Teaching Undergraduate Science: A Guide to Overcoming Obstacles to Student Learning
Autor Linda C. Hodgesen Limba Engleză Paperback – 11 aug 2015
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781620361764
ISBN-10: 1620361760
Pagini: 248
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.33 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1620361760
Pagini: 248
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.33 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Public țintă
Postgraduate and Professional Practice & DevelopmentCuprins
Foreword Preface Acknowledgements 1. Introduction. Making the Most of the Time We Spend Teaching 2. Helping Students Learn During Class 3. Helping Students Learn From Text 4. Helping Students Learn, and Learn From, Problem Solving 5. Motivating and Helping Students Learn on Their Own 6. Helping Students Learn From Tests and Assignments 7. Helping Students Learn From Laboratory Work and Research 8. Helping Students Learn to Write like Scientists 9. Making Choices About What and How to Teach in Science References About the Author Index
Notă biografică
Linda C. Hodges is Associate Vice Provost for Faculty Affairs and Director of the Faculty Development Center at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. She publishes and presents widely on a variety of topics in faculty development, engaged student learning, and effective teaching practices. Before relocating to Maryland in 2009, she worked in the Harold W. McGraw, Jr. Center for Teaching and Learning at Princeton University for eight years, six as its Director. Her interest in faculty development arose from her 21 years of experience as a tenured faculty member and department chair at two different institutions. Her formal faculty career began in the chemistry department at Kennesaw State College (now University) where she was a recipient of the Distinguished Teaching Award. After 12 years she moved to Agnes Scott College to become the William Rand Kenan, Jr. Professor of Chemistry. In 1999 she was chosen to participate in the Carnegie Academy for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, a Scholars program of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. During her time as a Carnegie Scholar she examined how problem-based learning affected students’ approaches to learning. Through her work in faculty development she continues to explore the specific effects of various active learning formats on student learning. Dr. Hodges holds a Ph.D. in biochemistry from the University of Kentucky. She earned her B.S. in chemistry in three years from Centre College of Kentucky where she was valedictorian and an elected member of Phi Beta Kappa. Jeanne Narum is founding Director of PKAL, Project Kaleidoscope. Jeanne is focused on building leadership at the institutional and national levels to ensure that American undergraduates have access to robust learning experiences in STEM fields.
Recenzii
“In recent years, cognitive scientists and educational researchers have teamed to shed light on the process of learning. Linda Hodges has distilled their findings into a concise and well-written guidebook for STEM instructors. Teaching Undergraduate Science offers them a wealth of practical strategies for motivating students, improving their problem-solving, self-directed learning, and communication skills, and assessing their learning. Experienced and new teachers alike can open the book to any randomly chosen page, and they will not fail to find useful and easily applied tips.”
Richard M. Felder, Hoechst Celanese Professor Emeritus of Chemical Engineering, North Carolina State University, Raleigh
Coauthor of Teaching and Learning STEM: A Practical Guide (Jossey-Bass, 2016)
"Linda C. Hodges (Director of the Faculty Development Center, University of Maryland, Baltimore County) presents Teaching Undergraduate Science: A Guide to Overcoming Obstacles to Student Learning, a straightforward resource created especially for science and engineering faculty stymied by disengaged and dispirited undergraduate students.
Hodges offers new methods to better understand the daily struggles that students undergo, and evidence-based teaching strategies. Chapters discuss ways to motivate and help students learn on their own, as well as learn from problem solving, laboratory work, and research; teaching students to write like professional scientists; making choices in what to teach and how to teach it; and much more.
For example, a common roadblock for teachers who assign science problems in homework or testing is that their students will 'plug and chug', plugging in the first equation that seems appropriate, without thinking about or learning from the problem. 'Problem solving does not automatically help students learn content... Teaching problem solving as a process through a combination of modeling behavior, homework strategies, and class activities can indeed deepen students' conceptual understanding and promote their critical thinking abilities.' Highly recommended."
Midwest Book Review
"The author offers a unique perspective on problems that occur in teaching. She provides explanations and different courses of action that are targeted to specific problems. As a result, the reader has a better understanding of why the problem exists, what research has to say about the problem, and suggestions on how to address it. The writing style is that of one colleague mentoring another. This is a great resource for both the novice and experienced teacher."
Diane M. Bunce, Professor, Patrick O’Brien Chemistry Scholar, Chemistry Department
The Catholic University of America
"Very important handbook: I highly recommend it for all STEM faculty. I found the entire book engrossing and very easy to read. I easily saw exciting and new ways to apply it. The chapters combine great summaries of fundamental literature on learning and teaching (“why do it”) with great ideas on how to do it including key examples from the literature. Powerfully and uniquely focused on the key problems faculty perceive in their classes."
Craig E. Nelson Professor (Emeritus) & Faculty Development Consultant Biology & SOTL
Indiana University, Bloomington
"As the sciences become increasingly important to both our economy and our lives, educators are seeking to improve teaching and learning in these fields. In Teaching Undergraduate Science, Linda Hodges synthesizes those evidence-based strategies that will help faculty to be intentional in re-designing their courses to facilitate deeper learning. Readers will gain useful insights about ways of engaging students in class and as they conduct research or solve problems on their own."
Freeman A. Hrabowski, III, PhD
University of Maryland Baltimore County
“Hodges makes a strong case for approaching issues in the science classroom the same way a scientist conducts research: by understanding the issue, identifying how others have addressed similar situations, becoming familiar with literature in the field, and by practicing and applying the available theories and tools. To this end, the book’s ‘charts’ provide useful prompts for personal reflections and communal conversations about integrating new strategies into one’s teaching repertoire.
Teaching Undergraduate Science is a valuable reminder of where we are now in understanding how learning happens and how particular learning strategies work to overcome obstacles in the classroom.”
Jeanne L. Narum, Director Emeritus
Project Kaleidoscope
"This book is a must read for any college science instructor. Hodges summarizes key ideas from a wide variety of educational research to highlight the most important barriers to student learning in college science courses. She then connects these ideas to a range of actionable instructional techniques. Each instructional technique is rated in terms of time and effort required to implement. This is an impressive synthesis of practical ideas written with minimal jargon."
Charles Henderson, Professor, Department of Physics and Director, Mallinson Institute for Science Education
Western Michigan University
"This clearly written, timely book provides STEM instructors with a treasure trove of practical teaching advice and the educational research behind it. Hodges writes with sympathy for both students trying to learn and instructors trying to help them, while gently but persistently pushing adoption of evidence-based teaching approaches. Especially welcome is her emphasis on deliberate practice, backward design, and adaptation for the classroom of the highly effective apprenticeship model of teaching in a research lab."
William B. Wood, Distinguished Professor of MCD Biology, Emeritus, and Center for STEM Teaching
University of Colorado, Boulder
Richard M. Felder, Hoechst Celanese Professor Emeritus of Chemical Engineering, North Carolina State University, Raleigh
Coauthor of Teaching and Learning STEM: A Practical Guide (Jossey-Bass, 2016)
"Linda C. Hodges (Director of the Faculty Development Center, University of Maryland, Baltimore County) presents Teaching Undergraduate Science: A Guide to Overcoming Obstacles to Student Learning, a straightforward resource created especially for science and engineering faculty stymied by disengaged and dispirited undergraduate students.
Hodges offers new methods to better understand the daily struggles that students undergo, and evidence-based teaching strategies. Chapters discuss ways to motivate and help students learn on their own, as well as learn from problem solving, laboratory work, and research; teaching students to write like professional scientists; making choices in what to teach and how to teach it; and much more.
For example, a common roadblock for teachers who assign science problems in homework or testing is that their students will 'plug and chug', plugging in the first equation that seems appropriate, without thinking about or learning from the problem. 'Problem solving does not automatically help students learn content... Teaching problem solving as a process through a combination of modeling behavior, homework strategies, and class activities can indeed deepen students' conceptual understanding and promote their critical thinking abilities.' Highly recommended."
Midwest Book Review
"The author offers a unique perspective on problems that occur in teaching. She provides explanations and different courses of action that are targeted to specific problems. As a result, the reader has a better understanding of why the problem exists, what research has to say about the problem, and suggestions on how to address it. The writing style is that of one colleague mentoring another. This is a great resource for both the novice and experienced teacher."
Diane M. Bunce, Professor, Patrick O’Brien Chemistry Scholar, Chemistry Department
The Catholic University of America
"Very important handbook: I highly recommend it for all STEM faculty. I found the entire book engrossing and very easy to read. I easily saw exciting and new ways to apply it. The chapters combine great summaries of fundamental literature on learning and teaching (“why do it”) with great ideas on how to do it including key examples from the literature. Powerfully and uniquely focused on the key problems faculty perceive in their classes."
Craig E. Nelson Professor (Emeritus) & Faculty Development Consultant Biology & SOTL
Indiana University, Bloomington
"As the sciences become increasingly important to both our economy and our lives, educators are seeking to improve teaching and learning in these fields. In Teaching Undergraduate Science, Linda Hodges synthesizes those evidence-based strategies that will help faculty to be intentional in re-designing their courses to facilitate deeper learning. Readers will gain useful insights about ways of engaging students in class and as they conduct research or solve problems on their own."
Freeman A. Hrabowski, III, PhD
University of Maryland Baltimore County
“Hodges makes a strong case for approaching issues in the science classroom the same way a scientist conducts research: by understanding the issue, identifying how others have addressed similar situations, becoming familiar with literature in the field, and by practicing and applying the available theories and tools. To this end, the book’s ‘charts’ provide useful prompts for personal reflections and communal conversations about integrating new strategies into one’s teaching repertoire.
Teaching Undergraduate Science is a valuable reminder of where we are now in understanding how learning happens and how particular learning strategies work to overcome obstacles in the classroom.”
Jeanne L. Narum, Director Emeritus
Project Kaleidoscope
"This book is a must read for any college science instructor. Hodges summarizes key ideas from a wide variety of educational research to highlight the most important barriers to student learning in college science courses. She then connects these ideas to a range of actionable instructional techniques. Each instructional technique is rated in terms of time and effort required to implement. This is an impressive synthesis of practical ideas written with minimal jargon."
Charles Henderson, Professor, Department of Physics and Director, Mallinson Institute for Science Education
Western Michigan University
"This clearly written, timely book provides STEM instructors with a treasure trove of practical teaching advice and the educational research behind it. Hodges writes with sympathy for both students trying to learn and instructors trying to help them, while gently but persistently pushing adoption of evidence-based teaching approaches. Especially welcome is her emphasis on deliberate practice, backward design, and adaptation for the classroom of the highly effective apprenticeship model of teaching in a research lab."
William B. Wood, Distinguished Professor of MCD Biology, Emeritus, and Center for STEM Teaching
University of Colorado, Boulder
Descriere
This book is written for all science or engineering faculty who have ever found themselves baffled and frustrated by their undergraduate students’ lack of engagement and learning.