Title: Teaching Excellence Workshop
1Teaching Excellence Workshop
- Geoffrey Gamble, President
- David Dooley, Provost
- Joseph Fedock, Senior Vice Provost for Academic
Affairs - Gregory Young, Vice Provost for Undergraduate
Education - Shannon Taylor , Chair, Faculty Council
- Jeff Adams, AVP
- Lynn Owens, HHD
2Another talk about course reform...
3Our Goals for the Workshop
- Highlight the characteristics of good teaching.
- Describe various instructional and assessment
strategies to improve student learning. - Help you prepare for next week!
- Introduction to PT and GC.
4Academic Advising Workshop forFaculty Staff
who advise students
- Tuesday, October 9
- HERE
- Lunch served _at_ 1215
- Program 1230-130
- What advising at MSU looks like
- Questions advisors should ask
- CORE 2.0
- Tips for effective advising
- Advising resources across campus
- How the Academic Advising Center and and
- departmental advising work together
- Sponsored by the Academic Advising Center
(University Studies) and the Teaching/Learning
Committee - For more info contact
- Diane Donnelly. Assoc. Director
- University Studies
- 994-6053 or donnelly_at_montana.edu
5HR/Personnel Payroll invites you to join us for
New Employee Benefits Orientation
- Please attend one of the following sessions
- Thursday, August 23rd
- Thursday, September 13th
- Both sessions run from 8am to 12 noon and will be
held in - Presidents Conference Room (Basement of Montana
Hall). - The Agenda will include presentations about your
employee retirement plan (TIAA/CREF), Employee
Wellness, your insurance plan (CHOICES), how to
complete your CHOICES form, and the Optional
Reimbursement Accounts. - Please bring your new employee packet!
- Refreshments will be served.
- Please confirm attendance by calling 994-6610.
6Introductions
- Name
- Where are you from?
- What department are you in?
- What is your research area?
- Describe the courses you will be teaching this
year. - What are your burning questions?
7It is now 945
8Observing Teaching
- Questions to think about while watching
- the strengths and weaknesses of the instruction
- the amount of learning you think is occurring
9Questions to think about
- Do you want to be remembered?
- How do you want to be remembered?
- Remember your best teacher
- What made them best for you?
- Were they best for everyone?
- Remember your worst teacher
- What made them the worst for you?
- Were they the worst for everyone?
10What Constitutes Good Teaching
- Sensitivity and Concern with Class Level and
Progress - Preparation--Organization of the course
- Knowledge of the Subject
- Enthusiasm (for subject and teaching)
- Clarity and Understandability
- Availability and Helpfulness
- Impartiality of Evaluation Quality of
Examinations
(summary of 31 studies from student and faculty
perspectives)
11Coffee Break
0
Well start promptly at 1045 !!
12Active Learning in Your Classroom
0
To lecture or not to lecture, that is the
question.
13What is active learning?
0
- Characterized by
- students involved rather than listening
- less emphasis on transmission more on skills
14What it isnt
0
15What is active learning?
0
- Characterized by
- students involved rather than listening
- less emphasis on transmission more on skills
- emphasis on higher order thinking skills
16Taxonomy of Bloom
0
Evaluation
synthesis
Teaching goal
analysis
application
comprehension
knowledge
17What is active learning?
0
- Characterized by
- students involved rather than listening
- less emphasis on transmission more on skills
- emphasis on higher order thinking skills
- Students engaged in activities (e.g., writing,
reading, discussing)
- more emphasis on students exploration of their
own attitudes and values
18Why we lecture
0
- Its the traditional model of higher education.
- Its what was done to us.
- IT WORKED FOR (MOST OF) US!
- Give a faculty almost any kind of class in any
subject, large or small, upper or lower division,
and they will lecture. -Blackburn, 1980
19Is lecturing evil?
0
- A lecture can
- motivate
- model scholarly behavior
- present current material
- organize material to benefit a particular
audience - effectively deliver large amounts of information
20Six Ways to Discourage Learning in the Lecture
0
- Insufficient "Wait-Time"
- The Rapid-Reward
- The Programmed Answer
- Non-Specific Feedback Questions ("Does anyone
have any questions?) - Fixation at a Low-level of Questioning
- The Condescending Response
adapted from AAS Education http//www.aas.org/e
ducation/sixways.html
210
22 0
230
240
25Why dont they get it ?
0
26Bad news about lectures ...
0
- Most students do not pay meaningful attention for
50 minutes without breaks. - Lectures can encourage students to try to
process information later. - Lectures have been shown to result in very low
levels of student retention. - Remember Our students are not , for the most
part, younger versions of us.
27 Taxonomy of AL
0
CSGL
Discussion
Teaching goal
Think-pair-share
Problems/In-class writing
Time for Questions
Lecture
28Our Mantra
- Its not what the teacher does that matters its
what the students do!
29How do you know how its going?
- End of semester student evaluation forms
- Self-created teaching surveys
- 1-5 scale or written answer
- letter to chair
- Video tape yourself
- Peer observation
- Self-created learning surveys
- one minute or muddiest point papers
- NOTE If you ask students opinions, you must
respond to it publicly.
30Kirk Branch
31Lunch is being served !!!Please sit with
colleagues from your college.
- We will begin promptly at 100 pm!!
32Technology and Teaching Learning
C E N T R E
33Designing an effective syllabus
- Where does your course fit?
- general education course
- first course in a sequence
- required course for majors
- advanced course with prerequisites
- Who are your students?
- What are your specific course goals?
- How will you know if you meet your goals?
34Syllabus Checklist
See www.montana.edu/teachlearn
- course name and number
- your name, office location, phone number, and
e-mail - scheduled office hours
- policies regarding your availability outside of
office hours - prerequisite courses or skills
- required purchases such as textbooks, rulers, and
protractors
35Syllabus Checklist
- policy on using or having access to calculators,
personal digital assistants (PDAs), Internet, and
so on (required vs. optional) - detailed description of how grades are determined
- descriptions and goals of assignments and tests
- dates, times, and locations for all tests or
other out-of-class requirements. - policy on missed classes or tests
36Syllabus Checklist
- instructors philosophy on roles and
responsibilities - detailed list of course goals and objectives
- course calendar including exams, drop dates, and
holidays - an explanation of how this course fits into
students overall education and the specific
university goals - firm statement on academic honesty (conduct code)