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Acknowledgements

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Voices from the Classroom
Ein Kapitel aus dem Buch Voices from the Classroom
© 2019 University of Toronto Press, Toronto

© 2019 University of Toronto Press, Toronto

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Table of Contents v
  3. Acknowledgements ix
  4. Introduction: Responsibility, Respect, Research and Reflection in Higher Education 1
  5. SECTION I: POWER, DIVERSITY AND EQUITY IN THE CLASSROOM
  6. Introduction 6
  7. Part One: Student Voices
  8. Gender, Power and Silence in the Classroom: Our Experiences Speak for Themselves 7
  9. Fog and Frustration: The Graduate Student Experience 18
  10. "Dissertation Dementia": Reflections on One Woman's Graduate Experience 21
  11. Part Two: Teachers' Voices
  12. Power in the Classroom 25
  13. The University Classroom: From Laboratory to Liberatory Education 40
  14. Diversity in the Classroom: Engagement and Resistance 45
  15. Responsibility and Respect in Critical Pedagogy 54
  16. Feminist Pedagogy: Paradoxes in Theory and Practice 58
  17. Teaching "Women and Men in Organizations": Feminist Pedagogy in the Business School 63
  18. Empowering Students Through Feminist Pedagogy 68
  19. Heterosexism in the Classroom 75
  20. DisABILITY in the Classroom: The Forgotten Dimension of Diversity? 79
  21. Teaching Students with Learning Disabilities 85
  22. Avoiding the Retrofitted Classroom: Strategies for Teaching Students with Disabilities 89
  23. Adult Students 93
  24. English-as-a-Second-Language Students 95
  25. SECTION II: THEORIES AND MODELS OF STUDENT LEARNING
  26. Introduction 98
  27. Teaching Styles/Learning Styles: The Myers Briggs Model 99
  28. The Gregorc Model of Learning Styles 105
  29. Student Development: From Problem Solving to Problem Finding 110
  30. Using Theories about Student Learning to Improve Teaching 118
  31. SECTION III: COURSE DESIGN
  32. Introduction 128
  33. Course Planning: From Design to Active Classroom 129
  34. Developing and Teaching a Science Course: A Junior Faculty Member's Perspective 133
  35. The Dialectic of Course Development: I Theorize, They React... and Then? 136
  36. Beyond Bare Facts: Teaching Goals in Science 139
  37. "Why Didn't He Just Say It?": Getting Students Interested in Language 141
  38. SECTION IV: WORKING WITH GRADUATE STUDENTS
  39. Introduction 146
  40. Graduate Supervisory Practices 147
  41. Working Together: The Teaching Assistant-Professor Relationship 153
  42. Working with Teaching Assistants 157
  43. Issues for International Teaching Assistants 159
  44. SECTION V: ACADEMIC HONESTY
  45. Introduction 162
  46. Academic Dishonesty 163
  47. Plagiarism and Student Acculturation: Strangers in the Strange Lands of our Disciplines 166
  48. Plagiarism and the Challenge of Essay Writing: Learning from our Students 171
  49. Honesty in the Laboratory 177
  50. Electronic Plagiarism: A Cautionary Tale 179
  51. SECTION VI: TEACHING AND LEARNING STRATEGIES
  52. Introduction 182
  53. Part One: Lecturing
  54. Effective Lecturing Techniques 184
  55. Improving Large-Class Lecturing 188
  56. Improving Student Learning in Lectures 197
  57. Part Two: Class Participation
  58. Dead Silence... A Teacher's Nightmare 200
  59. Evoking and Provoking Student Participation 202
  60. Resistance in the Classroom 206
  61. Computer-Mediated Communication: Some Thoughts about Extending the Classroom 210
  62. Part Three: Seminars, Tutorials and Small-Group Learning
  63. Study Group Guide for Instructors and Teaching Assistants 215
  64. Warm-Ups: Lessening Student Anxiety in the First Class 225
  65. Small is Beautiful: Using Small Groups to Enhance Student Learning 227
  66. Integrating Group Work into our Classes 231
  67. Scrapbook Presentations: An Exercise in Collaborative Learning 235
  68. The Field Walk 241
  69. Teaching with Cases 244
  70. Stages in Group Dynamics 247
  71. The Joy of Seminars 249
  72. The Office Hour: Not Just Crisis Management 252
  73. Negotiating Power in the Classroom: The Example of Group Work 255
  74. SECTION VII: ASSIGNMENTS AND EVALUATION
  75. Introduction 268
  76. Part One: Reading
  77. When No One Has Done the Reading 270
  78. A Strategy for Encouraging Students to do Readings 272
  79. Telling a Book by Its Cover 274
  80. The Sherlock Holmes Approach to Critical Reading (Or How to Help Students Become Good "Detextives") 279
  81. Part Two: Research Essays and Other Writing Assignments
  82. Sequencing Assignments 282
  83. An Experiment in Writing and Learning Groups 285
  84. Paper Chase: The Sequel 288
  85. Working with Students'Writing 291
  86. What Happens After You Say, "Please Go to the Writing Centre"? 295
  87. Part Three: Grading and Evaluation
  88. Evaluating Student Writing: Problems and Possibilities 298
  89. Fast, Fair and Constructive: Grading in the Mathematical Sciences 303
  90. An Individualized Approach to Teaching and Evaluation 306
  91. The Norwegian Motivator, or How I Make Grading Work for Me and My Students 316
  92. SECTION VIII: DEVELOPING AND ASSESSING YOUR TEACHING
  93. Introduction 320
  94. Part One: Classroom Assessment
  95. Improving Student Learning Through Feedback: Classroom Assessment Techniques 321
  96. The One-Minute Paper...Two Success Stories 324
  97. Developing the One-Minute Paper 326
  98. Part Two: Mid-Course Evaluation
  99. Formative Evaluation Surveys 330
  100. Facilitating Student Feedback 333
  101. Feedback Strategies 336
  102. Part Three: Collegial Consultation
  103. Peer Pairing 338
  104. Peer Pairing in French Studies 340
  105. Part Four: Teaching Evaluation Guide
  106. Teaching Evaluation Guide 344
  107. Part Five: Teaching Documentation Guide
  108. Teaching Documentation Guide 361
  109. CONTRIBUTORS 369
Heruntergeladen am 10.11.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.3138/9781442603059-001/html?lang=de
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