Midcourse Correction for the College Classroom

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A01=Carol A. Hurney
A01=Christine M. Rener
A01=Jordan D. Troisi
Author_Carol A. Hurney
Author_Christine M. Rener
Author_Jordan D. Troisi
Category=JNM
Category=JNT
Colby College
collaborative course improvement
Collect Student Feedback
CTL
Curriculum Design
Educational Development Work
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Face To Face
Faculty Development Committee
Faculty Learning Community
faculty professional development
Follow
formative assessment strategies
Higher Education
higher education pedagogy
Institutional Review Board
Instructional Consultant
instructional consultation
Introductory Biology
IRB
JMU
Midcourse Correction
Midsemester Feedback
midsemester feedback for educators
Office Hours
Pause
Random Assignment
Reflective Teaching
Rollout Plan
Set
Set Data
SGID
Small Group Instructional Diagnosis
SoTL
Student Communication
Student Feedback
student feedback methods
Teaching Methods
Team Based Learning Courses
Word Of Mouth

Product details

  • ISBN 9781642673128
  • Weight: 403g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 29 Dec 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book is about using the Small Group Instructional Diagnosis (SGID) method to make improvements to the educational experience midcourse. The idea is to use this structured interview process to involve students in helping faculty improve a course while they are in it, potentially making a difference for themselves as well as for future students. Faculty gain the opportunity to work on a course before it ends, and can see what changes work without waiting for the next time the course is offered, or the end of semester student evaluations.SGID is a consultation method developed to collect midsemester feedback from students using structured small and large group conversations, involving four conversations between students, a learned colleague the authors refer to as the SGID consultant, and the instructor. First, student talk with each other in small groups about the learning happening in a course, under the guidance of a consultant (SGID Conversation #1- Student & Students). Then the SGID consultant engages the students in a conversation about how the feedback provided impacts the learning in the course (SGID Conversation #2 - Students & Consultant). Then there is a conversation between the consultant and the instructor, where they discuss how the feedback provided by the students can best inform the pedagogical approaches and strategies used by the instructor (SGID Conversation #3 - Consultant & Instructor). Finally, the instructor closes the feedback loop with a conversation with their students about what they learned and how best to move forward (SGID Conversation #4 - Instructor & Students).These conversations during the middle of the semester change the way students think about the teaching and learning endeavor, the way instructors perceive the learning challenges of their courses, and the quality of the institutional academic culture. Most importantly, the SGID equips the instructor with the knowledge to make midsemester course corrections that can profoundly impact the ways students navigate the course, communicate with the instructor, and realize the ways effective teaching can enhance learning.

Dr. Mary Deane Sorcinelli is the Senior Research Fellow at the Institute for Teaching Excellence and Faculty Development at UMass Amherst. She was awarded, along with two colleagues, an NSF Institutional Transformation Grant through the American Association of Universities (AAU) in Washington, D.C.Mary Deane has directed a number of externally grant-funded projects aimed at promoting educational innovation from the Andrew W. Mellon, Microsoft, and William and Flora Hewlett Foundations, Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, and Pew Charitable Trusts. She has served on advisory boards and as an external evaluator of NSF ADVANCE CCLI, IUSE, and WIDER Grants.

Carol A. Hurney is Associate Provost for Faculty Development and the Founding Director of the Center for Teaching and Learning at Colby College.

Christine M. Rener is Professor of Chemistry and Vice Provost for Instructional Development and Innovation at Grand Valley State University.

Jordan D. Troisi is the Senior Associate Director of the Center for Teaching and Learning at Colby College.

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