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New graduate student teaching assistants (TA) for the 2019 - 2020 academic year are invited to participate in the 2019 IUPUI TA Orientation to learn more about their new position and develop strategies to confidently and effectively interact with faculty and undergraduate students. The in-person training session is scheduled for Thursday, August 22, 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and the online Canvas course will be available from August 1. Successful participation includes completing the in-person training and the online course. Click here for more information and registration details.
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At this event, organized as a number of forum sessions, associate faculty join their colleagues from other departments to brainstorm and explore different strategies to approach commonly encountered teaching issues. The AFTF event takes place on the evening of Wednesday, September 18, 2019 from 4:00 to 8:00 p.m., in the University Library (UL), in and about the offices of the Center for Teaching and Learning (CTL). Click here for more information and registration details.
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Canvas has dashboards that are visible only to instructors that help faculty see student engagement for their course: The IU-developed
Canvas Student Profile Report and
Canvas Course Interaction Summaries are external tools designed to help you tailor your strategies and activities to meet student needs. They'll initially be hidden by default, but you can
add them to your course navigation menu.
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CTL Workshops and Webinars
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Thursday, July 18 | 12:00 - 1:00 p.m. | Online - Zoom Register » Organizer(s): Anusha S Rao and Presenter(s): Jessica Alexander, Anusha S Rao
Diversity and inclusion play an important role in promoting student learning.Today’s college students are increasingly diverse compared to prior generations. Traditional teaching strategies have also been shown to lead to lower academic achievement for underserved students compared to majority students even when differences in GPA and other factors are controlled for.
By considering the diversity of the classroom and implementing equitable teaching strategies, instructors can increase student learning and sense of belonging for all students, not just those who are underserved. In this webinar, participants will learn how to leverage student diversity and incorporate inclusive teaching strategies in their classrooms. Questions and discussion will be encouraged.
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Tuesday, July 23 | 12 noon - 1:00 p.m. | Online - Zoom Register » Organizer(s): Jessica Alexander and Presenter(s): Jessica Alexander, Douglas Jerolimov
Creating assignments that align with and allow for the accurate assessment of learning objectives requires careful planning. Such planning can help improve student understanding of your expectations, student achievement of your learning objectives, and can also set the stage for a smoother assessment process. This webinar will review methods for designing or refining assignments to target specific objectives, for communicating critical assignment components to students, and for scaffolding assignments to help students achieve intended learning outcomes.
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Wednesday, July 24 | 11:00 a.m. - 12:00 p.m. | Online - Zoom Register » Organizer(s): Kimmaree Murday and Presenter(s): Kimmaree Murday
Are you ready to get the most out of Canvas? In this webinar, you will learn about ten ways to leverage Canvas to improve both your and your students' experience in your course.
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Monday, July 29 | 11:00 - 11:30 a.m. | Online - Zoom Register » Organizer(s): Jeani Young and Presenter(s): Jeani Young
Formative assessment is an important part of a balanced assessment strategy. Providing frequent opportunities for students to see what they know and what they don’t know – especially when paired with targeted feedback – helps students assess their own level of understanding, ask better questions, and study more effectively. It encourages active engagement with the content while also giving instructors regular feedback on how their students are progressing.
Quick Check allows you to easily integrate frequent, low-stakes, knowledge and understanding checks within your own content to promote student learning. The integrated, mastery-based approach of Quick Check activities can be less intimidating to students than a formal quiz, reducing anxiety and allowing these checks to be a learning experience.
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Wednesday, July 31 | 12:30 p.m. - 1:00 p.m. | Online - Zoom Register » Organizer(s): Anusha S Rao and Presenter(s): Douglas Jerolimov, Anusha S Rao
Evidence-based teaching practices are research-supported methods of teaching that foster high levels of student learning and retention in STEM fields. These active learning strategies are rooted in principles of how people learn and may be successfully adapted to different disciplines. This webinar will provide an introduction to various evidence-base teaching practices and particularly focus on two such evidence-based teaching practices, Peer Instruction and Problem-Based Learning (PBL). Using examples drawn from different disciplines, participants will be equipped to implement a Peer Instruction or PBL strategy for an assignment in a course of their own, and discuss techniques to assess student learning gains.
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Tuesday, August 6 | 12:00 - 1:00 p.m. | Online - Zoom Register » Organizer(s): Jessica Alexander and Presenter(s): Jessica Alexander, Kimmaree Murday
Creating accessible course materials is critical to support all students, particularly those with visual or audio impairments. In this webinar, participants will be introduced to tools, resources, and best practices for developing accessible course materials.
This webinar is part of the Center for Teaching and Learning’s online mini-workshop series focused on foundational teaching skills, Teaching@IUPUI. Designed for new faculty, adjunct faculty, graduate students, and those looking for a refresher on good teaching practices, the webinars are short, with a brief presentation interspersed with opportunities for interaction and questions. Grounded in current research, the workshops address various teaching topics and provide participants with strategies and resources to make instruction more effective, efficient, and enjoyable. Sessions are scheduled with the time of semester in mind, to keep topics relevant for faculty needs at that time.
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Wednesday, August 7 | 10:00 - 11:30 a.m. | University Library 1126 Register » Organizer(s): Terri Tarr and Presenter(s): Jessica Alexander, Douglas, Jerolimov, Anusha S Rao, Terri Tarr
The Profiles of Learning for Undergraduate Success, our new institutional undergraduate learning outcomes, have replaced the Principles of Undergraduate Learning (PULs) and Principles of Co-Curricular Learning (PCLs). They are written with an active orientation, using student-facing language, and are applicable to all student-facing units. Administrators of all undergraduate programs, and instructors of general education courses and capstone courses, are expected to be among the first to map their learning outcomes to the profiles.
In this hands-on workshop, facilitators will provide a brief overview of the profiles, share examples of academic and co-curricular programs and courses that already have been mapped, and introduce tools, resources, and processes that participants can use to map their own learning outcomes. Participants are expected to bring copies of or have access to their own learning outcomes during the workshop so they can begin to map their program or course learning outcomes to the profiles. Ample time will be given for participants to engage in discussion and ask questions.
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Thursday, August 8 | 1:00 - 3:00 p.m. | University Library 2115 J Register » Organizer(s): Terri Tarr and Presenter(s): Terri Tarr, Debora Herold
As IUPUI continues the process of reviewing general education courses, course coordinators or faculty responsible for preparing course portfolios for review may have questions about the information and materials that need to go into the portfolios. This workshop will provide an overview of the course review process, course portfolio requirements, and the rubric that will be used to review the course portfolios. It will also introduce a new option for preparing a simplified course portfolio based on using a Mile Marker assignment. Examples from existing course portfolios will be incorporated into the workshop. Questions and discussion will be encouraged.
This workshop is being offered in two formats: in person and online. When you register, you will be prompted to choose how you would like to attend.
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The Polis Center at IUPUI is offering a series of free workshops to build data literacy skills and use the SAVI community information system as a resource. SAVI Training is a hands-on curriculum focused on data literacy from end to end. Workshops are offered every other week.
• Create and Use Survey Data | July 25, 9:00 a.m. -11:00 a.m. - Register
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Monday, August 5 | 12:10 p.m. - 12:50 p.m. | Online - Zoom Presenter(s): Krista Hoffmann-Longtin and Gabe Bosslet This session is designed to provide busy clinicians with a simple model, the Compass Points, to teach clinical reasoning efficiently and effectively to medical students. Participants will learn the basics of the tool and discuss appropriate applications.
Click for registration and more information.
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Nadworny, E., Watson, T. J., Isensee, L., Phillips, C., & Pauly, M. (2019, June 25). For these young, nontraditional college students, adulting is a requirement. National Public Radio.
Do you know what today's "non-traditional" student looks like? This NPR article provides insight into five students' lives and how instructors can make students' experiences better by creating inclusive in-person and online environments.
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