Turning open education into a social movement
Turning open education into a social movement
By Doug Ward
Rajiv Jhangiani makes a case for free and open course materials in very personal terms.
By Doug Ward
Rajiv Jhangiani makes a case for free and open course materials in very personal terms.
By Doug Ward
At a meeting to provide highlights of KU’s latest climate survey, Emil Cunningham of Rankin & Associates asked audience members a question:
What is the point of higher education?
“Students,” someone in the audience said.
“That’s right,” he said. “Our purpose for being here is students.”
By Doug Ward
The future of colleges and universities is neither clear nor certain.
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?
By Doug Ward
Let’s call it pride.
That’s probably the best way to describe the look of Sandra Gautt as she wandered among the 45 posters and the dozens of people at The Commons in Spooner Hall.
By Doug Ward
A recent study about reading on mobile phones surprised even the researchers.
The study, by the digital consulting firm Nielsen Norman Group, found that reading comprehension on mobile phones matched that of reading on larger computer screens. The results were the same with shorter, easier articles (400 words at an eighth-grade level) and longer, more difficult articles (990 words at a 12-grade level).
The recent (Re)imagining Humanities Teaching conference (PDF) offered a template for the future of teaching in higher education.
With its emphasis on teaching as a scholarly activity, the conference challenged participants to find effective ways to document student learning, to build and maintain strong communities around teaching, and to approach courses as perpetual works in progress that adapt to the needs of students.
By Doug Ward and Mary Deane Sorcinelli
BOULDER, Colo. – Symbolism sometimes makes more of a difference than money in bringing about change in higher education.
By Doug Ward
BOULDER, Colo. – Noah Finkelstein rarely minces words, and the words he offers to public universities carry a lofty challenge.
By Doug Ward
Concealed carry laws in Colorado, Idaho and Texas generated considerable anxiety among faculty members and students when they took effect over the past few years. Many feared for their safety. Others worried about whether they could teach controversial topics in the same way.
“It felt like the end of the world here,” a professor in Idaho said.