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Your weekly update from The Teaching Professor |
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In case you missed last week’s round-up, here again are 10 of The Teaching Professor’s most-read articles from 2022. We will resume publishing new writing next Monday.
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By Regan A. R. Gurung
Most discussions in higher education seem to revolve around the use of student evaluations of teaching. To fully capture the hard work that is teaching, we need to change how we evaluate and reward teaching. Read More
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The first day of class presents a great opportunity to grip your students with the sorts of big questions and compelling contradictions that drew you and your colleagues to your field in the first place. Read More
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Students should be studying just before tests, but it should not be their first time seriously looking at course materials. Multiple research findings make clear that one frenzied period of study right before the exam generally results in lower scores than regular study sessions. Read More
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Normally, we focus on what the most effective teachers think and do, but it is equally important to identify and avoid harmful beliefs that undermine teaching success. Here are nine common beliefs shared by teachers who regularly get poor student evaluations. Read More
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Part of the difficulty of group work comes from misguided assumptions. Students bring these assumptions because they haven’t yet learned differently. Many faculty also operate with these assumptions because they haven’t always thought critically about the collaboration process. Read More
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To effectively make course material memorable, teachers need to tap into the mind’s mechanisms for accomplishing the core purpose of memory: retaining information that is relevant to our goals and our survival and retrieving it when it’s useful. But how do we account for digital technology’s influence on how memory works? Read More
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A lot of professors assign readings like so: students read a piece of text, respond to it in some way, and come prepared to discuss it in class. Yet over half of students don’t do the assigned readings. So maybe it’s time we stop assigning readings. Perhaps we should instead start assigning tasks. Read More
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Part of our March exploration of quizzes and quizzing, here’s a short quiz for our readers, including a downloadable, editable Word copy you can share with your colleagues. (Check out the full article series.)
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The online format will be new for many students—in particular, adult students who are returning to school after a long absence—and they may be uncertain of their ability to perform in the course. Opening the course with a welcome video and a carefully designed icebreaker can help students feel comfortable and motivated. Read more
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After 35 years of writing for The Teaching Professor, Maryellen Weimer says goodbye in her final column. Read more
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