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University of California Press

About the Book

Learning from Each Other includes 20 original chapters written by well-known experts in the field of teaching and learning. Conceived for both new and experienced faculty at community colleges, four-year institutions, and research-intensive universities, the volume also addresses the interests of faculty and graduate students in programs designed to prepare future faculty and campus individuals responsible for faculty professional development. With the aim of cultivating engagement amongst students and deepening their understanding of the content, topics covered in this edited volume include:
  • employing the science of learning in a social science context
  • understanding the effects of a flipped classroom on student success
  • pedagogical techniques to create a community of inquiry in online learning environments
  • the risks and rewards of co-teaching
  • reaching and teaching "non-traditional" students
  • facilitating learning and leadership in student team projects
  • connecting students with the community through research
  • issues of assessment, including backward design, developing and using rubrics, and defining and implementing the scholarship of teaching and learning

Through Learning from Each Other, all faculty who care about their teaching, but especially faculty in the social sciences, can successfully employ curricular innovations, classroom techniques, and advances in assessment to create better learning environments for their students.

 

About the Author

Michele Lee Kozimor-King is Professor of Sociology and Past Director of the Center for Excellence in Teaching and Learning at Elizabethtown College. She is a past President of Alpha Kappa Delta, the International Sociology Honor Society and is currently the Editor-in-Chief of Teaching Sociology, an official journal of the American Sociological Association.

Jeffrey Chin is Professor of Sociology at Le Moyne College and Secretary-Treasurer of Alpha Kappa Delta. He is a former editor of Teaching Sociology and a Carnegie National Scholar, a program of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching.

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Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Foreword by Michael Reder
Introduction
Michele Lee Kozimor-King and Jeffrey Chin

Part I. Curricular Innovations
1. The Science of Learning in a Social Science Context
Melinda Messineo
2. Pedagogical Techniques for Creating a Community of Inquiry in Online Learning Environments
Andrea N. Hunt
3. Co-Teaching: Risks and Rewards
Renee Monson and Kristy Kenyon
4. A Collaborative Aff air: Connecting Students with the Community through Research
Michele Lee Kozimor-King and Barbara Prince
5. Strategies and Resources for Internationalizing the Curriculum
Christine K. Oakley
6. Flipping Out: Understanding the Effects of a General Education Flipped Classroom on Student Success
Craig Douglas Albert, Stacie K. Pettit, and Christopher Terry
7. Reaching and Teaching “Nontraditional” Students in Community Colleges and Beyond
Sara Parker
8. Addressing Learner Variability on Campus through Universal Design for Learning
Shannon Haley-Mize

Part II. Classroom Techniques
9. Without Apology: Reclaiming the Lecture
Diane L. Pike
10. Scribes in the Classroom: Effectively Using PowerPoint to Enhance the Classroom Experience
Monica R. Sylvia and Brenda J. Kirby
11. Discussion in the Social Science Classroom
Jay R. Howard
12. Facilitating Learning and Leadership in Student Team Projects
Dennis O’Connor
13. Courting Controversy and Allowing for Awkward: Strategies for Teaching Difficult Topics
Mari Plikuhn
14. Becoming a Culturally Inclusive Educator
Dena R. Samuels
15. The Value of Games and Simulations in the Social Sciences
Amanda M. Rosen
16. Putting the Student at the Center: Contemplative Practices as Classroom Pedagogy
Tracey Wenger Sadd

Part III. Out-of-class Situations
17. Student Reading Compliance and Learning in the Social Sciences
Jay R. Howard
18. Cultivating Engagement and Deepening Understanding While Leaving the Textbook Behind
Robin G. Isserles

Part IV. Assessment
19. (Re-)Creating Your Course: Backward Design and Assessment
Melinda Messineo
20. “Am I Grading Consistently and Effectively?”: Developing and Using Rubrics
Shirley A. Jackson
21. Defining and Implementing the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
Jeffrey Chin

Contributors
Index

Reviews

"Learning from Each Other provides an overview of both the latest research and resources and tips for improving time-honored teaching strategies and incorporating cutting-edge, innovative teaching techniques. The variety of topics ensures that even the most experienced faculty member or faculty developer will find something of use. . . . Readers will find that while the authors all teach in the United States, the broad focus makes the techniques and issues addressed applicable to a global audience."
International Journal for Academic Development
"The first step to enhancing teaching in any academic discipline is to build a community of reflective, engaged, and evidence-oriented instructors. The editors have brought together a multitude of perspectives and scholarly techniques that will help move this critical conversation forward, in sociology as well as in other social science disciplines."—Mary C. Wright, Director of the Sheridan Center for Teaching and Learning, Brown University

"No matter what you teach or how you teach it, readers will find practical guidance for improving the learning of their students, all of it solidly grounded in evidence and scholarship. An expansive and impressive contribution to the literature."—James Lang, author of Small Teaching: Everyday Lessons from the Science of Learning

"An essential addition to the bookshelf of anyone teaching in higher education. Those of us looking for a resource for faculty teaching across a variety of disciplines and student populations need look no further; this will be a 'go-to' book for instructors in every type of college classroom."—Kevin Gannon, Director, Center for Excellence in Teaching and Learning, Grand View University, Des Moines, Iowa