Archive for July, 2010

Exam Wrappers

Posted Thursday, July 29th, 2010 by Maryellen Weimer

Here’s a strategy that helps students look at more than the grade when an exam is returned. An exam wrapper (I like the name) is a handout attached to the exam that students complete as part of the exam debrief process. The wrapper directs students “to review and analyze their performance (and the instructor’s feedback) [...]

Talking and Listening

Posted Tuesday, July 27th, 2010 by Maryellen Weimer

One of the things about blogging that I really like is how blogs feed off each other. Here’s a great example: several entries back I shared some of the principles of effective instruction offered by Ronald J. Markert, a medical educator. One of those principles, “Good teachers do not talk as much as their less effective colleagues do—Good teachers talk less because their students are talking more,” reminded my friend and colleague Ricky Cox of a favorite quote by Deborah Meier, “Teaching is listening, learning is talking.” Ricky posted both quotes on a blog he hosts for faculty at Murray State University: http://msuctlt.blogspot.com/.

Teaching for Transformative Learning

Posted Friday, July 23rd, 2010 by Maryellen Weimer

Picking up where we left off on the previous post, so how do teachers intentionally teach for transformative learning? And how do they do that, given the fact that a teacher cannot make (as in require or force) students have a learning experience that changes what they believe, how they think, or how they act? [...]

Transformative Learning

Posted Wednesday, July 21st, 2010 by Maryellen Weimer

I’m immersed in writing one of 34 chapters commissioned for a handbook on transformative learning. My chapter explores the relationship between learner-centered teaching and transformative learning. I am convinced the two are related, but I’ve never spent time trying to sort out the nature of that relationship. It’s a good project—I’m learning a lot, although I seem to be uncovering more questions than answers.

Teaching—More than a Set of Skills

Posted Thursday, July 15th, 2010 by Maryellen Weimer

Ronald J. Markert captures the “more” in a set of principles. The context is medical education, but the principles he proposes are broadly applicable. Here’s a sample.
 
A good teacher wants to be a good teacher—“Teaching has to be its own reward.” (p. 809) Reward and recognition are fine, but they cannot provide the motivation necessary [...]

Learning can be Frustrating

Posted Tuesday, July 13th, 2010 by Maryellen Weimer

It’s good to remember how frustrating learning can be. It’s even better when you experience the frustration firsthand.

Let’s Take a Break

Posted Thursday, July 8th, 2010 by Maryellen Weimer

 
How about a regularly scheduled two-to three-minute break in the middle of class? John A. Olmsted III recommends it for the following reasons: 1) it provides a change of pace and lets students recharge tired brains; 2) it can be used to get students involved with the content; and 3) it can be designed to [...]

Unlearning

Posted Thursday, July 1st, 2010 by Maryellen Weimer

The capacity to learn and to use what we’ve learned is one of those things that makes life worth living. When the mind delivers what we need or helps us understand something new, we take it for granted, unable to imagine its absence. Like so much else in life, learning is a gift to be used and enjoyed. But it is also one of those gifts that sometimes wears out.