DO YOU HAVE AN OPINION
Are you looking to integrate active learning into your course or perhaps you want to use inquiry-guided learning in your class? Do you know why Millennial students are different from students you may have taught in the past? Did you know that student engagement has proven to be the most important deterrent to student attrition according to the latest research? These questions are just part of the Teaching+Learning Center's Needs Assessment survey now being collected. If you have not had the opportunity to complete the short survey, please take a few minutes to do it today.
CONNECTING NEW INFORMATION TO MEMORY
Speaking of student engagement, there are a number of resources that can help you create a student-friendly classroom. Elizabeth Barkley says that engaged students are involved in the academic task at hand and are using higher-order thinking skills such as analyzing information or solving problems. In her book Student Engagement Techniques: A handbook for college faculty, Barkley notes that engagement is linked to active learning because learning is about making sense and meaning out of new information by connecting it to what is already known. Although the BRCC Library does not have access to Barkley's book, you can view large portions of it using the Google books feature. She concludes by saying that there is "no single tip, technique, or strategy that offers a magic formula or blueprint for student engagement. Yet some approaches and activities do engage students better than others."
YOU CAN USE THIS NOW
If you are looking for a way to enhance the question and answer portions of your class, you might want to try to the Waiting Game technique. Tell your students that once you ask the question, they must wait until you say it is okay for them to answer. The wait time should generally be short
(15 seconds or so) - but research shows this is one of the hardest things for faculty to do yet it creates a better learning environment for many reasons. It
is important to insist that no one raise their hand (or shout out the
answer) before you give the okay, in order to discourage the typical
scenario in which the five students in the front row all immediately
volunteer to answer the question, and everyone else sighs in relief.
Waiting forces every student to think about the question, rather than
passively relying on those students who are fastest out of the gate to
answer every question. When the wait time is up, the instructor asks for
volunteers or randomly picks a student to answer the question. Once
students are in the habit of waiting after questions are asked, more
will get involved in the process.
DOCTORS OF THE FUTURE
A $1.3 million grant from the National Institutes of Health has been
awarded to LSU and BRCC to establish a new
biomedical and behavioral sciences education initiative called the
Bridges to the Baccalaureate Program. The program will encourage
underrepresented students in the biomedical and behavioral science
fields to complete their associate degrees at BRCC, and then move on to
complete bachelor's degrees at LSU.