By Dr. Robin Grenier Tuesdays are my busy days this semester. It typically goes like it did yesterday: 6:30am: Up to drive carpool to get my kid and some neighborhood kids to school 7:00am: Hit the gym 8:00am: Home to eat breakfast, answer emails, and get ready for the day 9:00am: Arrive at the office, […]
Author: Kaeppel, Kristi
“I Feel Like I Live a Double Life When They Don’t Know My Status”: A Student Perspective on Supporting Immigrants
By Emma Bjorngard & Kristi Kaeppel On September 5, 2017, Trump announced that his administration would phase out Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) over the next two and a half years, leaving it to Congress to take up legislation in the next 6 months. As instructors who have worked with vulnerable populations, our thoughts […]
1 Day Teaching Conference at Westfield State
Teaching at Teaching Intensive Institutions Conference Friday , October 6th – 9:00am-3:00pm Westfield State University, Scanlon Hall, Westfield, MA Many faculty enjoy rewarding careers at colleges and universities that primarily emphasize teaching, including liberal arts colleges, community colleges, and regional comprehensive universities. This free one-day regional conference brings together graduate students, postdocs, and faculty to […]
Differentiated Instruction with Graphic Novels: Using Unconventional Texts to Foster Positive Learning Outcomes
In my previous posts for this blog, I’ve discussed how you can support LGBTQIA+ students in your college classroom. In this post, I’ll speak about how I’ve made curricular decisions to support another student demographic–diverse learners. More specifically, I’ll be discussing the merit of using graphic novels and how doing so can actually support the […]
Bringing the Current into the Classroom: Thoughts on Tackling Tough Topics with Our Students
In our valiant efforts to integrate important current topics in our classes, we need support from the university and from each other, to discuss and exchange advice and strategies on doing this well. We will need support in the form of forgiving ourselves if it doesn’t always go well. We will need to recognize that some of our classes may become tense and uncomfortable (as a story I’ll share below illustrates). To actually open minds to consider new viewpoints and shift deep-seated beliefs and biases is a precarious, slow, and often uncomfortable process. But then, such is learning.
Register for Fall Seminars on College Instruction!
Grad 6001 students and other graduate students interested in developing their competence in college instruction are invited to register for our fall 2017 college teaching seminars. All seminars are on Fridays from 1:30pm-3:30pm in Oak 111 on the Storrs Campus. Click on the links below to register and read the seminar description. 9/22: Active Learning […]
A Primer on Flipped Classrooms
By Lindsey Danburg If you’re looking to implement a more student-centered approach in your classroom in which students spend more time applying knowledge and less time listening to you lecture, then the flipped classroom may be for you. At the very basic level, a flipped classroom is a pedagogical approach where students watch recorded lectures, […]
What Being a High School Dropout Taught Me About Teaching
I recently began working on a project that looks at how teachers form their beliefs and conceptions of teaching. Like so much of learning, it seems teachers’ beliefs develop incidentally through experience and observation. Perhaps we model our beloved high school science teacher or we imagine ourselves rousing students from boredom a la Robin Williams […]
Alternatives and Tweaks to PowerPoints in Large Classes
By Fahd Rafiq As a PhD student in Political Science, I have spent most of my life in educational settings. From the time I graduated high school in 1998 until now, I’ve witnessed a transition from traditional chalk board teaching to PowerPoint slideshows. Although I believe PowerPoint slideshows can be useful, I argue that they […]
Video Recorded Assessments: Help Your Students, Save Your Sanity
by Sarah Myers I have given several oral presentation assignments over the course of my 5 year teaching experience in higher education. It wasn’t until after the third year of grading these presentations with no issues that a student approached me with questions about her grade. She insisted that she covered a particular aspect of […]