Monday, January 14, 2019
Light Touch Interventions Improve Student Success
Want to improve the student success in your classes this spring? Want to improve your student rating as well? The same approach can help both and it is something that is probably already in your teaching toolkit. Engagement is something that provides multiple benefits and while we know that it works, there are still some of us who struggle with implementing it effectively. Colleen Flaherty provides some good information in her article for Inside Higher Ed. She notes, "Students benefit from increased faculty engagement. Yet many professors still resist more student-centered teaching. Part of the problem is that graduate schools are slow to adopt
pedagogical training, meaning that some professors may want to up their
interaction with students but don’t know how. Another part of the
problem is that becoming a better teacher takes time, an increasingly
scarce faculty resource. What if engagement wasn’t complicated and didn’t take that much time?
Preliminary research called 'My Professor Cares: Experimental Evidence
on the Role of Faculty Engagement,' presented last week at the annual
meeting of the American Economics Association, suggests that even 'light
touch' interventions can make a difference to students." You can read the entire article here.