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Jay Howard Butler University 2013 Future Faculty Teaching Fellows Summer Institute.

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Presentation on theme: "Jay Howard Butler University 2013 Future Faculty Teaching Fellows Summer Institute."— Presentation transcript:

1 Jay Howard Butler University 2013 Future Faculty Teaching Fellows Summer Institute

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3  Increases learning ◦ (Astin 1985, Johnson and Johnson 1991, Kember and Gow 1994, McKeachie 1990)  Increases critical thinking ◦ (Garside 1996, Smith 1977, Weast 1996)  Makes students co-creators of knowledge & understanding  Makes class more interesting and fun

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5  One minute to describe in writing  Share with partner  Volunteers to share?

6  Norms: taken- for-granted rules for behavior in social situations

7  Norm of Civil Attention  Students are not required to pay attention.

8  Norm of Civil Attention  Students only need to appear to pay attention.

9  Establish norm on first day ◦ Don’t do all the talking ◦ Introductions ◦ Ice breaker related to course

10  Talk with students outside of class ◦ Weaver and Qi 2005.

11  Get closer to your students ◦ Move around the room

12  Directly call upon students

13  Reward participation by grading it

14  1 = Present, but did not contribute to discussion.  2 = Made at least one contribution, but had not read the assigned material prior to class.  3 = Made one contribution to discussion and read the material prior to class.  4 = Made more than one contribution to the discussion and read the material prior to class.  5 = Made more than one contribution to the discussion, read the material prior to class and made an effort to secure the participation of all group members.

15  Norm of Consolidation of Responsibility

16  Howard, Zoeller, and Pratt 2006.  Introductory Sociology Courses  9 instructors teaching 15 sections  Average class size = 39

17  Howard, Zoeller, and Pratt 2006.  Averaged 49 student comments in 75 minutes  Roughly 1 comment every 1.5 minutes

18  Only 30% of students participated (N=12)  70% didn’t participate at all! (N=27)

19  Regardless of class size, 5 to 7 students will make 75-95% of comments.

20  Significant differences: ◦ Student Age (4:1) ◦ Instructor Gender (nearly 3:1) ◦ Seating Third (2:1)  Few differences by Student Gender or Race

21  Talkers & Non-talkers perceive class environment and their role differently in one key respect  Agree should complete assignments, pay attention, study, learn, ask for help  Differ on participate in discussion

22  Many significant differences between talkers and non-talkers ◦ Something to share, need clarification, help grade, comfortable atmosphere, learn more, more interesting, disagree with another, familiar & comfortable with classmates, trying to help

23  Significant differences between talkers and non- talkers ◦ Shy, someone else will do it, fear of appearing unintelligent to others, class too large, course not interesting

24  “Let’s hear from someone who…”  Use direct questions (call on individual students)  Carrots & Sticks (Just-in-Time quizzes, Reading Check quizzes)

25  Break the class into smaller groups to discuss  Allow time to reflect before speaking (Think-Pair-Share)

26  Structure with discussion questions  Use board to highlight key points

27  Overtly emphasize key points  Summarize periodically

28  Effective Discussion, like all good teaching, requires careful planning and structuring

29 Jay Howard Butler University 2013 Future Faculty Teaching Fellows Summer Institute


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