Free Report Best of TPC 2019 PDF
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hrough its free e-newsletter and dedicated website, Faculty Focus publishes
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CONTENTS
The Best Teaching Advice I Have Received.........................................................................5
Contributors............................................................................................................................... 48
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Hey, it’s okay! Just take a chill pill and relax. A hot shower and a full plate of
Pad Thai chicken will do you some good. Chase that down with a slurpee. I don’t
even care what flavor that slurpee is—just don’t make it a blue one. Blue ones
jack up your teeth.
Look . . . if you put $100 in a savings account, you cannot draw out $101—
you will be overdrawn. Likewise, if you earned an “A–,” I cannot give you an “A”
just for kicks.
I promise: Life will go on, you will graduate from college, you will work in
honorable professions, and best of all, you will still drive all your children to soc-
cer practice in a really nice minivan. Life is going to be great.
I have a hard time believing that this class is going to determine your future
salary and potential for winning a Nobel Prize, much less who you marry, or if
you will live in a nice home.
Cheer up. Eat some ice cream. Live a little! You can do this! But don’t lose
any more sleep over an “A” or “A–”! Get some perspective! You will live to see
another day! But, that’s just me. Sorry for the rant, but man, did that feel good.
I love you all!
• Be straightforward with students. No one likes to be the bearer of bad news, but you
don’t do yourself or your students any favors if you downplay or withhold important
information from them. If a student is in danger of failing your course, for example,
you need to ensure that they clearly understand their situation.
• Capitalize on your strengths. Don’t try to copy others. Be yourself.
• Always be learning. We live in an amazing time. Knowledge is moving forward on
all fronts. Teachers have an obligation to continue learning. As one of my colleagues
explained, “If there are few eureka moments for the teacher, there will be even fewer
of those moments for their students.” You should be on the lookout for opportunities
to learn from your students too.
• Admit when you don’t know something. Never try to bluff. It’s a fact that you won’t
always know the answer to every question you might be asked. Let students know
that you will try to find the answer. Then, once you find it, teach your students how
you did so. It can be extremely valuable for students to understand how questions can
be answered. Equally important, if you can’t find the answer, let students know that
as well.
• Front-load relevance. Too often teachers seem to wait until the end of a lesson to
put the pieces together for students. They sometimes act as if they are pulling back
an imaginary curtain and saying, “Ta-da! Here’s how everything fits together!” That
doesn’t work as well with the current generation of college students as it may have
in years past. Today’s students want to understand the big picture up front—not wait
until the end.
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• Watch others teach. Whether it’s negative or positive, you can always learn some-
thing from watching others teach. Take the time to visit the classrooms of other teach-
ers and talk with them about their teaching successes and failures.
• Borrow appropriately from other teachers. One of my teaching mentors taught me
that it’s okay to borrow from other teachers if you do so with love and their permis-
sion. In fact, if we’re not sharing with each other, we’re all doing more work than
necessary.
• Learn to ask good questions. Questions that ask only who, what, or when don’t re-
quirement much engagement from students. Generally, the questions that matter the
most begin with why or how.
• “Right-size” your course, your lessons and exams, and your assignments. Don’t try
to cram as much as you can into each lesson, exam, or assignment. You can’t squeeze
two hours of instruction into a 50-minute class, no matter how hard you try or how
fast you talk. If you add 10 minutes of content to a lesson, you’ve also got to remove
10 minutes from that lesson.
• Bad day? Shake it off! Every teacher has lessons that “just didn’t work”—even if the
same lesson to similar students worked the hour before. Learn from the experience,
figure out what might be improved, and then move on.
• Show them, help them, watch them, let them. Teaching can often be viewed as
a kind of progression in which the role the teacher plays gradually diminishes. You
might think of this process something like this: it begins with show them (100 percent
teacher effort), transitions into help them (75 percent teacher, 25 percent student),
progresses to watch them (25 percent teacher, 75 percent student), and concludes with
let them (100 percent student effort).
• Consider next semester when preparing this semester. Too many teachers are in
such a rush to prepare for the coming semester that they don’t take the time to gener-
alize their preparation—so they end up doing just as much work the following semes-
ter too. Instead, look for ways to reuse lesson plans, schedules, syllabi, assignments,
and exam questions instead of reinventing the wheel every term.
• Share more stories. Stories are powerful and extremely flexible. They can be used to
illustrate, explain, entertain, compare, contrast, and reinforce. Stories can enable you
to teach without it being obvious that you’re doing so. Share more stories!
• Remember, it is an honor to teach . . . and it should be fun.
When it comes to teaching, the bottom line is that there is always room for each of us to
improve. What two ideas from this list might you investigate further?
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L ecture as a pedagogical approach has come under considerable fire in recent years. In-
deed, critics have called lectures boring, obsolete, old-fashioned, overused, and even
unfair, among other, less-flattering terms. The criticisms, however, have most often been
leveled at one type of lecture: the full-class-session, transmission-model lecture. And it is
fair to say that delivering a 50- to 75-minute nonstop lecture is not the best pedagogical
approach.
But there is another type of lecture, one that my colleague Elizabeth Barkley and I de-
scribed in detail in our recent book, and it’s called interactive lecturing (Barkley & Major,
2018). Interactive lecturing is a model for combining engaging presentations and active
learning techniques in a way that can engage students and improve their learning. The
following figure illustrates the model for interactive lecturing that I shared at the 2019
Teaching Professor Conference:
Interactive lecturing is a useful approach for faculty who not only want or need to lecture
but also hope to do more than simply transmit information. Rather than merely present-
ing material, during interactive lectures faculty embed a well-planned, engaging pre-
sentation within a sequence of activities that help students understand, process, apply,
and rehearse new information. Thus faculty can use interactive lectures to encourage
students to engage in a structured and supportive learning environment that ensures they
are active participants before, during, and after the lecture.
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Research shows that more students fail and drop out of lecture-only courses than do
students in classes with active learning components included in the lecture sessions. By
supporting students with engaging presentations embedded in active learning tech-
niques, you can support and improve student learning in lectures. Below are some re-
search-supported tips and techniques you can use when choosing interactive lectures.
SAMPLE TIPS FOR ENGAGING LECTURE PRESENTATIONS
Many of us have attended boring lectures in which the speaker drones on and on in a
dull, monotonous voice. Interactive lecturing requires an engaging presentation as a core
component within a carefully constructed process designed to ensure that listeners par-
ticipate actively in their learning. Table 1 provides examples of what you can do to make
your presentation more effective.
Tip Description
Before the lecture Sticky-note You can use sticky-note diagrams to generate ideas for a lecture, identify common
diagrams themes among the ideas, and then sort and organize the ideas to develop and
organize lecture content.
During the lecture Aristotelian The Aristotelian triptych is a good way to provide support to a lecture. It enables
triptych you to reinforce the key message and most important supporting idea. In short, tell
them what you are going to tell them, tell them, and tell them what you told them.
After the lecture The synthesis At the end of the lecture, briefly synthesize the central and supporting ideas.
Table 1. Sample engaging lecture tips (adapted from Barkley & Major, 2018)
Technique Description
Before the lecture Active reading Active reading documents (ARDs) are carefully prepared forms that guide students
documents through the process of critical and careful reading.
During the lecture Guided notes Guided notes provide students with an organizational structure for taking notes
during a lecture. In particular, the notes present students with specific questions
to answer or blanks to fill in as the lecture progresses.
After the lecture Lecture wrapper Lecture wrappers enable students to listen to a lecture to identify its key points
and then compare their judgments to what the instructor identifies as the most
important points.
Table 2. Sample active learning techniques (adapted from Barkley & Major, 2018)
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Table 3. Sample interactive lecture session (Barkley & Major, 2019, p. 72)
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By structuring your session using these three techniques, you can ensure that your lec-
ture presentation incorporates active learning techniques that help students engage.
Bookends, overlays, and interleaves allow you to support and extend lecture presenta-
tions in ways that focus on improving student learning.
Conclusion
Faculty need not avoid the lecture entirely. Rather, when we use it, we should embed it
within a series of activities designed to help students learning. We should use whatever
pedagogical tools will best help us accomplish our teaching objectives and our students
meet their learning goals. And interactive lecturing is an engaging pedagogical approach
with a well-developed research base to support it.
Reference
Barkley, E. F., & Major, C. H. (2018). Interactive lecturing: A handbook for college faculty.
San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
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These social skills are crucial to engaging in civil and productive discussions. By per-
forming these social skills, learners actively inhabit and embody an intellectual attitude
that centers open-mindedness, intellectual humility, and integrity, which then prepares
them to craft logical and credible arguments.
To teach social skills, we designed a podcasting assignment as a prewriting activity. For
our podcasting assignment, students record a group discussion about a contentious issue,
including topics such as housing insecurity, prison reform, and immigration policies. In
the recording, students assess the validity of two published articles that offer divergent
perspectives on the topic, defend their own points of view, and contend with their peers’
perspectives.
So why podcasting of all things? How does this medium help our students to become
open-minded, intellectually humble communicators? We gravitated toward podcasting
because it is a unique medium that allows speakers to record themselves and listen back.
This means that students are forced to
reflect on how they sound when they
engage with others. We propose that the
podcast medium is absolutely critical to
Overall, we found that after
helping our students improve their so- podcasting, students were
cial skills in a self-reflective and self-con-
scious way—a benefit that other verbal better equipped to build their
activities cannot offer. This all comes
down to the aurality and technology
credibility, make reasoned
involved in podcasting. conclusions, and engage with
In her paper “Podcasting and Perfor- a range of diverse perspectives
mativity: Multimodal Invention in an
Advanced Writing Class,” Leigh A. in a civil and productive way.
Jones (2010) argues that podcasting is
essentially an aural performance that
deepens students’ awareness of audience and therefore the importance of connecting
with that audience. We take Jones’s claim a step further. In addition to this deep aware-
ness of audience, we argue that the technology of the podcast allows students to listen to
their own voices, reflect on their blind spots, and assess and improve their social skills
by rerecording. This is what makes podcasting unique; we can teach the same social
skills for in-class discussions, presentations, and debates, but these in-class opportunities
privilege students who are vocal and able to think quickly on their feet. The podcast me-
dium, on the other hand, is unique because it affords students the semi-privacy to aural-
ly perform for a listening audience. In other words, students can thoughtfully deliberate
and rehearse what they want to say and how they want to sound. Students also have
the safe space to record and rerecord their voices after reflecting on how their ideas and
the delivery of their ideas affect others. Through podcasting, then, students can improve
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their social and, in turn, writing and research skills. Overall, we found that after podcast-
ing, students were better equipped to build their credibility, make reasoned conclusions,
and engage with a range of diverse perspectives in a civil and productive way.
To scaffold the development of specific social skills necessary for civil and productive
discussion, we recommend the four following pre-podcasting activities.
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Social Skills for a Civil and Productive Discussion
Instructions
To have a civil and productive discussion with others, it’s important to practice the
following social skills to avoid shutting down the conversation, dismissing other people’s
experiences, and disrespecting your interlocutors. Imagine the discussion you’re going
to have on your podcast episode. In the right-hand column, write down what these
social skills would sound like in your own words:
3. Suspend judgment
(to withhold personal biases; to
connect with others)
4. Disagree agreeably
(to stay true to your beliefs; to
respect opinions that conflict with
your own)
Figure 1
Figure 1
Best of the 2019 Teaching Professor Conference
Listening to podcasts
We also encourage assigning podcast episodes for your students to listen to. Episodes
from podcasts such as This American Life, Here to Slay, Ear Hustle, and 99% Invisible
can be excellent texts for students to not only familiarize themselves with podcasts but
also practice listening for and identifying social skills—or the lack thereof. Students can
use an adapted version of the “Social Skills for a Civil & Productive Discussion” handout
(Figure 1) to identify where and how the speakers on the podcast episode demonstrate
or fail to demonstrate these social skills as well as the impact they have on the audience.
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Figure 2
Figure 2
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These pre-podcasting activities prompt students to not only recognize the importance of
social skills but also reflect on how they can improve their own social skills so that they
can have more civil and productive discussions about contentious issues. Once students
completed these pre-podcasting activities and the podcasting assignment, they became
demonstrably more open-minded and intellectually humble communicators. For example,
students approached subsequent assignments with an awareness of and willingness to
make reasoned conclusions based on a careful investigation of diverse perspectives and
evidence. As a result, students produced intellectually rigorous work that was persuasive,
logical, and credible. We have found that podcasting, because of the aurality and tech-
nology involved, has radically transformed the way students can master social skills and
prepare for professional leadership and civic engagement.
References
Gay, R., & McMillan Cottom, T. (Hosts). (2019). Hear to slay. Retrieved from https://lu-
minarypodcasts.com/listen/roxane-gay-and-dr-tressie-mcmillan-cottom/hear-to-slay/
b52dbaee-2243-4230-ac20-8dc36ca6a453
Glass, I. (Host). (1995). This American life. Retrieved from https://www.thisamerican-
life.org
Jones, L. A. (2010). Podcasting and performativity: Multimodal invention in an advanced
writing class. Composition Studies, 38(2), 75–91. Retrieved from https://composition-
studiesjournal.files.wordpress.com/2019/02/38n2.pdf
Mars, R. (Creator and host). (2010). 99% invisible. Retrieved from https://99percentin-
visible.org
Poor, N., Woods, E., & Thomas, R. (Co-producers and hosts). (2017). Ear hustle. Re-
trieved from https://www.earhustlesq.com
Song, A., & Narinesingh, S. (Creators and hosts). (2017). Discourse. Retrieved from
https://anchor.fm/discourse
Zimmerman, J., & Robertson, E. (2017). The case for contention: Teaching controversial
issues in American schools. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.
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T o engage a generation of learners who are as comfortable in digital space as they are
in the physical world requires faculty to employ and expand on teaching practices
that best align with learners’ needs and expectations. While remembering that each in-
dividual student brings many skills and challenges to the classroom, we will look at the
characteristics that many of this generation of students share.
Generation Z learners are best characterized as individuals born between 1995 and
2012. These learners are creative, want to make a difference in the world, are comfort-
able using technology in a variety of ways, and appreciate working individually with
their teachers and their classmates. Below, I summarize five specific strategies you can
use with this complex generation of learners, including a list of best practices for each
strategy.
Video
During their K–12 schooling, Generation Z students have typically been encouraged to
explore their creative natures. They have been encouraged to think broadly about topics
and their learning has been assessed in a variety of ways. Many students have created
insightful presentations, wonderful videos, strong podcasts, artwork, and excellent writ-
ten work to show their creativity. Other students struggle with the tasks assigned and
have been unable to find a medium that allows their creativity to flourish. Video is often
called the medium of communication for Generation Z students. Being creative with
video allows Gen Z students to write by making scripts, learn inclusivity by practicing
digital accessibility techniques, and use technology (including digital photography and
automation) in impressive ways. Providing students with opportunities to tap into their
creative natures by producing strong video work will assist them in developing their own
knowledge sets.
Digital tools are a comfortable choice for this generation to use to approach creative
solutions to problems. Students have also been immersed in the use of video for their
own personal learning activities as they regularly avail themselves of YouTube to learn
how to do, make, and create.
As you consider this strategy, think of how you can use video in your lectures to share
content and lectures. Implementing curated video to supplement course materials will
also assist students in mastering concepts and construct possible solutions to complex
problems. By allowing students to use video as one approach to assignments, you are
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allowing Gen Z students to work in a medium that comes naturally to them while provid-
ing parameters related to the assignment.
Experiential learning
Generation Z students are truly committed to making a difference. Accordingly, many
Gen Z students volunteer for local Habitats for Humanity, area hospitals, food banks,
schools, and other organizations to improve and make more equitable area inhabitants’
lives.
To use this strategy, it is necessary for students to understand how what they both care
about and are willing to do for the initiatives they care about can become part of the
learning experience.
By using experiential learning and allowing for the activity to be flexible, faculty can
lead students into a great understanding of how their selflessness is also helping with the
foundational learning of a skill set that will be needed in the world of work.
BEST PRACTICES IN HELPING STUDENTS THROUGH EXPERIENTIAL
LEARNING ACTIVITIES DESIGNED TO MAKE A DIFFERENCE
1) Summarize the purpose of the exercise.
2) Allow students to choose an agency, an organization, or a cause they will get behind
and work for to meet an organizational goal.
3) Require students to produce a product that shows how their experiential learning
activity relates to or aligns with your overall course objectives.
4) Give students a rubric so they understand how you will assess learning outcomes.
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Individualization
Generation Z students prefer highly individualized approaches. They create and build
ideas and products regularly in an online format. They applaud individualization and
equality throughout their generation. They look for ways in which they can tailor and
customize their experiences in any learning modality. The age of digital customization
has made individualization easier to achieve.
In the classroom, structure for individualization has been a pedagogical tool in the K–12
arena for the time that this generation participated. With the advent of many of the
digital tools we have today, comput-
er-enhanced instruction allows for
individualization in almost every field Generation Z students are equally
of study and should be considered in
higher education.
comfortable in the digital and
To use this strategy with students, it is
physical worlds. This “phygital”
imperative that faculty understand the approach allows students to
challenges for individualizing assess-
ments and are comfortable with al- move back and forth easily and
lowing students a high degree of flex-
ibility in meeting and demonstrating efficiently as they learn new
their mastery of learning outcomes. content.
BEST PRACTICES FOR
INDIVIDUALIZATION
1) Create learning contracts to ensure that students completely understand the desired
outcome.
2) Be comfortable with students choosing a product to show mastery of a learning
outcome
3) Be flexible in grading assessments.
4) Provide strong rubrics for multiple projects (a written paper, a video, a podcast, a
play or screenplay, a sculpture, creation of an app or a piece of software, etc.).
5) Be able to guide students in the use of multiple approaches to fail, start again, and
eventually succeed.
Immersion
Generation Z students are equally comfortable in the digital and physical worlds. This
“phygital” approach allows students to move back and forth easily and efficiently as they
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learn new content. Generation Z students also appreciate face-to-face interactions, such
shopping in a physical environment, and look forward to group discussions both in per-
son and online. Because of this facility with both digital and physical approaches, class-
room spaces can optimize strategies for learning from both. Provide strong reasoning to
your students regarding why digital and physical approaches matter. Yes, an interview
can be conducted via Zoom. Discuss why and when a Zoom or an in-person interview is
preferred.
BEST PRACTICES FOR IMMERSION IN BOTH DIGITAL AND PHYSICAL
EXPERIENCES
1) Provide parameters that include both physical and digital experiences.
2) Include assessment materials that focus on in-person interactions (e.g., interviews
and mock interviews, attendance at theater productions, and museum visits).
3) Encourage students to build strong face-to-face skills, such as looking at someone
directly while speaking to them, shaking hands, and cordially sharing conflicting
ideas.
4) Use strong rubrics that indicate the purpose of both digital and physical interactions
in terms of learning outcomes.
5) Consider using augmented or virtual reality or apps to engage students with content.
Cultivating curiosity
Gen Z students have quick and easy access to massive amounts of information. But what
they do with that information is the key. How does a student spot fake news? Devel-
op opinions and a sense of purpose from the information available? Effectively argue a
point?
Developing a sense of curiosity within subject matter is necessary for Gen Z students.
Getting students to not simply collect and use information but develop strong thinking
skills is critical to their future in the workplace and in life.
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5) Ask “so what?” questions that help students develop a deeper sense of why the in-
formation gathered is important and what its impact will be.
6) Insist upon strong information literacy skill development.
7) In each rubric, include at least one assessment criterion related to curiosity.
This generation’s learners are equally comfortable in digital and physical space. As facul-
ty we can find teaching strategies that align our intended learning outcomes to students’
expectations. The five strategies I have discussed here are not comprehensive; there are
many others you can use to engage Generation Z students as they develop academic
skills with strength, purpose, and curiosity. What strategies might you suggest your col-
leagues use to fully engage these learners in high-impact practices in the classroom?
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O nline courses present unique challenges for both students and faculty. We’ve been
teaching and learning in person for millennia, and we know a lot about how to do it
well. The same is not true for online education. This modality has existed in its current
form for only about 20 years. We’re still learning what works. We’re still getting familiar
with what a good online classroom looks like—where the front of the room is, where the
desks are, and where the light switch is. Indeed, many students and faculty today are rel-
atively inexperienced in online learning environments, especially considering that we’ve
taught and learned in physical classrooms for years.
And yet the demand for online classes
continues to grow. Students who would
otherwise be unable to attend college Tomorrow, next week, or next
due to work and family obligations
now have a way to pursue credentials semester, consider making just
and improve their lives. The flexibili-
ty afforded by online classes makes it
one change to the way you set
easier for more people to earn a higher up or teach your online course.
education than if the only option were
to take classes on campus. We can
improve our online teaching so that our
students have a rich and rewarding learning experience—and we can do it one small step
at a time.
Based on the approach James M. Lang and I outline in Small Teaching Online: Applying
Learning Science in Online Classes (2019), which presents minor modifications to our
classes to produce major learning gains, we’ll explore eight practical, evidence-based
strategies we can apply in our online classes—approaches that are neither overwhelming
nor time-consuming, techniques that won’t place an undue burden on our time. These
strategies are organized according to four guiding principles that are especially relevant
for online classes.
Tomorrow, next week, or next semester, consider making just one change to the way you
set up or teach your online course. Because these strategies are grounded in research and
intentionally applied, you’ll likely find that this small change will have an outsize impact
on student learning and engagement.
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they learn in your class will help them reach their academic, personal, and career
goals. Communicate enthusiasm in your writing and voice recordings to capture
and keep your online students’ interest and attention.
• Convey empathy and support. Online students often do their coursework by them-
selves, and they often have competing demands on their time. Help them stay moti-
vated to complete your course by being a cheerleader, a coach, or a mentor (which-
ever persona you prefer) in ways that extend beyond your content. Post encouraging
announcements, point out how far students have come, tell them you know they
can do it. Small reassurances such as these can do a great deal to help students
keep going throughout an often-isolating experience.
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them think about their previous experience with these ideas. Pretests can be un-
graded; set them as conditional release (most learning management systems allow
you to do this) so that submitting the completed questionnaire unlocks the rest of
the module’s content.
• Provide the framework. Give students a skeletal outline or partial slides to take
notes on while watching a mini-lecture video or doing the reading. Have them up-
load their document or a photo of it for points. Helping students organize new ideas
helps novice learners retain information and begin to make connections between
concepts.
Making small adjustments such as these can bring about big improvements in student
engagement and learning in online courses. Don’t try all of these at once; rather, pick
one, try it, refine it, then add another. You—and your students—will be glad you did.
References
Cavanagh, S. R. (2016). The spark of learning: Energizing the college classroom with the
science of emotion. Morgantown, WV: West Virginia University Press.
Darby, F., & Lang, J. M. (2019). Small teaching online: Applying learning science in on-
line classes. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
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N o one can deny that the world in which we live and work is changing at a tumul-
tuous pace. We live in a knowledge economy, driven by technologies that require
different skill sets than were needed of workers in the age of industry. Students will
encounter work and life situations that require them to learn as they go, perhaps even
teach themselves, as they address contemporary problems, challenges, and proposed
solutions—ones we have no way of anticipating as we prepare our curriculum. Although
this is reality for students, “we rarely (if
ever) purposefully teach these students We often neglect the role of
to be self-regulated learners—a feature
that historically tends to be a serendip- the student in the process,
itous result of classroom instruction
rather than part of a purposeful plan de-
assuming that it is our job to
signed to equip students for their future” assess and the student’s to
(Box, 2018, p. 124).
respond. But by not partnering
The question du jour for universities,
then, is this: What should be our role with students in the process, not
in preparing students for success in a
knowledge economy? It is a given that empowering them, and leaving
students need content knowledge in
math, science, technology, and so forth,
their self-regulation to chance,
but content knowledge is not enough. we fall short of preparing them
I join the chorus of educators who pro-
claim a moral imperative for universities for the future.
to prepare students for what lies ahead
by explicitly teaching them how to learn, fostering the skills they need to monitor and
mediate their own learning in order to be productive and prosper.
I propose we do this through metacognition and the process of formative assessment.
Educators often define metacognition as “thinking about thinking,” but that description
sometimes creates the misconception that thinking critically about content is metacogni-
tive. It is not. In short, metacognition broadly means having knowledge about cognition
as well as control over and regulation of one’s own cognitive systems (Händel, Artelt, &
Weinert, 2013; Vrugt & Oort, 2008). I suggest we call it “thinking about learning,” a nu-
anced but crucial distinction.
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Where am I going?
If students are to monitor their own progress, they first need to be aware of intend-
ed learning targets or outcomes. Expectations should never be a mystery to students.
Additionally, we know that learning improves when students reflect on what they al-
ready know, what they might not know, and what they think can be learned before and
throughout a unit of study. An effective strategy that meets this need is to have students
create course-related evidence portfolios.
Evidence portfolios allow students the opportunity to (1) become aware of expectations
up front, (2) document their learning, and (3) show evidence of mastery by the end of
the semester. Portfolios are intended to help students think about what they have learned
and reflect on their success.
STEPS
1) Determine your learning targets and share them with your students at the beginning
of the semester. To do so helps them become familiar with course expectations be-
fore getting started—a necessary first step in self-regulated learning.
2) Ask students to “traffic light” each target before beginning instruction (green = I
know this, yellow = I need some help with this, and red = I don’t know this at all).
3) Periodically during the semester, ask students to traffic light again and reflect on
their growth. What have they learned? What do they still need to work on?
4) At the end of the semester, ask students to traffic light each learning target again and
provide evidence of growth or mastery of each target.
a) Artifacts that serve as evidence may include anything graded that indicates mas-
tery of a given learning outcome.
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b) Students should include a written reflection that describes the artifact, why they
chose that artifact to serve as evidence, and how completing the assignment con-
tributed to their knowledge.
Where am I now?
Once students are aware of learning targets and course expectations, they should have
the opportunity to assess their level of mastery and set goals. The process of reflection
has the potential to deepen the learning and puts students squarely in the driver’s seat
as they think about where they are in the process and what they should do next (Sawyer,
2014). But students do not normally do this on their own; they need guidance. Addition-
ally, students tend to set performance goals (i.e., grades) rather than learning ones. Thus
we need to foster and encourage the habit of focusing on learning. One effective strategy
that directs students toward self-assessment and goal setting is a post-exam review.
Faculty have used a variety of post-exam review formats, but many reviews fail to help
students set concrete goals with specific learning tactics that can later be analyzed for
effectiveness. This review includes those important metacognitive steps.
STEPS
1) While taking a test, students indicate their level of confidence in each answer (sure
or unsure), then after the test is graded and returned, they analyze each wrong
answer.
2) For each wrong answer, they indicate whether they missed it due to a simple mis-
take or a lack of knowledge. Ideally, students will have marked missed questions as
unsure, but often this is not the case. Prompting students to link the two forces them
to assess their knowledge of what they do and don’t know.
3) Students list learning targets that they’ve mastered, ones that need a little work, and
ones they just don’t get.
4) Next, students answer questions such as these:
• What study strategies did you use to prepare for this exam?
• How happy are you with your exam results? Did you know the information that
you needed to know to succeed?
• Based on your test analysis, what percentage of questions did you miss due to
simple mistakes? What percentage did you miss because of a lack of knowledge?
Were you aware that you didn’t know the answer to questions that you missed?
• What stumps you?
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5) After analyzing their progress and the process they used to get there, students set
learning goals and articulate specific study strategies they plan to employ, such as
concept mapping, using flash cards, and making practice test questions.
References
Box, C. (2018). Formative assessment in United States classrooms: Changing the land-
scape of teaching and learning. Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan.
Brown, P. C., Roediger, H. L., III, & McDaniel, M. A. (2014). Make it stick: The science of
successful learning. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
Chappuis, J. (2015). Seven strategies of assessment for learning (2nd ed.). Hoboken, NJ:
Pearson Education.
Händel, M., Artelt, C., & Weinert, S. (2013). Assessing metacognitive knowledge: Devel-
opment and evaluation of a test instrument. Journal for Educational Research Online,
5(2), 162–188.
Sawyer, R. K. (Ed.) (2014). The Cambridge handbook of the learning sciences (2nd ed.).
New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.
Vrugt, A., & Oort, F. J. (2008). Metacognition, achievement goals, study strategies and
academic achievement: Pathways to achievement. Metacognition and Learning, 3(2),
123–146.
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Data analysis
Direct and indirect measures can include numbers analyzed quantitatively or words
analyzed qualitatively. Examples of quantitative data would be frequencies or means
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of student exam scores. Examples of qualitative data might be themes identified from
student journal entries. It is important to consider your own expertise in methods of data
collection and analysis as SoTL often utilizes mixed methods approaches, which com-
bine quantitative and qualitative methods. Collaborators experienced with one or both
forms of data analysis may be needed for successful project completion. Several resourc-
es provide guidance on SoTL data analysis (Cross & Steadman, 1996; Kranzler, 2018).
References
Bishop-Clark, C., & Dietz-Uhler, B. (2012). Engaging in the scholarship of teaching and
learning: A guide to the process, and how to develop a project from start to finish. Ster-
ling, VA: Stylus Publishing.
Cross, K. P., & Steadman, M. H. (1996). Classroom research: Implementing the scholar-
ship of teaching. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
Hutchings, P., Huber, M. T., & Ciccone, A. (2011). The scholarship of teaching and learn-
ing reconsidered: Institutional integration and impact. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.
Kranzler, J. H. (2018). Statistics for the terrified (6th ed.). New York, NY: Rowman &
Littlefield.
Meyer, D. J. C., & Kadolph, S. J. (2005). The scholarship of teaching and learning in tex-
tiles and apparel. Clothing and Textiles Research Journal, 23(4), 209–215.
Witman, P. D., & Richlin, L. (2007). The status of the scholarship of teaching and learn-
ing in the disciplines. International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning,
1(1). Retrieved from http://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/ij-sotl/vol1/iss1/14
34 www.TeachingProfessorConference.com
Turning Your Scholarly Teaching into the Scholarship of Teaching
and Learning
INDIVIDUAL ACTION PLAN FOR A SOTL PROJECT
Date created:
Which course(s)?
Research objective:
Researchable question:
IMPLEMENTATION
What group do you want to study?
Miscellaneous
Data Collection
Data to Collect Resources Needed Type of Data Data Analysis Plan How will you know
Direct/Indirect Qualitative/ whether you have made
Quantitative progress?
Implementation Timeline
Item Resources Needed Timeline Date Resources Needed How will you know
whether you have made
progress?
My Support Team/Colleagues(s)
Who will help support my efforts? How will you share your plan with them?
Individual Action Plan for a SoTL Project by Center for Excellence in Learning and Teaching (CELT), Iowa State Uni-
versity is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
Best of the 2019 Teaching Professor Conference
H ave you ever struggled to get students to do required readings? Do your students
treat them as optional? Perhaps they do the readings, but when you ask them to en-
gage in critical discussion or think deeply about the material, they are unable to do so. If
any of these scenarios resonate with you, read on! In the paragraphs that follow, I intro-
duce four activities guaranteed to motivate your students to do the required readings and
think critically about them.
Jigsaw readings
Jigsaw activities work because there is
an information gap between one group
of students and another or between
The benefits of a jigsaw activity
a student and their partner or group include students’ working
members. This means that a student or
group of students possesses information together, learning from each
that their group or another one needs
and vice versa. Because of this gap, stu-
other, and thinking critically
dents are forced to listen to each other
to gain a full picture and gather all relevant information.
HOW IT WORKS
In the context of course readings, there are two ways to do a jigsaw activity. The first is
to have students read in class, and the second is to assign the readings for homework.
Both approaches work well and are similar in their execution, involving only a couple of
minor adjustments.
The idea is that each student will read only the text assigned to them and take notes on
the important points so they can teach the content of their reading to other students in
the class. As the instructor, you will have identified two to four readings that you’d like
the students to cover, but each student will read only one of these. When it comes time
to teach their peers, students work in groups and take turns explaining their readings.
When they are not explaining, they take notes on the readings being explained to them.
After all the information has been shared, the instructor leads a follow-up activity. This
activity could be a discussion, a problem-solving exercise, or some other activity that can
only be done with the information gleaned from all the readings.
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• The discussion leader identifies two or three questions related to the main ideas in
the reading and poses them to the group. The discussion leader also facilitates the
discussion, keeping everyone on track time-wise and ensuring that each person gets
a chance to contribute.
• The passage master identifies one or two passages that are central to the point of
the reading, that are particularly interesting, or that in some other way catch their
attention. They read the passages aloud to the group to spark discussion.
• The devil’s advocate critiques the reading. The challenge here is that the student
with this role must find critical comments to make even if they agree with the
reading. The devil’s advocate is meant to stir things up, share alternatives, and get
people thinking.
• The illustrator draws a picture or puts together a flow chart or other graphic based
on the reading. Their contribution might highlight the main points of the reading, il-
lustrate a reaction that they had while they read, or express disagreement. This role
allows the student flexibility in terms of what they can draw.
• The connector finds connections between the reading and the real world. They can
pull examples from sources such as the news, the workplace, or popular culture.
• The recorder takes notes during the discussion. They are also meant to participate
and can ask questions to clarify points if things are unclear. After the discussion,
all the other group members email their contributions to the recorder. The recorder
then compiles everything into one document and uploads it to the learning manage-
ment system for the instructor to see.
BENEFITS OF THIS ACTIVITY
Because this approach is highly structured, students know exactly what they are sup-
posed to do. Discussion does not peter out; it can easily be sustained for 30 minutes.
Students engage critically with the material, and they learn from each other as they work
collaboratively. The discussion leader role helps students practice time management and
group leadership. The activity also builds community as students get to know each other
through the discussions.
DRAWBACKS
There are no drawbacks.
STUDENT MOTIVATION
My students said they got more out of the readings using this method and viewed the
readings as more valuable than they do with the usual approach to readings, where
everyone reads on their own and the instructor may or may not address the readings in
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class. Additionally, as with the jigsaw activity, students reported that they didn’t want to
let their group members down, look like slackers, or appear unintelligent.
Figure 1. Template for “pass the paper” debate activity. Note that normally this document
would take up a full 8.5"×11" sheet of paper. The boxes should be big enough to accom-
modate lengthier responses. I have truncated them here to save space. In addition, you
will need to change the question in the diamond to something relevant for your reading.
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Once each student has had time to read their completed handout, the instructor can
proceed in several ways. A class discussion or small group discussions about some as-
pect of the responses could ensue. An individual reflection on the reading, enhanced by
the input from their peers, is another helpful follow-up. Alternately, the completed de-
bate paper could be used as a jumping-off point for a research paper or other individual
assignment.
A variation would be to ask each student to include their name with each of their re-
sponses. Doing so would hold students accountable to one another for what they write
and encourage them to take the activity seriously, if that is an issue.
BENEFITS OF THIS ACTIVITY
Students learn from each other and think critically about the reading(s). This activity also
allows introverts time for reflection, and it provides a springboard for other activities.
DRAWBACKS
Devising a good question for the central diamond can take time and thought.
STUDENT MOTIVATION
Because students know that others will read their ideas, they don’t want to appear fool-
ish or ill prepared (especially if you ask all students to include their names on every
response).
Collaborative quiz
For this activity, students come to class having done the assigned readings and prepared
to “demonstrate their knowledge.” (Their professor will have instructed them to do this
in the previous class. They do not know in what way they will demonstrate their knowl-
edge.) The instructor distributes a quiz based on the reading(s) and asks students to
complete it individually. The instructor scores the quiz and gives students their marks.
Then students are put into groups and given the quiz again, but this time they can dis-
cuss the answers and help each other. All students in a group put their names on the
same quiz paper. The instructor scores the quizzes again. If a student’s group grade ex-
ceeds their individual grade, that student receives the average of the two scores for their
quiz grade. If a student’s individual score exceeds their group’s score, they can keep the
higher grade.
The main issue with this activity is the grading of the quiz. I suggest creating a self-grad-
ing electronic quiz or, if you have teaching assistants, recruiting their help to grade paper
quizzes. Naturally, if you use an electronic quiz, you should hide the answers from the
students until after they have completed the group quiz.
If you’re not using a self-grading electronic quiz, plan an activity for students to do be-
tween the individual and group quizzes. This will give you time to do the scoring.
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STUDENT MOTIVATION
Students want a good grade. Also, after the first time, they will want to look prepared
and intelligent in front of their peers during the collaborative part of the quiz.
Conclusion
Since applying these strategies in my classes, I no longer dread required readings. Stu-
dents come to class prepared and participate actively. They glean more from the read-
ings and as a result feel that they have received good value; the readings have become
an interesting and useful component of the course and students are enthusiastic in their
feedback. I trust that you will find these activities equally beneficial with your students!
Reference
Parrott, H. M., & Cherry, E. (2011). Using structured reading groups to facilitate deep
learning. Teaching Sociology, 39(4), 354–370.
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I n all higher education programs, men of color (MOC) are the least likely subgroup to
persist and be retained (Harper, 2006). Although the subgroup constitutes the small-
est percentage of enrollees in online programs, it has one of the most rapidly trending
growth rates in the industry (Center for Community College Student Engagement, 2014).
For us as educators, then, it makes sense to study MOC in online programs to understand
what strategies, methodologies, and mindsets have helped them successfully navigate
their programs.
I have done just that. I delivered a series of surveys and interviews to 1,282 MOC across
three large online universities who had a GPA of at least 3.0, persisted in their programs
yearly, and were on track to complete or had completed their programs at 100 or 125 per-
cent of normal time. Our research revealed the following:
• Three common principles or pillars of mind drive successful MOC
• Self-implemented best practices
that the MOC employed to estab-
lish and maintain momentum
An educational institution
• Gaps in the existing service model
cannot dictate what MOC
at their universities and how the commit to, but if it knows their
MOC adjusted to remain successful
typical priorities, it can support
• Implications for modifications to
course design and adjustments to them, understand them, and
the advising models and support
services that embed strategies implement strategies that
helpful to the success of MOC remind the MOC of their “why.”
The pillars of mind, strategies for
both students and institutions, and implications mapped to the success of MOC are re-
search-proven strategies that are known stimulators of success for all populations in both
the online and traditional face-to-face modalities.
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mon values or principals—three pillars of mind—that motivate them and shape their
actions:
1) They have had positive experiences with educators, curricula, and academic support
teams.
2) They commit themselves to well-defined personal goals.
3) They are motivated by their responsibility to those who depend on them.
This is invaluable information for educators because it can shape how we develop learn-
ing objectives, instructional strategies, and academic support services.
All three pillars are based on commitment or perception. An educational institution can-
not dictate what MOC commit to, but if it knows their typical priorities, it can support
them, understand them, and implement strategies that remind the MOC of their “why.”
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writing center and tutoring services, the library, technology services, the finance de-
partment, and career services. The three strategies they employed when utilizing these
services were more like advice. They urged their fellow students to (1) make themselves
aware of the services available, (2) find out how to access those services, and (3) use
them as often as needed. This is a gigantic leap for MOC from socioeconomically dis-
tressed backgrounds. These men usually operate in survival mode and often hesitate to
ask for help as it creates a type of vulnerability that could jeopardize their ability to sur-
vive. The fact that this strategy emerged was a major breakthrough in terms of learned
behavior. The three recommendations the MOC participants made for support services
were to (1) publicize links to the services, (2) simplify financial aid communication, and
(3) make the career services department more relevant and helpful in finding employ-
ment. Because the university system had not done these things, successful MOC simply
contacted their advisors to learn more about the support services available to them.
Instructors will differ on how and to what degree they make these accommodations
for their students. The good news: our study shows that even with those variations,
instructional quality and student success greatly increase.
3) Advising teams should schedule students within the same programs in cohorts (pillars
1 and 2). When students travel in cohorts, they feed off each other and provide an
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organic and naturally developed sense of support, comfort, and academic safety that
synergizes around each of their inherent strengths and weaknesses. The impact of
placing students in cohorts throughout their programs is immeasurable for all stu-
dents, but particularly for those categorized as at-risk.
4) Instructors should foster a growth mindset (pillars 2 and 3). To do so, they should
embed as many motivational quotes, personal messages that praise students’ indi-
vidual and collective achievements, and testimonials from students who previously
took the course as they can. Although these strategies may not seem directly relat-
ed to academic achievement or course learning outcomes, they directly address the
growth mindset that at-risk students need to develop to learn how to succeed both
in the course and throughout their educational careers.
5) Institutions should create systems whereby faculty and advisers collaborate to wel-
come students into each new course (pillars 1 and 2). Collaboration between faculty
and advisers creates opportunities to view student needs from different vantage
points. Thus, when a collaborative welcome video, letter, or activity is distributed
to students, all bases are covered, and each student feels more comfortable knowing
that everyone in the system is working together in a unified way to help them be
successful.
Importantly, strategies 2 and 4 are “ready to go”: they don’t cost anything, won’t need
approval from administration or faculty organizations, and can be implemented immedi-
ately by any instructor, at any institution, teaching any course. Individual instructors will
have a learning curve as they find ways to effectively implement these two strategies.
Thus, I suggest that instructors work together and form professional learning communi-
ties to discuss—in a nonjudgmental, “everything goes” style—what works as they imple-
ment these strategies.
Implications
This research has potential to transform teaching and learning in higher education. The
subgroup studied was limited MOC, but the takeaways from the research apply to all
populations that both online and face-to-face higher education programs serve. Initially,
this research looked for ways to construct more inclusive, culturally responsive academ-
ic and student-facing systems that enhance support for MOC’s success. Those things
were identified, but the interventions turned out to be just as productive for all students.
Thus, this research-based approach to course design, assignments, and assessment,
while designed specifically to help MOC successfully navigate their online academic pro-
grams, is actually productive for all students in all higher education settings.
Institutions that heed the findings of this research can expect to understand why instruc-
tion and systematic approaches to serve students must be differentiated and diverse.
More importantly, they will be aware of opportunities for systemic changes in their
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References
Center for Community College Student Engagement. (2014). Comprehensive fact sheet
men of color in higher education. Retrieved from http://www.ccsse.org/docs/MoC_
Long_Fact_Sheet.pdf?ts=20170310191550
Harper, S. R. (2006). Black male students at public flagship universities in the U.S.: Sta-
tus, trends and implications for policy and practice. Washington, DC: Joint Center for
Political and Economic Studies.
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CONTRIBUTORS
Kenneth L. Alford is a professor of church history and doctrine at Brigham Young Uni-
versity and a retired active duty Colonel in the U.S. Army.
Cathy Box is the director of the Center for Teaching, Learning, and Scholarship at Lub-
bock Christian University, where she also serves as director of the Quality Enhancement
Plan and program coordinator for the curriculum and instruction master’s program in the
Graduate School of Education.
Vickie S. Cook is the executive director of the Center for Online Learning, Research and
Service and a research professor in the College of Education at the University of Illinois
Springfield.
Flower Darby is a senior instructional designer at Northern Arizona University.
Cynthia Haynes is an associate professor of horticulture at Iowa State University.
Fiona Hunt is an academic librarian-turned professor who teaches in the library and
information technology program at the University of the Fraser Valley. She has 20-plus
years of teaching experience and is passionate about maximizing student support and
engagement in all her classes.
Claire Major is a professor of higher education administration at the University of Ala-
bama. She is cofounder of the K. Patricia Cross Academy (https://kpcrossacademy.org).
Sara Marcketti is the director of the Center for Excellence in Teaching and Learning at
Iowa State University.
Newton Miller is an associate dean in the College of Education at Ashford University.
Sarika Narinesingh and Anne Song teach in the Department of English and Communi-
cation at George Brown College.
Ann Marie VanDerZanden is the associate provost for academic programs at Iowa State
University.
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T
his two-and-a-half-day event presents the newest thinking on improving teaching and learning. From
learning the newest ideas about pedagogy to collaborating with colleagues from a variety of disciplines,
the Teaching Professor Conference is a uniquely engaging and enriching experience.
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