify, articulate, & refine it?
Questions from The Academic Portfolio (p. 13):
What do I believe about the role of a teacher, the role of a student?
Why do I teach the way I do?
What doesn't learning look like when it happens?
Why do I choose the teaching strategies and the methods that I use?
How do I assess my students learning?
Questions of my own that I have found useful in articulating my teaching philosophy:
Who are my students? How I describe them says a lot about how I approach my teaching.
Who am I, as an educator? How I describe myself says a lot about my teaching, too.
What is teaching? Is the purpose to convey information, or to facilitate learning (or something else altogether)?
Planet Money episode about young woman becoming a business owner in North Korea.
What are the artifacts of my teaching? Observable things.
What would I see/hear/experience that would be evidence of those beliefs, if I was in your class?
Espoused beliefs vs theories in use. Chris Argyris / Edgar Schein
Podcast updates
Thanks to Suzie RN for giving us our first iTunes review. We appreciate iTunes or Stitcher reviews from listeners, as it helps us get the word out about the show. Also, if you haven't done the listener survey yet, please do. That will help us continue to make the show better meet your needs. | |||
10 Jul 2014 | What this Trader Joe’s sign teaches us about professional development | ||
Overcome the excuses we make that stop us from pursuing more professional development opportunities in this episode of Teaching in Higher Ed.
There's a sign posted in our local (and beloved) grocery store: Trader Joe's. "Please do not use this machine if you have not been trained," it reads. The machine in question is a drink dispenser. As absurd as this is, in some cases, there's more training required to dispense raspberry lemonade than there is to teach a college class.
Guest: Dave Stachowiak
There are abundant resources out there for professional development, but we can sometimes be held back by our own excuses.
Professional development excuses and opportunities
Here are the most common excuses for not pursuing more training on how to teach and how to overcome each of them:
Not enough time
Podcasts (Bonni's podcast recommendations)
Audio books (Dave listens via Audible.com)
A couple of audio books that Dave particularly enjoyed listening to lately on Audible:
Adam Grant's Give and Take
Essentialism by Greg McKeown
When you're waiting (Pocket)
Too hard to keep up
Subscribing to blogs (feedly)
Twitter
Bonni's professional development Twitter lists:
Teaching in Higher Ed
EdTech
Teaching and learning centers
ProfHacker
My discipline is unique
Coursera
EdEx
Nothing I've tried before works
Filming or recording yourself teaching
My university doesn't dedicate resources for professional development
Faculty development centers at other universities
USC's Center for Teaching Excellence videos
Grass roots efforts
EdTech group at Vanguard
EdTech tools
JotPro stylus (Dave)
iAnnotate (Bonni) | |||
17 Jul 2014 | Eight seconds that will transform your teaching | ||
How can we use silence to condition our students to answer the questions we pose?
Podcast notes: Eight seconds of silence that will transform your teaching
It is counter-intuitive. We want students to engage with us, so we pose questions. Then, they just look at us, or down at their desks, with a pained or bored expression. We decide this whole question-asking thing is for the birds... or, at least, for a different kind of class/discipline than the one in which we teach.
Guest: Dave Stachowiak
How we condition ourselves not to ask questions and condition our students not to answer them.
We try to get our students to engage by asking a question. They stare back at us, blankly. It's awkward.
Thinking in terms of what to cover in class, versus where the needs actually are.
What has to happen before a student will answer a question.
Process what's been asked.
See if they can formulate an answer to the question.
Formulate an answer in their head (how they will convey their answer).
Decide if it is safe to answer.
Raise their hand, or speak (depending on the cultural rules in the classroom).
The 8 second rule takes this time I to account. It used the power of silence to pressure students to take to risk of engaging.
EdTech Finds
Broadening the definition of EdTech for the purpose of sharing a couple things that have captured our attention:
Evernote water bottle (Bonni) After recording the show, I saw that not only is this a great water bottle, but it is also associated with a great cause: WaterAid.
Turning off email on phone (Dave); Essentialism book | |||
24 Jul 2014 | Personal knowledge mastery | ||
Personal knowledge management and mastery. How to capture information, curate it, and create new knowledge from it. It can be so challenging to keep up with everything we have on our plates, let alone to what's happening in the world and in areas that are most important to us.
Podcast notes
Guest: Dave Stachowiak
This episode introduces the terms personal knowledge mastery and management.
Discipline of finding information, making meaning of it, and sharing it with others.
Personal mastery
“Personal mastery is a discipline of continually clarifying and deepening our personal vision, of focusing our energies, of developing patience, and of seeing reality objectively.” -Peter Senge
Personal knowledge management
Harold Jarche's PKM resources
Harold Jarche's introductory video
Personal knowledge mastery
Skills for 2020
KickStarter campaigns
StorkStand
Potato salad
Framework
Seek - capture
Sense - curate
Share - create
Definition
"Discipline of seeking from diverse sources of knowledge, actively making sense through action and experimentation and sharing through narration of your work and learning out loud." - Harold Jarche
Key posts on PKM from Harold Jarche
Bonni's online PKM modules:
1. Introduction to PKM
2. PKM demo (the actual tools I use in my PKM process)
3. PKM for academics
Recommendations
Practical Typography by Butterick (Dave)
Dave Pell's NextDraft - The day's most fascinating news (Bonni)
Feedback
On this episode: https://teachinginhighered.com/7
Comments, questions, or feedback: https://teachinginhighered.com/feedback | |||
31 Jul 2014 | Workflow show – Personal knowledge management tools | ||
Enough with the hypothetical. Now we share what tools we use in our personal knowledge management systems.
Podcast notes
This episode walks through each of the phases of a personal knowledge management system and the tools we each use for each step.
Discipline of finding information, making meaning of it, and sharing it with others.
Personal knowledge management definition
"Discipline of seeking from diverse sources of knowledge, actively making sense through action and experimentation and sharing through narration of your work and learning out loud." - Harold Jarche
Key posts on PKM from Harold Jarche
Bonni's online PKM modules
Framework
Bonni and Dave describe what tools we use in each of the stages of personal knowledge management.
Seek - capture
Feedly
Newsify
Mr. Reader
Unread
Podcasts
Bonni's favorite podcasts
Overcast
Instacast
Follow Dave on Twitter
Follow Bonni on Twitter
Subscribe to Bonni's Twitter lists
RSS
NextDraft: The day's most fascinating news
Audible
Drafts
Sense - curate
Dave's Pinboard
Bonni's Delicious
Evernote
Share - create
WordPress.com - free blog, good place to get started, but for most customization, you will want a self-hosted WordPress site
20 minute tutorial by Michael Hyatt on how to start your own self-hosted WordPress blog / website
Twitter
LinkedIn
Facebook
Recommendations
TextExpander (Dave)
Breevy (Bonni)
Feedback
On this episode: https://teachinginhighered.com/8
Comments, questions, or feedback: https://teachinginhighered.com/feedback | |||
07 Aug 2014 | Academic personal knowledge management workflow | ||
Librarians can be such a wonderful resource to us as faculty. Today's guests are Georgia Tech Academic Librarians: Mary Axford and Crystal Renfro. They have been a tremendous help to me - and I've never even met them in person. Call it a testament to the power of academic personal knowledge management...
Episode 9: Academic personal knowledge management
These are the notes from our dialog together about academic personal knowledge management for academic researchers and librarians.
Podcast notes
Guests
Crystal Renfro
Mary Axford
The comments made by Crystal and Mary during the podcast are their own opinions and do not represent those of Georgia Tech.
Academic personal knowledge management
Academic Personal Knowledge Management - AcademicPKM.org
Free course: A year to improved productivity for librarians and academic researchers
Link roundups
Our recent PKM discoveries
Jamie Todd Rubin's Going Paperless Blog (Mary)
Jamie Todd Rubin's post on simplifying Evernote notebooks (Mary)
Bonni advises to start simple with Evernote notebooks (I use 1) personal, 2) work, and 3) reference; plus 4) a shared/family notebook with Dave called BondNotes)
I Click it and I Know it video from Mircosoft about how OneNote works with the Surface tablet (Crystal)
PKM Foundations
Compares it to a Trapper Keeper folder; Ways of organizing information (Crystal)
First discovery of PKM was from a colleague at Georgia Tech, Elizabeth Shields (Mary)
Loves using Evernote: Helped her accomplish a move a few years back in a very short time (Mary)
Academic databases and PKM
How the databases have kept up, as well as how the researchers have kept up with the new features (Crystal)
Evernote to track and plan blogs and podcasts (Mary)
Bonni's Zotero tutorials
Catherine Pope's Zotero posts
It's very individual. What works for one person may not work for someone else.
Be sure that you don't let the 'doing the tool' well become more the goal versus achieving your purpose with the tool. (Crystal)
Archived version of our A Year to Improved Productivity for Librarians and Academic Researchers Program
Recommendations
ProfHacker | GradHacker | Catherine Pope's The Digital Researcher (Mary)
Tweet about the random sandwich generator from Dan Szymborski (Bonni)
This is why I really need adult supervision: I made a random sandwich generator based on my available cold cuts. pic.twitter.com/dnwyWFXpR1
— Dan Szymborski (@DSzymborski) August 6, 2014
ScoopIt : Robin Good's Scoop.it sites on content curation (Crystal)
Reminders
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