the college classroom (wi14) week 1: introduction

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Peter Newbury Center for Teaching Development University of California, San Diego 9 January 2014 collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu

TRANSCRIPT

collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu #tccucsd

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The College

Classroom Tuesday, January 7

Thursday, January 9

Winter 2014

Image: Greinke and Bob McClure by ChrisM70 on flickr CC

What do you notice?

What do you wonder?

Unless otherwise noted, this work is licensed

under a Creative Commons Attribution-

NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License.

Who Am I – Peter

Peter Newbury

PhD (Univ. of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada) 1998

in applied math

Carl Wieman Science Education Initiative, 2008 – 2012

Associate Director, Center for Teaching Development

since August, 2012

Teaching and learning interests:

how people learn

how to motivate instructors to transform the way they teach

finding the most effective ways to implement peer instruction (clickers)

Establishing and maintaining an online personal learning network

@polarisdotca peternewbury.org

collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu #tccucsd

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Who am I - Beth

Dr. Beth Simon

Faculty, Computer Science and

Engineering

Sr. Associate Director for Learning

Sciences and Technology,

Center for Teaching Development

Undergrad in Midwest (no TAs)

PhD UCSD 2001

Research: (Computer) Science Education

Mountain Biking, Cooking/Eating, Beer

Who Am I – Steph

Steph Carmack

PhD candidate in Stephan Anagnostaras’ lab in the UCSD Division of

Social Sciences

The College Classroom and Summer Graduate Teaching Scholar alum

(2013)

Research interests:

The relationship between memory and addiction

Pychostimulant mechanisms in ADHD

Moral attitudes toward academic doping

Teaching experience :

2 accelerated summer classes for high school students (Summer 2012-3)

Neurobiology of Learning and Memory (Summer 2013)

collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu #tccucsd

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Why are you taking TCC?

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[job] I’m looking for a tenure-track academic position and

knowing about teaching will help me get a job.

[teaching experience] I have little/no teaching experience and I

want to get some.

[better instructor] I’ve taught before and I want to become a

better instructor.

[pedagogy] I’m interested in the theory and

pedagogy of teaching and learning.

[required] I’m an SGTS or a GAANN Fellow

A) 1 reason B) 2 C) 3 D) 4 E) 5

A quick survey:

We have people with different backgrounds in our

audience: Raise your hand if this is you:

Who experienced undergraduate education in the US?

Who has had a teaching experience before?

Who has given a technical talk?

Who has English as a second language?

Who has been a student in a large (150+ students) class?

collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu #tccucsd

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Introduction to teaching and learning

in higher education

Survey

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Which of these do you most associate with a typical

university lecture?

A) listening

B) absorbing

C) note-taking

D) learning

E) other

The traditional lecture is based on the

transmissionist learning model

collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu #tccucsd

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(Image by um.dentistry on flickr CC)

Let’s have a learning experience…

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Here is an important new number

system. Please learn it.

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1 = 4 = 7 =

2 = 5 = 8 =

3 = 6 = 9 =

Test

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What is this number?

Scientifically Outdated, a Known Failure

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We must abandon the tabula

rasa “blank slate” and “students

as empty vessels” models of

teaching and learning.

New Number System

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Here’s the structure of the “tic-tac-toe” code:

1 2 3

4 5 6

7 8 9

Test

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What is this number?

New learning is based on knowledge you already have.

You store things in long term memory through a set of connections that are made with your existing memories.

Constructivist Theory of Learning

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(Images by Rebecca-Lee on flickr CC)

Creating memories (aka learning) involves having neurons fire and link up in networks or patterns. (fMRI is allowing us to observe learning as it happens.)

learning is done

by individuals

How People Learn [1]

collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu #tccucsd

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Learning is not about what

professors do.

It’s about what THE LEARNER does!

Corollary:

Students do not LEARN just

by listening to the professor explain

What the best college teachers do [2]

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The best college teachers create environments where

“students encounter safe yet challenging conditions in

which they can

try,

fail,

receive feedback, and

try again

without facing summative evaluation”

a test that counts for marks

Course Information

What are the goals of TCC?

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Topic-level

LO

Topic-level

LO

Topic-

level LO

Course-level LO #4

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Course-level LO #2

Course-level LO #3 Course-level

learning outcome (LO) #1

Topic-level

LO Topic-level

LO

Topic-level

LO

Topic-level

LO

Topic-level

LO

Topic-level

LO

Topic-level

LO Topic-level

LO

Topic-

level LO

Topic-

level LO

Topic-

level LO

Topic-

level LO

Topic-

level LO

Topic-

level LO

Topic-

level LO

Topic-level

LO Topic-level

learning outcome

Course-level learning outcomes

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By the end of The College Classroom, you’ll be able to

be reflective and scholarly about your teaching

explain why certain instructional activities are successful and

why others are not

identify and support student-centered learning environments

recognize and build upon the diversity of your students

know how to succeed as a professional educator in higher

education

interact with the online teaching and learning community

through blogging and Twitter

Topic-level learning outcomes

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Many topic-level learning outcomes in

1. modern theory of Constructivist learning

by the end of the course, you’ll be able to have an

elevator conversation describing the importance of

metacognition in learning.

and many more…

Topic-level learning outcomes

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Many topic-level learning outcomes in

2. best practices for the college classroom

by the end of the course, you’ll be able to write a peer

instruction (clicker) question and explain to a colleague the

rationale behind the question and choices and describe

how it can be incorporated into the lesson.

and many more…

Throughout the classes, we’ll be

trying to model best practices

so try to watch how we teach

as well as what we teach.

Topic-level learning outcomes

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Many topic-level learning outcomes in

3. how to be a successful, professional educator

by the end of the course, you’ll be able to collaborate

with others using Google docs.

and many more…

How do we do all this in just

80 minutes per week?

Traditional classroom

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first exposure to material is in class, content is

transmitted from instructor to student

learning occurs later when student struggles alone to

complete homework, essay, project

learn easy

stuff together

learn hard

stuff alone

transfer assimilate

Flipped classroom

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student learns easy content at home: definitions,

basis skills, simple examples. Frees up class time for...

students come to class prepared to tackle

challenging concepts in class, with immediate

feedback from peers, instructor

learn hard

stuff together

learn easy

stuff alone

transfer assimilate

What is going to happen in this class

Weekly meetings in Center Hall, Room 316:

1hr 20 min “lecture” – mixture of theory and practice

interact in small groups (e.g. peer instruction with clickers)

Tue 11:00a – 12:20p, Tue 2:00 – 3:20p, or Thu 12:30 – 1:50p

If you need to attend a conference, job interview or something of that nature, attend another weekly session and let us know.

To prepare:

read assigned research paper, chapter, article, etc.

do an activity (post on the class blog, leave comments on others’ posts, observe a class, etc.)

Professional career preparation: (details later in quarter)

draft a Teaching Statement

create microteaching experience

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collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu

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All course information,

presentations, links to

readings, discussions, etc.

will be on the class blog.

Each of you will have a username and password so you

can post to the blog. (You don’t need to login to access

the course materials or leave comments, though.)

(Image by kitsu on flickr CC)

Clicker question

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Which best describes your experience with blogs?

A) I don’t have any experience with blogs.

B) I read blog occasionally

C) I read blogs often and leave comments

D) I’ve written posts on someone else’s blog

E) I have my own blog

Course blog is public so

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I can only provide links to copyrighted articles, not

the articles (PDF) themselves

you may need to be on-campus so you can use UCSD

credentials to access subscriptions

you may be able to connect from home with the UCSD

web proxy server (search Blink for “web proxy”)

Your posts and comments will be visible to the public.

Be aware of what and how you write: your posts

become part of your digital footprint.

If you include pictures in your posts, they must not be

protected by copyright (use Creative Commons pix?)

How you will be assessed

The College Classroom is not an official UCSD course.

You will not receive an grade on your transcript.

To receive a completion certificate (and for SGTSs, to

be qualified to teach in the Summer), you must

attend all sessions

thoughtfully complete all assigned work.

contribute during class in a professional, collegial

manner.

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Syllabus

Week

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1) Introduction

2) How people learn

3) Development of expertise

4) Learning outcomes

5) Growth and fixed mindsets, assessment

6) Cooperative learning strategies

7) Diversity of learners

8) Alternatives to lecture

9) The first day of class

10) Teaching as research,

succeeding in academia

11)

(topics and/or order may change as the course progresses)

Microteaching presentations

preparation

Teaching Statements

background

first draft

review and feedback

second draft

Microteaching presentations

Homework for Week 2:

Visit the course blog, collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu

Find the homework for Week 2 (to be completed

before the Week 2 sessions on Jan 14 and 16.)

You will need the password to access certain items.

The password is ________________.

collegeclassroom.ucsd.edu #tccucsd

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References

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1. National Research Council (2000). How People

Learn: Brain, Mind, Experience, and School: Expanded

Edition. J.D. Bransford, A.L Brown & R.R. Cocking

(Eds.),Washington, DC: The National Academies

Press.

2. Bain, K. (2004). What the best college teachers do.

Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

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