ANOTHER REASON TO TEST
While reviewing some material for an upcoming presentation on Millennials, I found a terrific one-pager from Mary A. Pyc and Katherine A. Rawson entitled Why Testing Improves Memory: Mediator effectiveness hypothesis first published in Science (vol. 330) in 2010 (Q1 .S35 V.330). They set out to disprove the assumption that learning can only occur during study. They also wanted to see if testing could be used for something other than evaluating the state of memory. What they found was intriguing and could be incorporated in your classes as a test-restudy intervention. They noted that testing improves memory. One of the more important ideas to remember when constructing tests is to focus on what is truly important. Take a look at the course learning outcomes and make sure that you are aligning your learning experiences and assessment with those outcomes. The other important connection that this empirical research confirms is that important concepts should be included on subsequent tests and a comprehensive final may be your best opportunity to help your students retain what they have learned in your course.
TEACHING ONLINE
If you are looking for strategies for group learning activities for the online environment, take a look at this blog post by Debbie Morrison. Stephen Downes writes that the PAD (Personal Access Device) will become the dominant tool for online
education, combining the function of book, notebook, and pen.
CHARACTER MATTERS
Paul Tough believes that character development may be the most important thing we can teach our students. He writes about that and may other things including the effects of poverty in his book How Children Succeed: Grit, Curiosity, and the Hidden Power of Character. When asked how failure can help us succeed, he responds, "That’s
an idea that I think was best expressed by Dominic Randolph, the head of
the Riverdale Country School, where they’re now doing some interesting experiments with teaching
character. Here’s how he put it: The idea of building grit and building
self-control is that you get that through failure. And in most highly
academic environments in the United States, no one fails anything. That
idea resonated with a lot of readers. I don’t think it’s quite true
that failure itself helps us succeed. In fact, repeated failures can be
quite devastating to a child’s development. What I think is important on
the road to success is learning to deal with failure, to manage
adversity. That’s a skill that parents can certainly help their children
develop--but so can teachers and coaches and mentors and neighbors and
lots of other people." He elaborates in this podcast.