Make Your Lecture Memorable! — Arash Shahi

I recently ran two workshops on Creating Memorable Lectures and in preparing and running the workshops I have learned quite a bit, mostly from Richelle Monaghan who had ran this workshop in the past, which may be of possible interest to those who want to be remembered by their students long after their student-instructor contract has expired! There is a lot of research about memory and cognition and as educators it seems appropriate to be aware of what assists individuals with memory and recall. This also includes higher levels of conceptual understanding because fundamental knowledge needs to be accessible in order to use the information for levels such as analysis and synthesis.

One way to categorize memory is short-term versus long-term memory. Essentially you can think of your short term memory as a “supped-up” white board in your mind. We all know what a white board is….. but I say “supped-up” , so visualize a windshield wiper attachment on the bottom of the white board. All incoming information is put on your short-term memory white board (so to speak) but this information is not creating neural mechanisms in your brain for later recall. Just imagine that every 2-30 seconds (depending on the situation but the average is 18 seconds), the wiper will clear the information in your short-term memory!

The ONLY way in which you’ll have this information for later recall is if this information is “filed” so to speak in your long term memory. So picture yourself with a clipboard, actively selecting what information is important and/or meaning full for you to write down and file into filing cabinet. In my workshops, I covered a number of tools that could be used for moving the content from the whiteboard to your filing cabinets! The ones I found effective were the use of mnemonic, novelties, chunking, rehearsal and elaboration! I’d like to chat briefly here about “elaboration”.

Imagine that your spouse phones and asks if you can pick up 5 things from the grocery store on the way home. When you get off the phone, you simply review the list the way in which it was said to you over the phone “milk, carrots, bread, oranges, eggs”. This is called rehearsal or simply maintenance. Elaborative processing or rehearsal takes the form of attention to meaning. This attention to meaning is called deep processing. Many studies have shown that deep processing leads to good memory performance later on EVEN WITHOUT the intention of memorizing the target material. The intention to learn had no direct effect on performance; what matters instead is how someone engages or thinks about the material to be remembered.

So returning to the grocery list… Some people may prefer to categorize the food in terms of meals. For example they may view milk, bread, eggs and oranges as breakfast food…. some people may think more in colours with 3 white foods (milk, bread, eggs) 2 orange foods (carrots and oranges), …. or others may think of what those foods are for (Think of breakfast tomorrow and packing lunch for your son tomorrow). In any case, changing the grocery list to have meaning is called elaborative rehearsal and allows for deep processing and long-term memory recall. This was only one of the techniques I looked at and my intention here was to get you thinking about these techniques and hopefully you’ll look into them yourself and see which technique works best for the topics from your discipline!

 

“Why we’re making you take these courses” – Mary Robinson, Associate Director of First Year Engineering

“Why are you making me take this course?”  As a teacher, I hate this question.  But, I must confess that I posed it several times during my undergraduate years.  The answer that I got from my parents, friends, and teachers back in the day was the equally as frustrating “because you’ll need it later.” Continue reading “Why we’re making you take these courses” – Mary Robinson, Associate Director of First Year Engineering

Instructional Skills Workshop — Veronica Brown

Sunset on Georgian Bay, Pointe au Baril, ONWhen I first heard about the Instructional Skills Workshop (ISW), I didn’t immediately run to sign up. The idea of someone videotaping me teach made me squirm (it still does). What? You want to not only tape my teaching but then someone is going to critique it and I have to watch it that night? Ugh.

[Insert loud sigh here] OK. This is probably good for me. I am sure I wave my hands too much, I have been known to say ’cause instead of because, I wonder if I seem as distracted as I feel…yes, there are some things I can work on. Continue reading Instructional Skills Workshop — Veronica Brown

Learning to lose our balance — Julie Timmermans

We spend much of our lives focusing on achieving balance: balancing our many work and life commitments, balancing our diets, and balancing our cheque books (actually, does anyone do that anymore?).  We are concerned with maintaining balance in the world’s ecosystems and balancing national budgets.  Continue reading Learning to lose our balance — Julie Timmermans

Creativity in a Nutshell – Martin Smith

Often I read Science Daily as a way of keeping up on many different areas of science.   Lately, one topic that keeps popping up is creativity and how we can promote creativity in our lives. For me, the creative process and teaching have a lot of overlap.  As instructors we try to be creative in the ways that we engage our students.  Continue reading Creativity in a Nutshell – Martin Smith

Blogs and Eportfolios in Waterloo’s LEARN — Marlene Griffith Wrubel

Waterloo LEARN is the new online learning system. It was introduced in the Spring of 2011 and has been fully integrated in on-campus blended courses since January 2012. There are many activities that faculty can use in this system to increase the learning experience for their students. Continue reading Blogs and Eportfolios in Waterloo’s LEARN — Marlene Griffith Wrubel

Piazza – web-based discussion forums for university courses — Paul Kates

Piazza.com offers students and professors a smart-looking , easy-to-use discussion forum for question & answer communication in university and college courses. It is free to use and free of advertising. and is proving popular enough to use at some of the technical schools in the USA (e.g. Stanford, Berkeley, Georgia Tech) and Canada (e.g. University of Waterloo, University of British Columbia, University of Toronto). Continue reading Piazza – web-based discussion forums for university courses — Paul Kates