Teaching Your First College Class

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A01=Carolyn Lieberg
academic course design
active learning strategies
Active Learning Techniques
Administrators
Assignment Ideas
Author_Carolyn Lieberg
Category=JNM
Category=JNT
Cheated
Class Guidelines
Classroom Assessment Techniques
classroom management
classroom management for new instructors
Clip
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Fellowships
first time instructor
Follow
formative assessment techniques
Grade Complaints
Graduate Student Instructors
GSI
higher education pedagogy
Hold
Inclined
inclusive teaching practices
Novice College Teacher
Small Assignment
Speed Grading
String
Strongest
student engagement
student engagement methods
syllabus creation
theory of teaching
Timeline
Undergraduate Education
Viewpoints
Wo
Workshops
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781579222260
  • Weight: 340g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 20 May 2008
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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No other teaching experience will feel quite like the first time an instructor walks into a classroom to face a class of students.This book is a wise and friendly guide for new faculty and graduate student instructors who are about to teach for the first time. It provides an introduction to the theory of teaching; describes proven strategies and activities for engaging students in their learning; and offers advice on classroom management, syllabus creation, grading, assessment, and discipline issues, among other topics. It prepares readers for a confident start as teachers, and gives them a firm foundation on which to develop their skills and personal classroom styles.The author breaks teaching down into its component elements and tasks to enable graduate student instructors to identify their particular responsibilities, and learn about what works and does not. They will also benefit from reading the book as a whole as it sets their work in the context of course objectives and learning theory.For new faculty this engaging book provides a solid basis from which to develop their skills and personal styles as teachers; and offers guidance on documenting their classroom success for the purposes of promotion and tenure. For graduate student instructors, the book is a companion that will give them confidence and pleasure in teaching, and stand them in good stead if they decide on a in any future career in academe.

Carolyn Lieberg was Associate Director of the Center for Teaching at the University of Iowa for eight years. Previously she worked at the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. She now lives in Washington, D.C.

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