Bloom's Sixth


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Will students one day piece together their own degrees by assembling courses a la carte from a variety of colleges and universities? Derek Newton of the Center for Teaching Entrepreneurship, says no. Writing in The Atlantic, Newton argues that technology won’t force the “unbundling” of degrees and programs in higher education the way it has the music industry and cable TV.…
Read Moreabout Higher education isn’t breaking apart, but it is vulnerable
Posted on by Doug Ward

The note cards I handed out to students in my hybrid class last week drew astonished looks. Each contained a hand-written list of three things: events, people, animals, objects, locations, movies, songs, television shows. All were random, created one evening in a stream of consciousness. For instance: “Eye of the Tiger” Eye of a needle Arctic Ocean and Fire alarms Fairy tales Calvin Klein “Here’s the fun part,” I told students. “Find a connection among the three things.” That’s where the astonishment came in. The main goal of the exercise was to help students synthesize, to open…
Read Moreabout Ambiguity goes in search of the right answer
Posted on by Doug Ward

Despite declining enrollments (see below) and changes in student demographics, most colleges and universities have continued to divert resources into traditional areas related to rankings rather than to innovations that would help them reach and serve new audiences. That’s the argument Michael R. Weise, a senior research fellow at the Clayton Christensen Institute, argues in an article in Educause. Colleges and universities have…
Read Moreabout Education Matters: Competency and enrollment
Posted on by Doug Ward

Let’s peer into the future – the near future, as in next semester. Or maybe the semester after that. You’ll be teaching the same course that is wrapping up this week, and you’ll want to make some changes to improve student engagement and learning. Maybe some assignments tanked. Maybe you need to rearrange some elements to improve the flow of the course. Maybe you need to give the course a full makeover. By the time the new semester rolls around, though, the previous one will be mostly a blur. So why not take a few minutes now…
Read Moreabout 20 questions to ask at the end of the semester
Posted on by Doug Ward

Sylvia Manning offers an insightful characterization of a college education that summarizes the challenges all of us in higher education face today. In a paper for the American Enterprise Institute, she writes: The reality is that no one can guarantee the results of an educational process, if only because a key element is how the student engages in that process. The output or outcome measures that we have are crude and are likely to remain so for considerable time to come.…
Read Moreabout Education Matters: Proving learning, challenging liberal arts
Posted on by Doug Ward

After third grade, elementary students spend little time on in-class writing assignments, even though research shows that additional time improves both the quality of writing and the comprehension of written work. That’s the distressing news from the Hechinger Report, whose recent article explores research in K-12 writing instruction. In English classes, U.S. students write an average of 1.6 pages a week, and most assignments (in English and in other classes) usually require a…
Read Moreabout To learn to write, write. Unfortunately, students aren’t. Now what?
Posted on by Doug Ward

Saundra McGuire urges faculty members not to judge students’ abilities too quickly or too harshly. She speaks from experience. As a chemistry professor at Cornell and Louisiana State universities, she used to make snap judgments about her students, separating them into achievers and non-achievers. Then she realized that those students who skipped class and didn’t study but then acted surprised at bad grades were “just being good scientists.” Really. (More about that shortly.) A…
Read Moreabout Those halfhearted students? They may just be good scientists.
Posted on by Doug Ward