Monday, December 7, 2009

More on Men: What's the Mystery?

Sara Goldrick-Rab, in a commentary piece in the Chronicle, cites research offering a number of alternative explanations for the increasing gap between men's and women's success in college. The clearest evidence, she says, points to female successful performance in college and academic preparation for college. Her argument sounds tautological--but maybe it's just me. The comments posted in response to the article included one from Dan Dutton providing a link to a speech given by Roy Baumeister at the 2007 American Psychological Association conference in San Francisco. Makes for provocative related reading.

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Math Redesign Means More Student Success

An article in this month's "The Learning MarketSpace," a publication of the National Center for Academic Transformation, offers a fascinating review of a math success story. The article is written by Carol Twigg, who founded the center.


At Jackson State Community College in Tennessee faculty members were fretting about the high failure rates in their remedial and developmental math courses, so the decided to try an experimental redesign of the course.  They really threw out all the rules by consolidating three courses into 12 "modules." Creatively, the faculty members were able to do this without upending the traditional register-for-a-course, take-the-course, get-a-grade-for-the-course administrative structure of college registrars. Students were required to only pass the number of modules deemed necessary for their desired course of study, and could self-pace their work in a math center staffed most of each day.

Success rates are amazing!  You can see the results clearly in the article.Here is an intriguing thought that Twigg writes in the article: "JSCC has decided that it is more important to prepare students to succeed in the future than to remediate the past. That is a decision that every institution struggling with low student success rates in developmental math will need to make." Fasscinating stuff.

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Zemsky's Big 3: Learning, Attainment, Money

Robert Zemsky has written two commentary pieces recently in Inside Higher Ed. In the first, on September 4, he discussed topics that higher ed reformers are distracted by and, in his view, should leave alone. In the second, on September 14, he discussed about as clearly as has anyone, the three topics that should demand the academy's attention, action and reform: learning, attainment, and money. I couldn't agree more with his selection, and think that these would make a great core for the Board of Trustees' next revision of the strategic plan.


While I applaud Zemsky's summary, I do think that his discussion of the specific challenges in our assessment of learning is a bit shallow, and leads him only in the end to suggest that brain research will in coming decades help us better know whether and what students have learned. He describes the current state of affairs as argument between those in "two linguistic cul de sacs"--champions (or at least testers) of rote learning, and a supposedly opposite camp that teaches for creativity and critical thinking. It's a false dichotomy. "Experts in the process of learning," know that learning involves a great deal of memorization, rehearsal, and automaticity, often as a necessary precursor to or basis for analysis, synthesis and creativity. Experts in their own fields usually have to teach for a long time, and with a good deal of critical attention, before they gain the understanding of student learning that helps them know how to structure learning toward ever more sophisticated ends.


Zemsky still makes a strong case for the need for the investors in higher education to act as though learning is the important goal: important not just to teachers and students, but to society:

In fact, the absence of adequately defined testable learning outcomes reflects the fact that getting a good answer to the question [how and what are students learning?] has to date not proved very important. The United States continues to invest vast sums of money in an enterprise whose most tangible outcomes are only tangentially related to learning. Were this country -- or any country -- to decide it was important to rethink those investments, I think the academy would suddenly get very good at evaluating which teaching and learning modalities were the best. The question then becomes how best to create those conditions.


That's the question all right.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Online Education: The Elements for Better Learning


Some news (probably not enough) is being made of the recent U.S. Department of Education study, "Evaluation of Evidence-Based Practices in Online Learning: A Meta-Analysis and Review of Online Learning Studies." It's a meta-analysis of 99 studies in the research literature from 1996 to 2008, with an emphasis on 2004-2008 (46 studies from that time period were of sufficient scope to permit the calculation of effect sizes).

The report finds that online courses can have outcomes that are superior to those of classroom-based learning. However, the real news is in the final pages of the study, in Discussions and Implications (p. 51):

"Clark (1983) has cautioned against interpreting studies of instruction in different media as demonstrating an effect for a given medium inasmuch as conditions may vary with respect to a whole set of instructor and content variables. That caution applies well to the findings of this meta-analysis, which should not be construed as demonstrating that online learning is superior as a medium. Rather, it is the combination of elements in the treatment conditions, which are likely to include additional learning time and materials as well as additional opportunities for collaboration, that has proven effective. The meta-analysis findings do not support simply putting an existing course online, but they do support redesigning instruction to incorporate additional learning opportunities online."

In other words, interventions that can increase time on task and engagement with learning materials and other students, are likely to improve student learning. This is not news, but an important confirmation. Online tools give us more options for achieving increased engagement, but online does not--and these authors say it emphatically--magically, or in itself, produce better teaching and learning.

Wary of Budget Knife, Teaching Centers Seek to Sharpen Their Role

  • I'd have called it, "Wary of Budget Knife, Teaching Centers More Vitally Necessary Than Ever." This Chronicle piece suggests repeatedly that teaching centers ought to be anxious, and quotes a few anxious folks. I couldn't agree more, though, with Connie Cook, who speaks to the contrary.

    Not everyone is so gloomy. Constance E. Cook, who directs Michigan's teaching center, says that despite the high-profile closures, she believes more centers have opened than have been shuttered during the last two years. (No hard numbers exist, but most people interviewed for this story shared Ms. Cook's instinct.) "In this era in which people care so much about student learning, faculty teaching centers are generally thriving," Ms. Cook says. But she says that some of the recent closures, especially at an institution as large as Missouri, have made her colleagues anxious. As budgets tighten, she says, teaching centers need to strengthen their ties with other university offices and make sure that administrators see that the various offices are working in harmony.

  • tags: facultydevelopment, teaching, centers, economy

Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

Monday, August 3, 2009

Men Men Men Men


The day's news brings two items concerned with improving educational outcomes for boys and men.

In one, Grand Meadow (Albert Lea, MN) Superintendent, Joe Brown, announces that in his district, beginning this fall, four 7th- and 8th-grade classes (art, vocal music, industrial technology and physical education) will offer gender-segregated instruction. Brown cites Leonard Sax and others in support of this decision to give young men specific attention that may improve their education. Grand Meadow has a disproportionate number of boys with discipline problems, in special education, and underperforming academically. The Austin Daily Herald article reports that "Brown and his wife, Minnesota Rep. Robin Brown (DFL-Moscow Township), and possibly other staff are attending a National Association for Single Sex Public Education conference in Atlanta in October. Robin Brown, an art teacher in Albert Lea, sits on the Higher Education committee at the capitol and is also a proponent of the gender education." Brown was not specific as to the specific teaching approaches or learning experiences that might improve these students' outcomes.

In the other, the San Francisco Bay View publishes an article on the University of Pennsylvania's Grad Prep Academy, seeking 10 young Black males who will enroll as juniors in fall, 2009, as potential Ph.D. scholars. The 10 men selected will receive mentoring and specific preparation to prepare them to apply for graduate school. They will also be eligible for a full scholarship in the university's Graduate School of Education. The program is intended to address the disparity in doctoral awards by gender and race: only 2.1 percent of all Ph.D.s degrees awarded at American universities in 2008.

Both are interesting responses to particular gaps in K-12 and higher education outcomes.

Tuesday, April 28, 2009

Change: Now's our chance?

In a time such as this, when it's truly clear for once that things must change, you can't turn around without hearing loud calls for change and loud change-rakers.

Here are a couple thought-provoking "change we must" pieces from the week's higher ed news.

End the University as We Know It
Mark C. Taylor, chair of the department of religion at Columbia
April 27 New York Times

(and a reasonable response from Dean Dad at Inside Higher Ed)

In a Time of Crisis, Colleges Ought to Be Making History
Goldie Blumenstyk
May 1 Chronicle of Higher Education

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

New Book on Student Plagiarism: Blum


Inside Higher Ed today posted an article, "It's Culture, Not Morality," about Susan D. Blum's new book on student plagiarism (My Word! Plagiarism and College Culture)"The book, about to appear from Cornell University Press, is sure to be controversial because it challenges the strategies used by colleges and professors nationwide. In many ways, Blum is arguing that the current approach of higher education to plagiarism is a shock and awe strategy — dazzle students with technology and make them afraid, very afraid, of what could happen to them."

As usual with Inside Higher Ed articles, the comments are as good as the piece itself. I side with those who say no matter what theoretical frame you bring to it, practically speaking, the only way around plagiarism is to create assignments that make it very, very difficult.