Have you ever wondered if grading and feedback on exams and papers motivates students to learn? Consider Exam wrappers (and paper wrappers), a tool used by some Professors at Carnegie Mellon to help students use grading and feedback to direct their learning.
An interesting and free “MOOC” (Massive Open Online course) on Undergraduate STEM Teaching is now available. The course will run on the Coursera platform starting October 6th. It’s produced by faculty, students, and staff at six institutions affiliated with the CIRTL Network, a group of research universities collaborating in the preparation of STEM graduate students and post-docs as future faculty members. Lead instructors are Trina McMahon (UW-Madison), Rique Campa (Michigan State), Bennett Goldberg (Boston U), and me (Vanderbilt U).
The course is designed to provide graduate students and post-doctoral fellows in the STEM disciplines who are planning college and university faculty careers with an introduction to effective teaching strategies and the research that supports them. Topics include course design, cooperative learning, peer instruction, inquiry-based labs, problem-based learning, diversity in the classroom, and more. Although aimed at future STEM faculty, we expect that current STEM faculty will find the course interesting and useful, too.