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Mindset

with Rebecca Campbell

| August 20, 2015 | XFacebookLinkedInEmail

Rebecca Campbell shares about the power of mindset.

Podcast notes

Mindset

Guest: Dr. Rebecca Campbell

Recommended by Michelle Miller, from episode #026.

Associate Professor of Education and the Director and Department Chair for Academic Transition Programs at Northern Arizona University.

Promise me you'll always remember: You're braver than you believe, and stronger than you seem, and smarter than you think.  – Christopher Robin

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Background on mindset

  • Early introductions
  • Dissertation work on a piece: epistemological beliefs – where knowledge comes from.
  • “You either get it or you don't.”

Growth vs fixed mindset

Isn't about teaching differently, but about framing the conversation differently. – Rebecca Campbell

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Performance barriers

A better way of describing those things holding students back from academic achievement

How to help students achieve more of a growth mindset

  • Normalize help-seeking behavior: supplemental instruction, tutoring, writing centers, office hours, peers
  • Help seeking behavior is a big deal

The shift between high school and college is pretty big. – Rebecca Campbell

… students come and arrive with lots of incoming characteristics. None of these things have to be overcome, in order for them to be successful.

  • How they engage in learning. How they leverage help-seeking behaviors. << That's what defines student success.

These processes can be guided, coached, mentored and taught. – Rebecca Campbell

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When we make the processes explicit, we make effort explicit and we are saying everyone can grow if you engage in the right processes. – Rebecca Campbell

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We can guide students about the process of learning.

Recommendations

Bonni recommends:

  • TED Talk  |  Brain Stevenson: We need to talk about an injustice
  • Rebecca will be using his book for the freshman reading group this year:
  • Just Mercy, by Brian Stevenson
  • Chronicle blog post about the freshmen reading groups

Rebecca recommends:

Be kind to students. Don't make assumptions. – Rebecca Campbell

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More on performance barriers

Reframing the conversation

Closing notes

  1. Rate/review the show. Please consider rating or leaving a review for the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast on whatever service you use to listen to it on (iTunes, Stitcher, etc.). It is the best way to help others discover the show.
  2. Give feedback. As always, I welcome suggestions for future topics or guests.
  3. Subscribe. If you have yet to subscribe to the weekly update, you can receive a single email each week with the show notes (including all the links we talk about on the episode), as well as an article on either teaching or productivity.

 

Tagged With: mindset, podcast

All that is out of our control

with Lee Skallerup Bessette

| August 13, 2015 | XFacebookLinkedInEmail

Lee Skallerup Bessette joins me to talk about how to deal with and manage when stuff get's out of control in our lives, as well as how to address those situations when it happens to our students.

All that is out of our control

 

Podcast notes

Guest: Dr. Lee Skallerup Bessette

  • Faculty Instructional Consultant at the Center for the Enhancement of Learning and Teaching at the University of Kentucky
  • Dr. Skallerup on Twitter: @readywriting
  • Dr. Skallerup on Inside Higher Ed

Digital humanities

… the intersection between technology and what technology can help us do in the humanities. – Lee Skallerup Bessette

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  • Big data, distance reading, social networking and network graphs
  • Digitization and archives
  • Making research, primary sources more available
  • Computational linguistics and mapping
  • Media studies

Digital pedagogy

We have unprecedented access to tools, to information, to interfaces, and the question that digital pedagogy attempts to answer is: ‘So what? What do we do with them?' – Lee Skallerup Bessette

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  • EdTech versus digital pedagogy

Often educational technology are almost commercially based, not to say that all of them are. – Lee Skallerup Bessette

  • Assignment to define digital pedagogy in 121 characters, an assignment for the Humanities Intensive Learning and Teaching 2015
  • Storify of the Humanities Intensive Learning and Teaching 2015 by Lee
Lee's digital pedagogy definition   “Making, bending, and breaking. #hilt2015”

#hilt2015 Digital Pedagogy – Making, Bending, Breaking https://t.co/hBI5JSGQOB

— Lee Skallerup (@readywriting) July 27, 2015

Blogs at College Ready Writing on Insidehighered.com

  • Doing it Wrong
  • On Not Swimming
  • Reflections from a New Faculty Developer

Losing control during a course

  • Decided how to make this work, but learned some lessons along the way
  • Too much focus on “covering” the content
  • Disappointing results in students' un-essay projects

[When things happen outside your control], sometimes you've got to let go of some of the coverage [of course content] in order to accomplish the learning goals. – Lee Skallerup Bassette

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Finding balance

  • Tends to happen in stages/seasons (especially regarding the kid's ages)
  • Husband just got tenure and those demands also needed to be taken into consideration

Blogging was one of the things that I used to try to maintain some sort of balance. It was something I did for me and my own sanity. – Lee Skallerup Bassette

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Students losing control

  • Worked at diverse institutions
  • Had students research the resources available on campus to them during times of struggle
  • Cultural aspects to a death in the family

I saw my role as listening, so that they felt heard, and then guiding them to a place where they could be more effectively helped. – Lee Skallerup Bessette

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Final advice

Sometimes it's ok to let go of some of the content. – Lee Skallerup Bessette

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Recommendations

Lee recommends:

Cathy Davidson's blog post – Handicapped by being underimpaired: Teaching with Equality at the Core .

Note: Cathy was a Teaching in Higher Ed guest on episode #028

Perhaps the worst people to teach writing are the best writers. – Lee Skallerup Bessette

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Bonni recommends:

Critical Digital Pedagogy Resources and Tools by Andrea Rehn

Lee inspires us for the start to the academic year:

Be hopeful. Be optimistic. And give your students the benefit of the doubt right from the start. – Lee Skallerup Bessette

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Closing notes

  1. Rate/review the show. Please consider rating or leaving a review for the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast on whatever service you use to listen to it on (iTunes, Stitcher, etc.). It is the best way to help others discover the show.
  2. Give feedback. As always, I welcome suggestions for future topics or guests.
  3. Subscribe. If you have yet to subscribe to the weekly update, you can receive a single email each week with the show notes (including all the links we talk about on the episode), as well as an article on either teaching or productivity.

Tagged With: digitalpedagogy, podcast, teaching

Practical instructional design

with Edward O'Neill

| August 6, 2015 | XFacebookLinkedInEmail

Edward Oneill joins me to talk about practical instructional design.

Podcast notes

Practical instructional design

Guest

Edward Oneill, Senior instructional designer at Yale.

Teach Better Podcast

I know a little bit about a lot of things. – Edward Oneill (and also Diana Krall, etc.)

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What Edward's clients often need

  • intuitively-appealing ways of conceptualizing the learning process
  • a survey of the relevant tools & which fit their needs & capacities

Edward's special skill

…finding the points in the learning process where assessment and evaluation can be woven in seamlessly

Design approach of Edward's early courses

Successes

  • Made sure students had to do something every week
  • Ensured consistent deadlines
  • Weekly messages, creatively introducing them to that week

Failures

  • Disconnected topics, no second chances

You don't learn anything by doing it once. – Edward Oneill

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  • Not opportunities for practice

I wanted to see it as the students' fault. It's so hard to get out of that [mindset]. – Edward Oneill

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Biggest challenges in our teaching

  • We know our content, but we don't realize how tightly packed our knowledge is…
  • Edward's blog post about the Five stages of teaching
  • Peter Newbury – prior Teaching in Higher Ed guest on episode #053 shared about recall / connections

Rehearsal and elaboration

It's about stepping away from the center and helping [students] communicate with each other. – Edward Oneill

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Methods for incorporating assessment and evaluation into the design of courses

  • Have shorter/smaller forms of assessment that aren't necessarily graded 100% of the time
  • Use their performance as your own assessment

Bonni shares about teaching with Ellen's Heads Up iPad game

Jeopardy game as form of reinforcement

Recommendations

Bonni recommends:

Parker Palmer quote

I am a teacher at heart, and there are moments in the classroom when I can hardly hold the joy. When my students and I discover uncharted territory to explore, when the pathway out of a thicket opens up before us, when our experience is illumined by the lightning-life of the mind—then teaching is the finest work I know. – Parker Palmer

Edward comments:

There is a special privilege in people letting you help them grow and change. – Edward Oneill

Edward recommends:

On Becoming a Person, by Carl Rogers

As a teacher, I need to see you as a unique learner. If I really try to understand you and try to help you grow, it is not so much about information transfer; it is a more humane kind of relationship. – Edward Oneill

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When you're passionate about teaching and you focus on it and you try to improve – you do. – Edward Oneill

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Closing notes

  1. Rate/review the show. Please consider rating or leaving a review for the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast on whatever service you use to listen to it on (iTunes, Stitcher, etc.). It is the best way to help others discover the show.
  2. Give feedback. As always, I welcome suggestions for future topics or guests.
  3. Subscribe. If you have yet to subscribe to the weekly update, you can receive a single email each week with the show notes (including all the links we talk about on the episode), as well as an article on either teaching or productivity.

Tagged With: pedagogy, podcast, teaching

The terror of teaching

| July 30, 2015 | XFacebookLinkedInEmail

Bonni Stachowiak shares some of her fears about teaching and ways that she often attempts to resolve them.

Podcast Notes

The Skillful Teacher, by Stephen Brookfield

Common fears

  • Quantity over quality
  • Confusion
  • Lacking balance
  • Being inadequate

Attempts to resolve fears

  • Carve out time for deeper connections
  • Use checklists and leverage Remind more
  • Ideal week template  |   Outsource (virtual assistants)/insource and say no more often

Essentialism: The disciplined pursuit of less, by Greg McKeown

  • Have evidence to the contrary (letters, emails, etc.)

Recommendations

Tommy Emmanuel's Tall Fidler

Closing notes

  1. Rate/review the show. Please consider rating or leaving a review for the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast on whatever service you use to listen to it on (iTunes, Stitcher, etc.). It is the best way to help others discover the show.
  2. Give feedback. As always, I welcome suggestions for future topics or guests.
  3. Subscribe. If you have yet to subscribe to the weekly update, you can receive a single email each week with the show notes (including all the links we talk about on the episode), as well as an article on either teaching or productivity.

 

Tagged With: fears, teaching

Teaching with Twitter

with Jesse Stommel

| July 23, 2015 | XFacebookLinkedInEmail

Jesse Stommel, shares about how he enhances his teaching with Twitter.

Teaching with

Podcast notes

Teaching with Twitter

  • Guest: Jesse Stommel
  • About Hybrid Pedagogy

Twitter basics

  • Getting started with Twitter
  • Jesse's blog post: Teaching with Twitter
  • Twitter Pedagogy: An educator down the Twitter rabbit hole, by Kelsey Schmitz
  • The rules of Twitter, by Dorothy Kim

Jesse's background

When I grew up, I always wanted to have my own school… [Hybrid Pedagogy] is not really as much a repository for articles, but a space for community and for engaging. – Jesse Stommel

jesse-stommel-quote1

Was recently in Canada for the Digital Humanities Summer Institute, where he broke his ankle

On kindness

Kindness is what drives my pedagogy. It's about seeing people for who they really are and engaging with their full selves. – Jesse Stommel

jesse-stommel-quote2

Part of [kindness] is also about bringing your full self to the relationship you have with your coworkers, your students, and [other collaborators] that you use as a guiding ethic. – Jesse Stommel

jesse-stommel-quote3

What the 140 limitation does

The constraints of Twitter are also its affordances. Being asked to take an idea and put it in this constrained linguistic space of 140 characters forces us to think about and question our thinking in ways we wouldn't otherwise. – Jesse Stommel

jesse-stommel-quote4

Twitter allows for improvisation within a framework

What students should know

Twitter lets us play out our ideas

Twitter is a space for trying out ideas. It encourages us to iterate… – Jesse Stommel

[Twitter] is like a tool in the way that a pencil is a tool. A tool that lots of people can use for lots of different reasons. It becomes this platform that you can use in different ways and environments. – Jesse Stommel

Conversation with Steve Wheeler re: digital natives on episode 38

Literacies

Each person has to find a different relationship to these tools and build their own self inside of the network. – Jesse Stommel

Privacy literacy

Anyone who imagines that they can become private just with the flip of a switch is not really understanding how these networks work. – Jesse Stommel

Reflections on Teaching in Higher Ed episode 31 on the social network Yik Yak

Creative ways to teach with Twitter

  • Twitter vs Zombies
    • Pete Rorabaugh and Jesse Stommel share about Twitter vs Zombies with GamifiED OOC

  • The Twitter essay, by Jesse Stommel
  • 12 Steps for designing an assignment, by Jesse Stommel (slide show that addresses some of the questions around how to grade these types of assignments)

Some things need to be public. – Jesse Stommel

jesse-stommel-quote5

Canvassers study in episode #555 of This American Life has been retracted

He was peer-reviewing my tweets before I sent each one out [at our wedding]… – Jesse Stommel

Today I'm live-tweeting my wedding to Joshua Lee. Because some things need to be public.

— Jesse Stommel (@Jessifer) June 13, 2014

I want my students to know someone in a place that is so different than the place that they are in. – Jesse Stommel

jesse-stommel-quote6

  • Maha Bali in Egypt on Twitter
  • Tweetdeck
  • Net Smart by Howard Rheingold

Recommendations

Bonni recommends:

  • Teaching with Twitter class, via Hybrid Pedagogy, taught by Jesse

Jesse recommends:

  • Net Smart by Howard Rheingold
  • Jesse on Twitter
  • Hybrid Pedagogy

Closing notes

  1. Rate/review the show. Please consider rating or leaving a review for the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast on whatever service you use to listen to it on (iTunes, Stitcher, etc.). It is the best way to help others discover the show.
  2. Give feedback. As always, I welcome suggestions for future topics or guests.
  3. Subscribe. If you have yet to subscribe to the weekly update, you can receive a single email each week with the show notes (including all the links we talk about on the episode), as well as an article on either teaching or productivity.

 

Tagged With: edtech, podcast, privacy, teaching, twitter

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