Large Group Meetings
August 24 (Thursday) 2:00-4:00 p.m.鈥擮pen Meeting
鈥淓nergizing Ways to Recharge Your Classes鈥
Director: Laurel J. Black; Codirectors: Francisco Alarc贸n, Stephanie Taylor-Davis, Valeri Helterbran, John Woolcock
September 6 (Wednesday) 3:15-4:30 p.m.鈥擟rimson Event Center, Folger Hall
鈥淢atchmaker, Matchmaker鈥濃擣orming Teaching Circles
October 5 (Thursday) 3:15-4:30 p.m.鈥擟rimson Event Center, Folger Hall
鈥淐ivic Engagement and Responsibility as Student Motivators鈥
November 1 (Wednesday) 3:15-4:30 p.m.鈥擫ocation to be announced
鈥淲riting for Publication鈥
December 7 (Thursday) 3:15-4:30 p.m.鈥擟rimson Event Center, Folger Hall
鈥淪hare and Compare: Fun & Engaging Assignments鈥
February 7 (Wednesday) 3:15-4:30 p.m.鈥擟rimson Event Center, Folger Hall
鈥淐ritical Thinking鈥
March 8 (Thursday) 3:15-4:30 p.m.鈥擟rimson Event Center, Folger Hall
鈥淚ntegrating Instructional Technology鈥
April 4 (Wednesday) 3:15-4:30 p.m.鈥擮ak Room, Foster Hall
鈥淪timulating Student Discussion Using the Socratic Seminar鈥
May 3 (Thursday) 5:00-7:00 p.m.鈥擟rimson Event Center, Folger Hall
Recognition Dinner
Reflective Practice Workshops
October 28, 2006: Visual Teaching in an Auditory World
Ellyn Arwood and Joanna Kaakinen will focus on cognitive processing of information: how exactly our students learn. It goes beyond learning styles to the hard-wiring that students and faculty may not be aware of, and offers participants advice on alternatives to standard lecturing as well as ways to alter other course assignments to improve student learning. We should leave this workshop with strategies we can use in the rest of the first semester and which we can apply to the courses we are designing for spring semester.
February 10, 2007: The Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
In her book Enhancing Scholarly Work on Teaching and Learning: Professional Literature that Makes a Difference, Maryellen Weimer lists four benefits that can accrue from becoming familiar with such work: 鈥渓essons about pedagogical scholarship for the disciplines to learn from each other; the power of well-established findings to advance the profession; more effective advocacy for those working to advance the teaching-learning agenda; and the power of reading widely to improve individual practice.鈥 In this workshop she will begin to familiarize us with exemplars of such pedagogical literature and help us start the process of structuring our classes based on sound research findings. We will also begin to think about how we can conduct research on our own teaching that will add valuable knowledge to this field.
Handouts (Word documents):