Artwork for GMoL S2E12 Greeks with Donald Clark
GREAT MINDS ON LEARNINGGMoL S2E12 Greeks with Donald Clark
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At the very origin of our ideas of about learning, as well so much else that defines our culture, lies the extraordinary flowering of thought and discovery centred on Athens from the fifth to the second century BC. This episode takes us back to the very earliest group of thinkers this series will cover, the ancient Greeks.
- 1:02 – Introducing the Greeks
- 11:36 – Socrates (c. 470–399 BC)
- 23:34 -Plato (428/427 or 424/423 – 348/347 BC)
- 34:06 – Aristotle (384–322 BC)
- 47:25 – Pythagoras (c. 570 – c. 495 BC)
- 53:57 – Euclid (c. 325 – c. 270 BC)
- 57:46 – Archimedes (c. 287 – c. 212 BC)
- 1:05:41 – Summing Up
- Socrates bit.ly/2FQz0hH
- Plato bit.ly/386Cd96
- Aristotle bit.ly/2tdGUzi
- Pythagoras, Euclid, Archimedes bit.ly/38hEL46
Despite decades of evidence, good teaching is still considered more art than science. That’s hurting faculty and students alike.
https://www.chronicle.com/article/the-damaging-myth-of-the-natural-teacher
Even as universities have become more bureaucratic and centrally controlled, teaching continues to operate largely independent of oversight
when she was a college administrator, before becoming a professor, she was expected to spend two to four hours a week on professional development. It was written into her job description. Her training as a faculty member, by contrast, “has all been self directed, self led, things I want to do. It’s never been part of my annual evaluation.”
At most research universities if you were publishing in pedagogy journals they would not be counted or weighted as heavily as if you were publishing in a traditional journal.
Valencia College, a community college in Central Florida that relies heavily on part-time instructors, encourages them to improve their teaching by offering certificates and pay increases for participating in 60 hours of professional development.
Some of the most notable reform efforts are coming from external funders and academic associations. The National Science Foundation, the Association of American Universities, the John N. Gardner Institute for Excellence in Undergraduate Education, the American Historical Association, the National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine, and others have sponsored research and projects on teaching reform, including work on how to advance discipline-based education research.
a pilot program at Kansas to reinvent the evaluation process, as part of a multi-campus project called TEval. The new process, she says, considers seven benchmarks, including course planning, class climate, and evidence of student learning. Teaching reviews consider, for example, how well course content is aligned with the curriculum, whether a faculty member is involved in scholarship about pedagogy, and how much time they spend advising and mentoring students. Departments are also encouraged to develop “peer triads,” in which small groups of faculty members whose coursework is related meet regularly to talk about their teaching and course design.
He and his peers were heavily involved in pedagogical innovation on campus, including the Center for Project Based Learning and discipline-based education research.
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More on teaching in this blog
https://blog.stcloudstate.edu/ims?s=teach