Bloom's Sixth
A new school year starts with a bang. (Can it be true?)
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…
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by Doug Ward
After a ‘train wreck’ of a start, Geology 101 helps redefine student success
Jennifer Roberts doesn’t hold back when describing her first attempt at active learning in a large lecture course.
“It was a train wreck,” said Roberts, a professor of geology who is now chair of the department. “It was bloody. Students were irate.”
Jennifer Roberts works with students in Geology 101.
This was in Geology 101, a required course for geology majors and one that typically draws a large number of engineering students. Starting in 2013, Roberts worked with a…
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by Doug Ward
Peer learning expands as instructors remake courses
Watching David Johnson’s class in digital logic design is a bit like watching synchronized swimming.
After a few minutes of announcements, Johnson and half a dozen GTAs and undergraduate teaching fellows fan out across an Eaton Hall auditorium as 60 or so students begin to work on problems that Johnson has assigned.
David Johnson works with a student during Introduction to Digital Logic Design.
A hand goes up on one side of the room. Johnson approaches, and students around him listen intently as he asks questions and quietly offers advice. Across the aisle, a group of four young men…
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by Doug Ward
Engaging students through silent contemplation
Here’s another approach to using silence as a motivator for active learning.
I’ve written previously about how Genelle Belmas uses classroom silence to help students get into a “flow state” of concentration, creativity, and thinking. Kathryn Rhine, as associate professor of anthropology, uses silence in as part of an activity that challenges students to think through class material and exchange ideas but without speaking for more than 30 minutes.
Kathryn Rhine explains…
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by Doug Ward
9 easy ways to improve student engagement
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,…
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by Doug Ward
Class’s Haiti project is a labor of love steeped in learning
If I were to design the perfect learning experience, it would have all the components that Chad Kraus included in a studio architecture class he taught this fall.
Chad Kraus with a prototype of the Haitian center his students designed.
Start with a problem that has no single or simple solution.
Study the problem, the context and the people involved.
Learn the skills that will help solve the problem.
Practice the skills with teammates.
Get feedback from instructors and peers.
Apply the skills in an authentic assignment.
Teach others the skills you have learned.
Reflect on the work…
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by Doug Ward
Improving diversity and inclusion, one class at a time
By Doug Ward
It was a simple idea.
Bring together a group of faculty members from around campus for guided discussions about diversity and inclusion. Guide them to think deliberately and openly about making their classroom practices and pedagogy more inclusive. Then help them create plans to take what they had learned back to their departments and help colleagues do the same.
That’s the approach behind Diversity Scholars, a program that CTE began last year with 11 participants. A second class of 10 began…
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by Doug Ward
Technology gives learning an augmented boost
By Doug Ward
Mannequins have been a part of health care training for decades. As Matt Lineberry of the Zamierowski Institute for Experiential Learning demonstrated recently, though, those mannequins have become decidedly smarter.
Lineberry, director of simulation research, assessment and outcomes at the Zamierowski Institute, spoke with faculty members and graduate students in the educational psychology department in Lawrence, explaining how health care simulation has evolved into highly…
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by Doug Ward
Shifting a course’s emphasis to the students rather than the content
By Doug Ward
When Mark Mort began remaking a 100-level biology course a few years ago, he asked instructors who had taught the class what they thought students needed.
“Not surprisingly, the answers were very much content, content, content,” said Mort, an associate professor of ecology and evolutionary biology.
Then he went to colleagues who taught classes later in the curriculum, courses for which his course, Biology 152, was a prerequisite. He asked what they expected students to know after taking Biology 152, or Principles of Organismal Biology.
Their response?
Nothing…
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by Doug Ward
Humanities instructors confront some challenging questions
KANSAS CITY, Mo. – The humanities have gone through much soul-searching over the past few years. So asking instructors in the humanities to take on hard questions about the way they teach seems like a natural step.
For instance, what do they value in their teaching? Is that truly reflected in their teaching and assignments? Why do they teach the humanities? What is humanities teaching and learning good for?
Those are some of the questions that arose in opening sessions…
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by Doug Ward