How to Improve Student Learning?
All too often in our concern to teach, we can
sometimes forget that teaching is not a goal in itself but rather is a
practice aimed at helping students to learn. But what do we
define the nature of learning? What does it mean to learn?
What should students be able to do intellectually (or physically or
emotionally) as a result of taking our classes? How do
students understand and approach their learning? This seminar
will provide participants an opportunity to explore these key
questions, to re-conceptualize their thinking about learning, and to
develop strategies for enhancing student learning.. Participants will:
- Explore key issues of student learning,including the different conceptions of and approaches to learning which
students bring to the learning situation;
- Look at faculty conceptions of teaching and their relationship to learning;
- Consider how different conceptions translate into strategies and approaches to teaching;
- Design and develop strategies of teaching for enhancing learning.
How to Design a Better Course
This seminar provides participants with the
opportunity to explore the issues and practice of course and curriculum
design. It will focus on devising course objectives, teaching
strategies, and assessment/grading schemes, in terms of what it is we
want our students to be able to do - intellectually, emotionally,
physically or socially. Seminars goals include the ability to:
- Appreciate the relationship of course design to student learning;
- Explore alternative conceptions of course design;
- Improve understanding and writing of goals and objectives for individual courses and teaching sessions;
- Develop an outline of a course design including goals and objectives, methods, assessment and evaluation in
relation to the different ways students learn;
- Consider the use of a range of teaching and learning methods.
Alternative Teaching: Case Studies, Problem-Based Learning, Games and Simulations
Designed to provide stimulating alternatives to
conventional teaching, this seminar explores a range of methods for
facilitating a deeper student interaction with the knowledge they are
encountering. The intent is to evoke the student’s capacity to generate
problems and patterns, their tolerance for ambiguity, their imagination, and,
crucially, a sense of fun and play. Seminar goals include:
- Considering a wider range of teaching possibilities;
- Appreciating the value in turning teaching activities on their heads
- Exploring the key elements of case studies, games and problem-based approaches to teaching
- Designing an alternative session for their course
Using Student Groups in Large Classes and Small Ones
The practice and ethos of small group teaching
is central to the critical quality of inquiry in higher education.
Small groups raise new opportunities for fostering excellence in
learning and teaching, including the development of creative thinking,
teamwork, problem solving and interpersonal skills. Seminar objectives
include the ability to:
- Appreciate the different styles of group teaching and their implications for student learning;
- Explore a range of practical and theoretical issues of small group teaching;
- Explore alternative structures such as role-play, games, peer learning/teaching;
- Improve skills in small group teaching methods.
Teaching with New Technology
Rather than asking how we can use certain
technologies, this seminar asks how (and whether) technologies can help
us create better learning environments for our students. It helps
participants explore both the research on human learning and
technologies and some of the cutting-edge uses of technologies to
foster learning.
Lecturing
This seminar is aimed at faculty for whom
lecturing comprises a critical element of their teaching. Drawing upon
research and theory, it is, nevertheless, an active seminar focusing on
the "lecture" as critical to improving the quality of student learning.
Participants will:
- Explore key issues of communication;
- Improve their understanding of lecturing in relation to the different ways students learn;
- Consider the use of a range of lecturing and learning methods;
- Evaluate the advantages and disadvantages of different approaches to lecturing;
- Extend their personal approaches to lecturing and learning.
Assessing Students
In light of widespread criticism of
examination- based assessment methods from both students and faculty,
many institutions have been rethinking their approach to student
assessment. This seminar has been designed to address the critical
issues involved. The seminar objectives include the ability to:
- Identify the main issues relating to assessment;
- Relate these issues to the broad purposes of learning and teaching in higher education;
- Critically evaluate the advantages and disadvantages of different assessment methods;
- Develop an assessment strategy that considers the different ways students learn and the learning objectives
of the course.
Fostering Great Discussions
This seminar will help participants develop
ways to foster discussions that are both lively and stimulating for
student learning. Participants will engage in some of those
approaches as they invent others to fit their classes and
discipline. Seminar objectives include the ability to:
- Understand why discussions work and why they fail;
- Recognize a variety of ways to stimulate good discussions;
- Design specific discussion classes.
The Promising Syllabus: Exploring Better Ways to Create A Syllabus
Can the make-up of the
syllabus influence how students learn? What does the research on
human learning and motivation suggest about how best to create a
stimulating syllabus? This seminar helps participants consider
the values of a new form syllabus that reflects the findings of the
learning sciences.
The Scholarship of Learning and Teaching
Ernest Boyer suggested
that we should expand the concept of scholarship to recognize that it
has four major types: the scholarship of discovery (research),
the scholarship of integration, the scholarship of application, and,
what some have argued is the highest form because it necessarily
entails the other three, the scholarship of teaching. This
seminar helps participants consider what that might mean and how they
might contribute to the small but growing body of published literature
that attempts to capture the scholarly aspects of teaching.
How Can I Evaluate My Teaching?
Must we depend only on
student ratings to evaluate teaching? This seminar explores
alternative approaches to evaluating teaching, including the use of
peers to help evaluate and the development and use of teaching
portfolio. It also allows participants to develop from the
research a better understanding of what student ratings can and cannot
tell us about the qualities of teaching.
Additional Workshops
The Center is currently developing more Learning &
Teaching workshops, including Science Teaching and Supervising Students.
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