We found 95 results that contain "sharing mics"

Posted on: CISAH
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Posted by over 3 years ago
Since we ran out of time to discuss the creative rubric examples today, I've posted links below. Please take a look and consider sharing your thoughts, or your own examples of rubrics you use to evaluate creative work, as a comment on this post!
- GJS

Creative Thinking VALUE Rubric (from AACU): https://teaching.berkeley.edu/sites/default/files/value_rubric_packet.pdf

Creativity Process & Product (from OECD): https://www.oecd.org/education/class-friendly-assessment-rubric-creativity.pdf

Co-Creating Rubrics with Students (from UC Boulder): https://www.colorado.edu/center/teaching-learning/teaching-resources/assessment/assessing-student-learning/rubrics/co-creating-rubrics-students

Posted on: #iteachmsu
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Posted by about 4 years ago
I just heard about the idea of "enduring understandings" and thought I'd share some resources that have been helpful. This website from the Pedagogy Resources at the University of Alaska Fairbank (UAF) has lots of great info! From a brief explanation of the concept to applying the ideas in your course (including considerations for online) - I'm excited to think more about what this looks like in my day-to-day.

https://iteachu.uaf.edu/enduring-understandings/

Attached below is the UAF Understanding by Design Tree, a tool to help in planning your course as a way to help identify what you expect students to get out of the course and how those “results” will be distributed between assignments and scaffolded through course content.
ubd_tree_2016.pdf

Posted on: MSU Academic Advising
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Posted by about 1 year ago
We invite you to submit a proposal to present at the 2025 Virtual Appreciative Education Conference, which will be held on January 10, 2025.

The Appreciative Education Conference will bring together educators, practitioners, and researchers from all levels dedicated to fostering positive and strengths-based learning environments. Appreciative Education Conference attendees will include PreK-12 teachers and administrators; higher education faculty, staff, and Administrators; students of all ages; and community leaders. We seek dynamic proposals on topics related to Appreciative Education from energetic presenters. In creative and interactive presentations, educators will share how they utilize an Appreciative approach to support and challenge students, their campuses, and/or themselves to reach their potential.

The deadline for proposal submission is July 1, 2024. https://www.fau.edu/education/centersandprograms/oae/virtual-appreciative-education-conference/submit-proposal/

Posted on: #iteachmsu
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Posted by about 4 years ago
Here is a very handy guide, based on Bloom's Taxonomy, for helping students think about their coursework: https://www.teachthought.com/learning/metacognitive-prompts-to-help-students-reflect-on-their-learning/

In my planned weekly feedback (copy and paste) to students on their 10 short written reflections (low-risk), I include a prompt based on questions developed by The Foundation for Critical Thinking, and one based on these metacognitive prompts shared through the link above.

My intent is twofold:

1) To get students to look again at their work and foster further thought about what they have written on the specific course material for a given week;

2) To encourage students to think about their approach to coursework and concrete steps they can take to improve their learning.


We'll see how well this works. "Kryss fingrane!" (cross your fingers) as they say in Norway.

Posted on: #iteachmsu
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Posted by over 1 year ago
Hello Colleagues,

I’m writing to inform you that the MSU Libraries' Open Educational Resources Award Program call for applications for the academic year 2023-2024 opens today.

Now in its 5th year, the OER Award Program provides financial incentives and support to instructors interested in adopting, adapting, or creating OER as an alternative to traditional learning materials to advance our goals of affordability, access, equity, and student success.

Please visit https://libguides.lib.msu.edu/oer/award or consult the attached Call for Proposals to learn more about the application categories, eligibility, participation requirements, timelines, and criteria for evaluation. Application forms are available at https://libguides.lib.msu.edu/oer/award, and the deadline for submission is February 12, 2024.

The OER Advisory Committee will meet to review applications, and successful awardees will be notified on March 1, 2024.

Please feel free to share this information with interested colleagues.

Sincerely,
Linda
Posted on: GenAI & Education
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Posted by about 2 years ago
We are hosting a virtual, pre-semester meeting on August 22 to start building our learning community, Navigating Artificial Intelligence and Large Language Models in the Classroom. Here is the description of the learning community, which you can also find on the OFASD website: "The use of large language models, such as ChatGPT, has exploded onto the educational scene with lots of unanswered questions about its implications in the classroom. This learning community will build on the many sources of information that probe these questions, participants’ experiences in the classroom, and create plans to develop guidelines and action research around these questions."


The meeting is Tues, August 22 from 10-11:30am on Zoom. We plan to spend the first part of the meeting doing some introductions, gathering information about members' specific goals for involvement, and share some of the campus resources around generative AI, including a streamlined version of our "generative AI in the classroom" workshop. Please register here if you plan to attend so we get a general sense of how many folks will participate: https://msu.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJcodu6grT4iG9z6AtbgcsDydWnZ2IY4VINN


If you have to miss this one, don't worry! We also have a Teams that you can join if you want to stay updated: https://teams.microsoft.com/l/channel/19%3a6oievzPpG1-Gu3eebonZyK2vpjzfc3ANdaMoCAAqnYQ1%40thread.tacv2/General?groupId=c0bd0cf9-f952-47e1-a2e6-0221348612e2&tenantId=22177130-642f-41d9-9211-74237ad5687d
We plan to have a monthly hybrid meeting on the first Thursday of every month at 9am in the STEM building, with an optional co-working session on the third Thursday of every month at 9am.

Posted on: Reading Group for Student Engagement and Success
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Posted by almost 4 years ago
Chapter 5: Notes and questions
1. Erasure: “We must engage in critical self-reflection about the conscious and unconscious ways higher education continues to participate in Native people’s erasure and develop decolonial engagement practices that foreground Native movements for cultural/political sovereignty and self-determination.”
2. Assimilation: “…the problematic goal of assimilation…”
3. Social Justice: “…scholars must work toward social change.”
4. Storying: “Stories are not separate from theory.”
5. Strategies offered:
a. Develop and Maintain Relationships with Indigenous Communities
i. Can a faculty member do this within their pedagogy? How?
ii. Can we encourage our students to do this in our classes/programs? How?
b. Honor Connections to Place
c. Build Community with Indigenous Students
d. Support and Protect Indigenous Student Cultural Practices
e. Foster Student Connections to Home Communities
f. Reframe Concepts of Student Engagement (WE, meaning the university community writ large, are the uninvited guests)

Chapter 6: Notes and Questions
1. “Whiteness is not a culture but a social concept”
2. “Critical White Studies”: ideas for how to use/introduce this to students? Will you? Why or why not? (“critically analyzing Whiteness and racial oppression from the habits and structures of the privileged group”)
3. In your current class design/structure, what ways could your own whiteness influence your students in invisible ways? Does it?
4. In your current class design/structure, what ways could your white students’ whiteness influence your POC, international students, etc… in invisible ways? Does it?
5. What aspects of “humanizing pedagogy” happen in your classes?
6. Have you ever shared your course design with a POC peer?
7. Thoughts of where “Nontraditional” white students (older students, part-time students, transfer students, commuter students, student-parents, veteran students (and I would argue other cross-sectional/intersectional identities of queerness, transgender students, religious minorities, disability, etc…)) and traditional white students INTERSECT or DIVERGE in terms of student success initiatives?
SSRG_12-3.docx

Posted on: Ungrading (a CoP)
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Posted by over 2 years ago
Hi Ungraders,

Thanks to all who were able to attend our 4/4 session and greetings to those who weren't able to. I wanted to post the questions that were indicated as "follow up needed" as folks left the space last week so we can continue the conversation, sharing, and support. In no particular they are:
1. How to encourage/increase undergrad/student readiness?
2. How do we ensure ungrading doesn't reproduce grade inequities?
3. How do you set students up to manage self-direction?
4. How to negotiate internal and external ecosystems - jobs?
5. How can we keep the atmosphere competitive even with ungrading?

I hope folks can simmer on these and share reflections, ideas, and resources as they come up. Also, I hope folks can add more questions, ideas, and resources.

~Brittany