A college degree generally results in higher incomes, more pleasant and more stable jobs, greater life satisfaction, and lower unemployment probabilities. Many students that enter college, though, leave without a degree, but with high levels of student debt. In this episode, Dr. Michelle Miller joins us to discuss an innovative program she helped develop at Northern Arizona University in which faculty members work together to discover ways of helping their students successfully complete their educational goals.
Michelle is the Director of the First Year Learning Initiative, Professor of Psychological Sciences, and President's Distinguished Teaching Fellow at Northern Arizona University. Dr. Miller’s academic background is in cognitive psychology. Her research interests include memory, attention, and student success in the early college career. She co-created the First Year Learning Initiative at Northern Arizona University and is active in course redesign, serving as a redesign scholar for the National Center for Academic Transformation. She is the author of Minds Online: Teaching Effectively with Technology, and has written about evidence based pedagogy and scholarly as well as general interest publications. She has been working with a Persistence Scholars program at NAU for the past two years.
A transcript of this episode and show notes may be found at http://teaforteaching.com.
First-Year Blues
Google Apps and the LMS
Write Like a Teacher
Teaching at its Best
Improving Learning and Mental Health
ChatGPT
North of Neutral
Mind Over Monsters
Should I Say Yes?
Fall 2022 Reflection
Faculty Book Clubs
Advancing Inclusivity while Mitigating Burnout
Fumble Forward
The Secret Syllabus
The New College Classroom
Collaborative Rubric Construction
Reflect to Deflect
What Teaching Looks Like
Social Justice Assessments
Antiracist Pedagogy
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