The lecture has dominated instructional practice for several centuries. In the last few decades, though, the lecture mode of instruction has often been criticized by advocates of active learning approaches. In this episode, Dr. Christine Harrington joins us to discuss evidence on the effectiveness of lectures and how we can create lectures that better support student learning. Christine is an associate professor in the Department of Educational Leadership at New Jersey City University and the author of Dynamic Lecturing and several other books related to teaching, learning, and student success. Christine has been the Executive Director of the Student Success Center at the New Jersey Council of County Colleges.
A transcript of this episode and show notes may be found at http://teaforteaching.com.
What Teaching Looks Like
Social Justice Assessments
Antiracist Pedagogy
Experiential Learning
Deconstructing Assumptions
PsycLearn
Sharing Our Stories
Thriving Through Behavioral Science
Teaching Up
Designing for Trauma
Thriving in Academia
Where’s the Professor?
Hacking Assessment
Winning the First Day
Reframing Academic Expertise
Picture a Professor
Embedding Career Competencies
Higher Ed’s Next Chapter
Unlearning
Trauma Aware Pedagogy
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