I'm off to France for ten days so will be taking a short break from posting on this website. Hope everyone is having a great summer!
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I'm off to France for ten days so will be taking a short break from posting on this website. Hope everyone is having a great summer!
May 29, 2009 in Dear Dr. Kirk: | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
One thing I've learned after 27 years of teaching is that using rubrics for exams, papers, and student presentations means less time grading and more specific feedback for the students. Check out this website for thousands of free rubrics for teachers.
May 27, 2009 in Advice for Teachers, Teaching tools, Tips for Teaching | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: iRubric, Rubrics, Teaching tools, Tips on teaching
Came across this article on measuring teaching effectiveness including peer ratings, self-evaluations, videos, student interviews, alumni ratings, employer ratings, administrator ratings, teaching scholarship, teaching awards, learning outcome measures, teaching portfolios, and...oh yes...student ratings.
You can download the article here: Download 12 strategies to measure teaching effectiveness
Interesting article in the Wall Street Journal for our ex-students and friends who are considering going to graduate school in business.
Many of us have started warning our students that they should be careful what they post on the internet. Here's the first court ruling addressing the use of a social network page (MySpace) in an adverse decision. The case dealt with the awarding of a degree in an university but could apply to employers and applicants also.
Teaching online can be rewarding, but be wary before you agree to tackle such a course. There are several seemingly counterintuitive experiences I’ve had with online courses.
May 21, 2009 in Advice for Teachers, Building Credibility, Tips for Teaching | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
As noted in Johanna Riddle’s article, Redefining the Role of the Teacher:
She goes on to say that we will have new roles as frameworkers, connectors, and enablers.
You can read the full article here.
I'm off to Lincoln, Nebraska, today to teach a faculty development workshop at the BryanLGH College of Health Sciences on Friday. The school provides professional education emphasizing clinical competence as well as academic excellence in order to prepare students for careers in Nursing and Allied Health.
In addition to topics of teaching effectiveness and classroom management, I'll discuss using educational technology such as blogs, wikis, and Twitter in the classroom.
I'm looking forward to it.
May 14, 2009 in Workshops | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: Classroom management workshops, Faculty development, Tips on teaching
Not sure of the original source of this but got it today from Dr. Robert Anderson, my dean at University of South Florida.
------------
Then Jesus took his disciples up the mountain and gathered them around him, and taught them saying:
Blessed
are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven,
Blessed
are the meek,
Blessed
are they that mourn,
Blessed
are the merciful,
Blessed
are those who thirst for justice,
Blessed
are you when persecuted,
Blessed
are you when you suffer,
Be
glad and rejoice for your reward is great in heaven.
Then Simon Peter said,
“Do we have to write this down?”
“Are we supposed to know this?”
“Will we have a test on this?”
“I don’t have any paper.”
“Do we have to turn this in?”
“The other disciples didn’t have to learn this.”
“Can I go to the boy’s room?”
“What does this have to do with real life?”
Then, one of the Pharisees asked to see one of Jesus’ lesson plans and inquired of Jesus.
“Where are your intended learning outcomes?”
And Jesus wept.
May 13, 2009 in Teaching Humor, Tips for Teaching | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: Setting course objectives, Teaching humor, The lesson
Yesterday, I asked if other professors were using Twitter in their classroom. Here’s an interesting article on CEOs who use Twitter and why. I'm thinking that an interesting assignment in my MBA class on Leadership this fall would be to have the students pick someone to follow and then analyze how that CEO and company is using Twitter as a business strategy.
And for those of you who wonder what this is all about, here's an article on the misconceptions about Twitter.
May 12, 2009 in Advice for Teachers, Pedagogy, Teaching tools, Tips for Teaching | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: Social networks, Teaching tools, Tips on teaching, Twitter
This article on using Twitter in the classroom states that it "helps students develop key skills in listening,
information-gathering, multitasking and succinct writing." Twitter appears to be used primarily in
I'm thinking of using Twitter in my management classes this fall-either as a visual aid for student presentations or as a way to review for exams. I would be curious to hear how others are using this technology.
May 11, 2009 in Advice for Teachers, Building Credibility, Pedagogy, Teaching tools | Permalink | Comments (1) | TrackBack (0)
This anonymous blogger poses the questions we've all had at some point in our teaching career...
What would happen if I walked into class and left my ipod in? If I just pantomimed my way through a lecture while I actually rocked out in my own little ipod world? It would look like I was teaching, just like it looks like you (chick in the 7th row to the left) are paying attention to me. Or, what if I lectured and played a video game at the same time? Instead of slides, you could see my game. Or if I just decided to work on the campus newspaper crossword puzzle (how can that take you all class period? It’s ridiculously easy, if you want, I can just give you all the answers in the first 2 minutes of class). Hmmm…what if I just interrupted class to take a call on my cell phone, or sent a text message or two. Oooh I know, what if I just ripped off a lecture from the internet. You know, it would be completely and obviously distinct from my usual lecture style. The organization would be different, the format of my slides would be different, it would just scream “I DIDN’T DO THIS” but I just passed it off to you like it was my own work. I will have to try these things. I’ll consider it pedagogical research and will begin as soon as I get tenure.
May 06, 2009 in Classroom Management, Difficult Students, Tips for Teaching | Permalink | Comments (0) | TrackBack (0)
I'm leaving today for Cincinnati to participate in my first half marathon on May 3 with Patti Digh and 11 other women from 10 cities in 8 different states. We are raising money for Metropolitan Ministries, an organization that helps poor and homeless people get jobs, housing, their lives back together...If you would like to make a donation, click here.
AND Patti's giving away t-shirts! As she notes, if you make a pledge to Metropolitan Ministries for $5 a mile or more ($65.50), she will send you one of the Life is a Verb Flying Pig half-marathon extravaganza t-shirts! Please be sure to note "Flying Pig--Digh" in the comment line so she will know who to send the t-shirt to, and send her an email at patti(at)pattidigh(dot)com with your address and t-shirt size.
"Every donation, no matter how large or small, counts, and gives back dignity to human beings just trying to make it, mile by mile."
May 01, 2009 in Dear Dr. Kirk: | Permalink | Comments (2) | TrackBack (0)
Technorati Tags: Flying Pig Marathon, Metropolitan Ministries, Patti Digh
