Monday, February 28, 2005

Welcome

Welcome to the blog of the UW-Stout Teaching and Learning Center. The goal of this blog is to share stories of successful learning in the classroom. At the TLC we encourage the focus on learning as the essential ingredient of courses. If you would like to share your story, and especially if you have a story about learning via technology, we encourage you to post it here.

Just to start here is a question, and a story. The question is this: What does "improved learning" mean? We often justify our changes in pedagogy by claiming that such a change will result in improved learning. Does that mean students remember more? can discuss context more incisecively? can synthesize independently? score higher on standardized exams?

A brief story. This fall I decided that I should teach my course based on the one thing I wanted them to know. The course was English 101. The one thing was that writing fulfills expectations. I spent the entire semester on this idea--in research papers, in readings, in daily postings. I used laptop technology extensively. By the end of the semester students had developed a macro sense of fulfilling--they would list the contents of the paper in the introduction and then organize based on the list. But they also develop a micro sense--they began to give much better and pointed examples. At the very end of the course I began to work on style and the way words and phrases work to fulfill expectations. Students were receptive but we ran out of time.

3 Comments:

At 12:24 PM, Blogger Alan A. Block said...

Hey Dan. Cool work. As always, and i suppose, as I've learned to expect. I'll work on my story next.

 
At 1:34 PM, Blogger Dan Riordan said...

Alan, for a story why not discuss your use of the discussion board? I would like to know what you are doing with it

 
At 6:34 PM, Blogger Alan A. Block said...

A long short story:

I ask my on-line students to engage in discussion during the week. Students are assigned a considerable amount of reading each week, and the first student to post for the week asks, addressing one of the texts, "What is Meant by . . .?" The questioner must also try to answer his/her question, or to state why that question is important to consider. Then the conversation begins with classroom participants entering as they will and as they must.

Students post a minimum of three times during the week, but they must leave at least one day between posts if they mean to enter only three times. This has almost never been the case. There are weeks when well over one hundred questions/comments are posted.

When students post, they must address not only the question, but also address the question using the texts under discussion. This creates a rather complicated conversation--that is the point.

 

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