Screen Idols — Trevor Holmes

colour-tvI’m not late — I’m in fact right on time — but the only seats left are close to the front and strangely they do not afford a very clear view of the screen at all. The chairs themselves are decades old and make my back hurt almost immediately. When things start up, I crane my neck upward and slump way down in my seat with the broken arms, hoping to be able to focus on the unfolding of the next hour and a half while people around me text, eat, have side conversations.

Contrast this with the following evening. When I am ready, I open a laptop and click “play.” I’m surrounded by loved ones — my cat and my spouse — and I spend an hour focused on the screen. We can pause to go back or pause if we need to make a comment, or reflect a bit. After it’s over, there’s a willing conversation partner to help analyse what I just experienced.

If you’re reading this blog entry from the CTE website, you could reasonably assume that I’m describing the difference between a large lecture hall and online learning. Perhaps you surmise that I’m a fan of online learning, and feel that lecture halls are bad places for learning, both cognitively and somatically. However, I’m actually describing my experience this past weekend of going out to a movie versus watching a downloaded TV episode (paid for, on iTunes, just to be clear). But when I think about it, I have to wonder if there is a connection to be made.

I’ve long been a proponent of the lecture , done well, as a great way to teach and learn. It’s a craft that can be honed, and my own lectures (according to me anyway) are universally adored while being chock full of memorable brilliance (jokes and useful theory).

Thinking back, though, on my weekend, I guess I am reconsidering my position a bit. Can self-paced, high-quality learning online be better for minds and bodies? You bet! Can it replace the social dimension of dozens or hundreds of people coming together and the (occasional) “aha” moments that arise? Sometimes, yes. I’m not going to stop holding lectures, but this weekend reminded me, again (it takes me  lot of reminders), that how we use lecture time and space needs to be thoughtful rather than assumed.

Welcome from the new Admin Assistant – Shelley Bacik

confusedMy name is Shelley Bacik and I am the new Admin Assistant at the Centre for Teaching Excellence (replacing Marta Bailey, who has a new position with the Grad Studies Office). I am enjoying getting to know all of the great people at the CTE and am really looking forward to working with such a great team!  I know it won’t be easy to replace Marta in this position as she certainly is admired by everyone here (including me for all the help she has given me in my first few weeks).

Please feel free to contact me for any questions you may have and I will be happy to help you out if I can even though I may still be in a learning curve for a while yet!  Thank you to everyone at the CTE for making me feel welcome during these first few weeks!

Student Laptop Use in the Classroom — Mark Morton

students-with-laptopsThe Centre for Teaching Excellence has nearly a hundred succint, pragmatic, and evidence-based “Teaching Tips” on its website. Moreover, we continue to develop new Teaching Tips as the need arises (and as resources permit). Down below is a Teaching Tips document that I recently drafted, pertaining to students using (or misusing) laptops in the classroom. I’ll eventually add this document to our “official” list of Teaching Tips, but I thought I would first post it here, and invite anyone who is interested to give feedback on it. Continue reading Student Laptop Use in the Classroom — Mark Morton

App Happy (or, the iPod Touch)

ipod-touch-handTwo years ago when I bought a netbook — an Asus EEE, about the size of hardcover novel — I thought that I had finally acquired the perfect technology: it was small enough that I could slip it into a little satchel that I carry, but big enough that it had a full-size qwerty keyboard that I could easily type on. It also had enough CPU power to meet 95% my needs: word processing, browsing the Internet, sending email, and watching videos. I was so pleased with my netbook that when Apple came out with its palm-sized iPod Touch, I wasn’t even interested. What, I opined, could it do for me that my netbook couldn’t do? Continue reading App Happy (or, the iPod Touch)

Of Pandemics and Pedagogy – Trevor Holmes

Coughing Girl
Coughing Girl

At the risk of sounding like a curmudgeon, I must say I have mixed reactions to the Daily Bulletin’s story about dealing with students who have the misfortune of coming down with the H1N1 influenza virus. In short, while Senate has tightened up the rules for documentation of illness as prerequisite to any accommodations, the University has simultaneously declared H1N1 to be free of any documentation requirements whatsoever. Continue reading Of Pandemics and Pedagogy – Trevor Holmes

“Fail often to succeed sooner”- IDEO

By Katherine Lithgow

I noticed these words on the door as I entered an instructor’s office, and commented on how appropriate they were, particularly in light of the fact that we were meeting to discuss how eportfolios could be used to help her students. She wanted to incorporate their use into a project her students would begin in the winter 2010 term and complete the following winter 2011 term with different aspects of the project being addressed in a number of different courses. Continue reading “Fail often to succeed sooner”- IDEO

Why do some students choose not attend tutorials?! – Walid Omran (International TA Developer)

3041908888_04ff4f701aWhen I was assigned my first duty as a TA in one of the electrical engineering courses, one term after arriving to Canada, I was keen to know more about Canadian students. Thus, I started asking other experienced TAs about undergraduate students and how to teach them effectively. One comment that I still remember until today and after being a TA for more than 6 courses was about the students’ attendance in the tutorials. Continue reading Why do some students choose not attend tutorials?! – Walid Omran (International TA Developer)