Bloom's Sixth


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In a focus group before the pandemic, I heard some heart-wrenching stories from students. One was from a young, Black woman who felt isolated and lonely. She mostly blamed herself, but the problems went far beyond her. At one point, she said: Peter Felten explains a family picture he shared at the 2023 Teaching Summit. He uses the picture, which shows his father as a young boy, in his classes as a way to connect with students through family history. “There’s some small classes that I’m in and like, some of my teachers don’t know my name. I mean, they don’t know my name. And I just, I…
Read Moreabout As the academic year begins, think community and connection
Posted on by Doug Ward

Lisa Sharpe Elles ignites a hydrogen balloon during the first day of Chemistry 130. The poor balloon never had a chance. It was Monday, the first day of fall classes. Lisa Sharpe Elles, assistant teaching professor in chemistry, circled a yellow, hydrogen-filled balloon as it floated above a table in Gray-Little Hall. She told the 200-plus students in Chemistry 130 to cover their ears. She carefully lifted a flame-tipped wooden rod to the balloon and suddenly pulled back. She had remembered the lone fool in the front row. That was me, two cameras poised, awaiting a promised explosion…
Read Moreabout A new school year starts with a bang. (Can it be true?)
Posted on by Doug Ward

The future of higher education may very well hinge on our skill as interpreters and communicators. Too often, though, we never bother to define the terms we use or to help students, parents, and employers understand the purpose and significance of a college education, Ashley Finley told participants at the 2021 KU Teaching Summit last week. Ashley Finley “We develop language as currency,” said Finley, who is vice president for research at the Association of American Colleges and…
Read Moreabout What does higher ed do? Our answer may determine its future.
Posted on by Doug Ward

Student motivation is one of the most vexing challenges that instructors face. Students can’t learn if they aren’t engaged, and serious classroom material often fails to pique the interest of a generation that has grown up with the constant stimulation of smartphones, social media and video on demand. Some instructors argue that motivation should be up to students, who are paying to come to college, after all. Most certainly, instructors can’t make students learn. Students have to cultivate that desire on their own. Instructors can take many steps to stoke that desire to learn,…
Read Moreabout 9 easy ways to improve student engagement
Posted on by Doug Ward

Alma Clayton-Pedersen offers this vision for higher education: “Imagine what a nation we would be if students really took away everything we wanted them to have,” she said at last week’s Teaching Summit in Lawrence. Alma Clayton-Pedersen at the KU Teaching Summit Problem is, they don’t. Much of the reason for that, she said, has to do with their background, the quality of the education they received before college, the way they are treated in college, and the connections they feel – or don’t feel – to their peers, their instructors and their campus. We talk about college readiness as…
Read Moreabout To provide equity, ‘we need to be focused on all our students’
Posted on by Doug Ward

Microsoft’s Office software has long been the standard in business and education. In a webinar this week, though, Microsoft showcased an online amalgamation of its software that looks very much like a learning management system. Blackboard it isn’t, and that’s the point. Microsoft is drawing on the familiarity and ubiquity of its Office software to create an environment for class materials that is spare, visually appealing, and easy to use – all things that Blackboard isn’t. The new software, called Class Dashboard (There was a link here, but the page no longer exist), isn’t all that…
Read Moreabout Two tech giants take on learning management
Posted on by Doug Ward

In a review essay for the Washington Post, Janet Napolitano takes on the idea that higher education is in crisis. She brushes aside criticisms from Ryan Craig (College Disrupted) and Kevin Carey (The End of College) and says that instead of falling apart, colleges and universities are going through “an intense period of evolution driven by advances in technology and better understanding of cognitive learning.” Higher education, she…
Read Moreabout Education Matters: ‘Students are not widgets’
Posted on by Doug Ward

Connecting with students in online courses challenges even the best instructors. I was reminded of that recently when I spoke with Tracy Russo, an associate professor of communication studies, at the C21 Course Redesign Consortium (There was link, but the page no longer exists). C21 brings together about 60 instructors from many disciplines at KU who are interested in making learning more active and more meaningful by changing the ways they approach their classes. The discussions teem with energy as…
Read Moreabout How can we connect better with students in online courses?
Posted on by Doug Ward