Take It or Leave It with Liz Norell, Betsy Barre, and Bryan Dewsbury — Intentional Teaching
Questions or comments about this episode? Send us a text message. We’re back with another Take It or Leave It panel. I invited three colleagues whose work and thinking I admire very much to come on the show and to compress their complex and nuanced thoughts on teaching and learning into artificial binaries! The panelists for this edition of Take It or Leave It are… Liz Norell, associate director of instructional support at the Center for Excellence in Teaching and Learning at the Univer…
This is a user manual video that I created in Clips, based on Professor Joe Musicco's 2019 Lilly Conference presentation, "Forget the Syllabus: Why We All Ne...
The Critical Thinking Matrix #oldaily https://www.downes.ca/post/78031 This interesting table dates from 2015 and draws from Peter Facione's 1990 'cognitive skills' (p. 12 or 15) and Thomas Kuhn's 1977 account of epistemic values (as extracted in a 1-page paywalled article by Linda Elder and Richard Paul). And the inclusion of 'self-regulation' as an epistemic value is something I would want to think about a lot more.
Please see below for the links to the slides and handout (with references and script) for my talk at The Grading Conference 2025 on June 11, 2025. Title: Tolerance for Error: A theory of how (some)…
Professor Sam Illingworth is a Professor of Creative Pedagogies at Edinburgh Napier University in the UK. His work and research focus on using poetry and games to develop dialogue between different audiences.
Campus podcast: The complex factors that drive students’ sense of belonging — Campus by Times Higher Education
A sense of belonging is particularly valuable in higher education, where feeling valued, respected and part of a community are connected to students’ academic achievement, retention and well-being. But belonging resists clear definition, both what it is and how it relates to other concepts such as inclusion and mattering. This is especially true in a post-pandemic world, where online learning and the digital transformation have blurred the boundaries of university life. For this episode of the Campus podcast, we speak to Karen Gravett, who is an associate professor in higher education and associate head of research in the Surrey Institute of Education at the University of Surrey. Her research covers belonging, digital education, student engagement, relational pedagogies and literacy practices. As part of the Belonging to and beyond the Digital university project, Karen (working with Rola Ajjawi of Deakin University and Sarah O’Shea from Charles Sturt University) asked students what belonging means to them,…
10 recommended citations on the science of learning
10 Recommended Citations on the Science of Learning Curated by Pooja K. Agarwal, Ph.D., Cognitive Scientist, Educator, & Book Author Visit retrievalpractice.org/citations and retrievalpractice.org/scientists for more information Retrieval Practice Agarwal, P. K., Nunes, L. D., & Blunt, J. R...
Postplagiarism as a Blueprint for Academic Integrity in an AI Age
The evolving landscape of academic integrity calls for a shift from traditional plagiarism detection toward a post-plagiarism approach that treats students as partners. This framework emphasizes co…
Materials from: “Designing Options for Interaction: Accessible Design Instead of “Retrofitting”
On Wednesday June April 23, 2025 I participated in the 9 in 9 in overtime UDL webinar series which was organized by Goodwin University. I wanted to make my materials available so I have provided li…
Five Ways to Use Group Work to Engage College Students (opinion)
Getting students to actively engage in class discussions is a common challenge, but group exercises can help both new and experienced instructors accomplish just that.
A reminder: Classrooms are neither living rooms nor trains
A recent Chronicle of Higher Education essay suggests that classrooms are nonsocial spaces where facilitating belonging is not within educators' scope of practice. We forcefully disagree.
Creating a Safe Space for Conversations on Academic Integrity - ACRLog
Musings on Teaching a Difficult Topic Stepping into the classroom of an academic integrity session has a distinctively different energy than a regular university classroom. For one thing, almost no one in the room is there by choice - and you can feel it. The body language, the facial expressions, and the overall lack of