Transcript Document
Fostering Climates of
Learning for Future
Students
Betsy L. Diegel, Ed.D
Director or Academic Services & Associate Professor
GROUND RULES
Be open-minded
Be honest with yourself
Raise your hand and answer or verbally reflect on any
question I have in the presentation.
Commit to making at least one change for future teaching
practices.
SURVEY
A student perspective view
of your classroom….
VINCENT TINTO
5 main conditions that we as faculty have control over:
1. Expectation
2. Advice
3. Support
4. Involvement
5. Learning
Students are much more likely to persist and graduate in
settings that support the above.
Take control so students can realize their full potential of
developmental growth.
Most important condition for student retention: Fostering
learning
NSSE (NATIONAL SURVEY OF
STUDENT ENGAGEMENT
5 benchmarks of effective teaching practices
1. Level of academic challenge
2.Active/Collaborative learning
3. Student/Faculty exchange
4. Enriching educational experiences
5. Supportive campus environment
-academic & social needs
Let’s examine this now through examples that you can
incorporate into your teaching practices on a regular
basis!
LEVEL OF ACADEMIC
CHALLENGE
No student rises to low expectations- Les Brown
Teach the subject matter the first day of class.
-begin to build a sense of community
How well do you feel you are doing in bridging the gap between
the high achieving student vs. less than prepared student?
Listen and sit down in their group during active learning
activities, ask questions, walk around the room, offer praise
Make frequent eye contact.
ACTIVE/COLLABORATIVE
LEARNING
Hold students accountable for taking on their share of the
responsibility for learning. More of them, less of me!
Put them in charge of their learning and encourage them to
reach higher
Ex) Leader of a class conversation instead of
a speech.
Ex) Ask students to suggest a new method of
learning material.
Students will respect you when they know that they have a
voice in how they learn, not just what they learn.
STUDENT/FACULTY
EXCHANGE
Are you the first one to arrive to class? Last one to leave?
Casually chat with students before and after class, know
their names.
Do you participate in the first icebreaker alongside of
them?
Acknowledge them on campus or in public- less likely to
be scared if you know them and care
Welcome them to your office hours
Set a mandatory amount of visits students need to attend
your office hours (Ex) 2X per semester).
STUDENT/FACULTY
EXCHANGE
Students love to give us their feedback but it is just as
crucial for us to be giving detailed, consistent feedback to
students.
Ex) in class counseling sessions
Online environment- do you welcome every student
individually and respond to the Introduction DB during the
first week?
Going beyond weekly office hours
Video lectures
Setting aside time to be available to assist with
groupwork
Motivation (U of Phoenix, 2014)
ENRICHING/EDUCATIONAL
EXPERIENCES
People don’t care what you know until they know you
care- (Marshall,2012)
Build a community of learners- create a “Family”
-talk about things that matter to them
-have them create personal goals the first day
-rigorous but fun
“Don’t even think about dropping this class because I will
hunt you down!” (Spencer, 2013).
ENRICHING/EDUCATIONAL
EXPERIENCES
In class experience- Complete an exam in trios after they
have just completed the exam alone
Weave diversity into the curriculum through an out of
class assignment (students interview each other, onlineFacetime each other)
SUPPORTIVE CAMPUS
ENVIRONMENT
We are doing an awesome job! Results from Student
Satisfaction Survey every year.
Do you assume students are not prepared when really they
could be fearful of you or the course?
Fear of failure
First Gens
Educate ourselves about fear, recognize it, offer
guidance
Video yourself
Create a safe learning environment
Receive feedback from a colleague about your syllabus,
ask to sit in on your class
Fair policies, nuturing learning environment,
encouraged to ask questions, assignments are clear
SUPPORTIVE CAMPUS
ENVIRONMENT
Refer a student who has psychological, emotional,
financial trouble. We are not counselors.
Do not want the classroom climate that we have
established to be altered.
Classroom relationships are involuntary.
ADDITIONAL
CONSIDERATIONS
The Teaching Professor- May 2014 issue
Taking the Tech Out of Technology
• Students did not want more technology
• Wanted and needed more instructor contact (talking,
professional bonding, feedback)
• Suggestion: Blend human contact ---- Technology
•
What ideas do you have?
ANOTHER CLIMATE TO
CONSIDER: IMPLEMENTING
THE FLIPPED CLASSROOM
BIOL 121L- Fall 2013 through Spring/Summer 2014
Past- spent too much time lecturing to prepare students
for lab activities
End of semester survey, focus group
Not an entirely flipped classroom
Video(s)
Handouts
Weekly pre-lab quiz
SURVEY RESULTS
77% better experience in BIOL 121L because of
pre-lab work as compared to other lab classes.
78% had more confidence in lab each week
because of the pre-lab work and completing the
10 point quiz.
92% liked knowing what was covered before
coming to lab.
81% felt they could participate more in lab.
38% felt their lab practical scores increased
because of the work they had to complete before
coming to lab.
QUALITATIVE
FEEDBACK
Great and very beneficial
Great approach, helpful
Liked knowing what we were doing ahead of time
Hit the ground running- begin with learning not listening
I wouldn’t have pre-read otherwise, only would have done
what was due that day.
Talked too fast
Add cumulative questions to quiz each week
Want it again in future
COME FULL CIRCLE
What do you think about your survey responses now?
Take time to make notes, reflect
TAKE HOME MESSAGE
Share the most valuable item you have
learned from today’s presentation.
Take what you have learned today to
inform future teaching practices.
My goal for you: Implement at least one new item this Fall
2014!
REFERENCES
Bledsoe, T., & Baskin, J. (2014). Recognizing student fear: The elephant in the classroom. College
Teaching, 62(1), 32-41
Boyer, S. Edmonson, D., Artis, A. & Fleming, D. (2014). Self-directed learning: A tool for lifelong
learning. Journal of Marketing Education, 36(1), 20-32.
Tinto, V. (2001, June 19). Taking Student Retention Seriously. Annual Recruitment and Retention
Conference, Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board. Austin, Texas. Retrieved May 11, 2006 from
http://www.mcli.dist.maricopa.edu/fsd/c2006/docs/takingretentionseriously.pdf.