In Class Not Dismissed, award-winning professor Anthony Aveni tells the personal story of his six decades in college classrooms and some of the 10,000 students who have filled them. Through anecdotes of his own triumphs and tribulationssome amusing, others heartrendingAveni reveals his teaching story and thoughts on the future of higher education. Although in recent years the lecture has come under fire as a pedagogical method, Aveni ardently defends lecturing to students. He shares his secrets on crafting an engaging lecture and creating productive dialogue in class discussions. He lays out his rules on classroom discipline and tells how he promotes the lost art of listening. He is a passionate proponent of the liberal arts and core course requirements as well as a believer in sound teaching promoted by active scholarship. Aveni is known to his students as a consummate storyteller. In Class Not Dismissed he shares real stories about everyday college life that shed light on serious educational issues. The result is a humorous, reflective, inviting, and powerful inquiry into higher education that will be of interest to anyone invested in the current and future state of college and university education.
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Product Details
Weight: 340g
Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
Publication Date: 15 Oct 2014
Publisher: University Press of Colorado
Publication City/Country: United States
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781607323020
About Anthony Aveni
Anthony Aveni is Russell Colgate Distinguished University Professor of Astronomy Anthropology and Native American Studies at Colgate University where he has taught since 1963 and one of the founders of cultural astronomy. Aveni was voted National Professor of the Year by the Council for Advancement and Support of Education in Washington DC and named one of the ten best professors in the United States by Rolling Stone in 1991. At Colgate he has received among other teaching awards the Alumni Award for Excellence in Teaching (1997) the Balmuth Teaching Award (2011) and the Phi Eta Sigma National Honor Society's Distinguished Teaching Award voted by the Freshman Class of 1990. In 2013 he was awarded the Fryxell Medal for Interdisciplinary Research by the Society of American Archaeologists.