PSYC850

PSYC850

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Observation Protocol (PAITE)
Observation Protocol (PAITE)
PAITE is a launching point The Protocol for Advancing Inclusive Teaching Efforts (PAITE) provides instructors with formative, data-informed feedback on a variety of observable inclusive teaching ap…
·inclusiveteachingvisualization.com·
Observation Protocol (PAITE)
Engaging Students Through collaborative Research Projects
Engaging Students Through collaborative Research Projects
Listen to this episode from Teaching in Higher Ed on Spotify. Engaging Students Through collaborative Research Projects, with Rebecca Glazier and Matthew Pietryka. Quotes from the episode We should use technology to our advantage as much as we can. -Rebecca Glazier Resources Learning through Collaborative Data Projects: Engaging Students and Building Rapport, by Matthew T. Pietryka and Rebecca A. Glazier In Defense of Negativity: Attack Ads in Presidential Campaigns, John G. Geer Connecting in the Online Classroom, by Rebecca Glazier R Script SIFT (The Four Moves) - Mike Caulfield AdFontes Media Affiliate income disclosure: Books that are recommended on the podcast link to the Teaching in Higher Ed bookstore on Bookshop.org. All affiliate income gets donated to the LibroMobile Arts Cooperative (LMAC), established in 2016 by Sara Rafael Garcia.”
·open.spotify.com·
Engaging Students Through collaborative Research Projects
S2E24: Nidhi Sachdeva on Microlearning with Cognitive Science Principles
S2E24: Nidhi Sachdeva on Microlearning with Cognitive Science Principles
Listen to this episode from Progressively Incorrect on Spotify. In this episode of Progressively Incorrect, I interview Nidhi Sachdeva, a Toronto-based PhD candidate who, like many of you I suspect, is exploring ways to embed the science of learning into teaching and professional development. Subscribe to this podcast on…SpotifyGoogle PodcastsApple PodcastsWordPress I first came across Nidhi on Twitter, where she shares these amazingly digestible … Continue reading S2E24: Nidhi Sachdeva on Microlearning with Cognitive Science Principles
·open.spotify.com·
S2E24: Nidhi Sachdeva on Microlearning with Cognitive Science Principles
Advice | How to Run a Good Meeting
Advice | How to Run a Good Meeting
You’ve been in your share of awful meetings. Here’s how to lead better ones.
·chronicle.com·
Advice | How to Run a Good Meeting
You Have More Influence Than You Think
You Have More Influence Than You Think
Listen to this episode from A Slight Change of Plans on Spotify. Influence is often seen as a skill we have to cultivate, a charismatic quality leveraged by select leaders, business people, and successful social media accounts. But in her new book, “You Have More Influence Than You Think,” social psychologist Vanessa Bohns demonstrates that we all have influence through our words, choices, and even just our presence. Maya and Vanessa discuss how we can become more aware of our power to persuade, and learn to wield it wisely. For a behind-the-scenes look at the show, follow @DrMayaShankar on Instagram. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
·open.spotify.com·
You Have More Influence Than You Think
Pandemic Pedagogy: Practical and Empathetic Teaching Practices
Pandemic Pedagogy: Practical and Empathetic Teaching Practices
This first-person dissection of pandemic pedagogy, supported by surveillance theory, queer and feminist pedagogical theory, and radically empathetic and nonviolent teaching practices, suggests a better way forward in college and university teaching during the COVID-19 pandemic and beyond. Outlining anti-surveillance and anti-policing practices, as well as instructors’ roles as enforcers of the neoliberal university’s interests and instructors’ needs usurping best teaching and administrative practices, the article attempts to make sense of interconnected limitations and inequities in higher education which the COVID-19 pandemic and subsequent distance and hybrid course delivery models have exposed. The article posits methods to reframe instructor/student interactions in virtual and socially distanced classrooms. In a radical departure from the violent surveillance university model, including an acknowledgement of processes instructors can realistically resist, the article suggests a non-hierarchical and informal ongoing review of teaching practices, a practiced and intentional refusal to engage with neoliberal systems of student control, and an active acknowledgement and decentering of instructors’ feelings when making pedagogical decisions. An accompanying handout, originally presented at the 2020 unConference hosted by the Race, Space, Place Initiative at Virginia Commonwealth University, presents the information in an easy-to-read and dynamic format.
·spectrajournal.org·
Pandemic Pedagogy: Practical and Empathetic Teaching Practices
6.1-2 Issue currie
6.1-2 Issue currie
Aceessi
·journalofmultimodalrhetorics.com·
6.1-2 Issue currie
About Improve with Metacognition - Improve with Metacognition
About Improve with Metacognition - Improve with Metacognition
Metacognition refers to an intentional focusing of attention on a process in which one is personally engaged. It encourages awareness of one’s current state of accomplishment, along with the situational influences and strategy choices that are currently, or have previously, influenced accomplishment of that process. Through metacognition, one should become better able to accurately judge one’s progress, and select and... Read more »
·improvewithmetacognition.com·
About Improve with Metacognition - Improve with Metacognition
Social Annotation in Psychology : Hypothesis
Social Annotation in Psychology : Hypothesis
In this video, we will focus on an open pedagogical practice known as social annotation. One frequently used social annotation tool is Hypothesis, which can enable the sort of collaborative meaning-making that leads to learning.
·web.hypothes.is·
Social Annotation in Psychology : Hypothesis
Leveraging What Students Know to Make Sense of Texts: What the Research Says About Prior Knowledge Activation
Leveraging What Students Know to Make Sense of Texts: What the Research Says About Prior Knowledge Activation
This systematic literature review examined the research on prior knowledge and its activation to ascertain how these terms are defined; what specific techniques have been empirically investigated; and the conditions under which prior knowledge activation facilitated students’ comprehension. Fifty-four articles met the inclusion criteria and revealed that the terms prior knowledge and prior knowledge activation were often vaguely defined. Further, 30 unique techniques for activating readers’ prior knowledge representing eight different categories were identified. Those categories were open-ended prompts, procedural or strategic supports during reading, visual representations, analogical reasoning, text alteration, augmented activation, extratextual activities, and spontaneous activation. Techniques meant to facilitate knowledge activation prior to reading were most common, although the prompting of students’ existing knowledge was beneficial during and after reading as well. Variability in the effectiveness of activation techniques was related, in part, to the amount, accuracy, and specificity of students’ knowledge. Based on the key findings identified in this review, recommendations for future inquiry are forwarded including suggested definitions of prior knowledge and prior knowledge activation.
·osf.io·
Leveraging What Students Know to Make Sense of Texts: What the Research Says About Prior Knowledge Activation
Great Expectations, Part II
Great Expectations, Part II
I was going to call my blog great expectations today, as an homage to my Victorianist past that seems to have been very much at the forefron...
·allthingspedagogical.blogspot.com·
Great Expectations, Part II