UPCOMING UC ALUMNI CAREER NETWORK WEBINARS
|
|
|
|
HIRE UC Virtual Alumni Career Fair
HIRE UC Virtual Alumni Career Fair
Wednesday, July 15, 2020
10AM to 4PM (Pacific) |
||||||||||||||
|
Is It Ever OK to Lecture?
Telling is a time-tested and efficient way to communicate information. Just try to keep the strengths and weaknesses of lecturing in mind. The most effective teaching involves looking to communicate information in inefficient ways — that is, in ways that make students work to understand the information, and not just listen passively. So when we lecture, we need to:
- Supplement periods of telling with activities in which students can then put to use the information we tell them.
- Design activities that allow students to integrate the new information into their prior knowledge and make new concepts.
- Think about how to prime students to receive a lecture, by creating activities that reveal to them the gaps in their own knowledge.
A big benefit of engaging students in active learning is that it reveals — to us and to them — what they don’t yet understand. With lecturing, we can tell them all we want, but whether they’re listening is anyone’s guess.
Congratulations to two CIRTL Scholars for presenting their Teaching as Research projects on the CIRTL network to the national cross network community.
Congratulations to two CIRTL Scholars for presenting their Teaching as Research projects on the CIRTL network to the national cross network community.
Elizabeth Mills: “Mixed Methods Assessment of Introductory Physics for Life Sciences Labs at UCLA” and Elizabeth Reid-Wainscoat: “Does temperament composition impact group dynamics in an upper division biology lab course?”
Elizabeth Mills |
Elizabeth Reid-Wainscoat |
Check out the videos of their presentations on the CIRTL.net website!
The Case for Teaching How to Teach
Graduate students who are taught how to teach are more likely to be prepared for the realities of working in higher education without affecting their research capacity, according to a new study.