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Teaching Sessions

December 9, 2010 by Kyshia

Elected Committee on Teaching “The Doctors Are In” Sessions

2009 Convention • Boston, MA

Evaluations Topics

  • Teaching Evaluation Resources [PDF]
  • Teaching Evaluations in the 21st Century [PDF]
  • Interpreting Evaluation Feedback [PDF]
  • Online Teaching Evaluations [PDF]
  • Student Evaluations [PDF]

Diversity Topics

  • Gay, Lesbian, Bi-Sexual, Transgendered, Questioning Students [PDF]
  • Students with Learning Disabilities or Challenges [PDF]
  • Physical Challenges and Disabilities [PDF]

Students in Crisis Topics

  • Depression and Anxiety in College Students [PDF]
  • Generation Gap [PDF]
  • Campus Violence [PDF]

<< Teaching Resources

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Tips from the AEJMC Teaching Committee

November 17, 2010 by Kyshia

Helping your students beyond the classroom

One of our freshman majors came into my office recently with a distressed look on her face. She came to us with a strong high school grade point average but was struggling in her classes here.

When I looked at her spring 2009 schedule, it wasn’t hard to figure out what was going on. Four of her five classes were taught almost entirely online. She felt overwhelmed, isolated, and incapable of meeting deadlines, especially in the self-paced classes.

Her situation is increasingly common as colleges and universities turn to online classes to serve more students in an era of shrinking education budgets. The 2008 Sloan Survey of Online Learning tracked a 12 percent annual increase in online enrollment. Nationwide, about 3.94 million college students were enrolled in at least one online course in fall 2007.

At many institutions, instruction in large introductory courses has been shifted from lecture hall to laptop. Freshmen, straight from fairly structured learning environments, are the ones most affected.

This trend affects all college educators, whether or not we teach online. As online enrollment grows, so have the number of resources designed to help us teach in this environment. While many university Web pages are devoted to this topic, a few good sites for teaching tips are:

• http://www.onlineteachingtips.org
From Dallas Baptist University.

• http://www.ion.illinois.edu/resources/
From the Illinois Online Network.

• http://www.ctdlc.org/faculty/TeachingTips/index.html
From the Connecticut Distance Learning Consortium.

• http://tlc.eku.edu/tips/online_teaching/
From Eastern Kentucky University.

Even for those of us not teaching online, we must keep in mind that we may be the only faculty member many freshmen see every other day. Our students are keeping track of multiple deadlines that don’t correspond to standard course scheduling blocks. They often turn to us for help with other classes because we are a familiar face.

Last year for the first time, my department offered three small, topic-driven freshman learning community courses with the hidden agenda of giving freshmen an hour a week to interact with a faculty member in a small group. While my community explored media and politics, I spent much of the time talking about time management, selecting courses, managing stress, learning in large lectures and how to succeed in online courses.

This is the inaugural Teaching Corner column. Members of the AEJMC Teaching Committee will explore a teaching topic in each issue of interest to journalism educators. We’d love to have you share your tips related to our column topics. We hope to gather your thoughts and ideas and put together a page on each topic on the Teaching Committee section on the AEJMC Web site.

If you have strategies or resources you’d like to share for teaching in an online environment, please send them to jdgreer@ua.edu. I’d also love to hear from those who work with students on time management, academic success strategies and the like as related to online survival skills.

Finally, we’d love to hear your ideas for future column topics. One of the things AEJMC members said they’d like to see more of in the newsletter is teaching tips. We on the Teaching Committee want to make this space useful to those passionate about teaching. Send ideas to Diana Rios, committee chair, at diana.rios@uconn.edu, or to Jennifer Greer at the address above.

By Jennifer Greer,
University of Alabama,
AEJMC Teaching Committee

<< Teaching Corner

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Tips from the AEJMC Teaching Committee

November 17, 2010 by Kyshia

Honing your teaching skills using the 2009 convention teaching committee sponsored sessions

(Article courtesy of AEJMC News, July 2009 issue)

At my first few AEJMC conventions, I presented my papers and then went to every research panel I could, trying to get ahead on my scholarly agenda. I made the mistake of overlooking the wide variety of panels and workshops that could help me hone my teaching skills.

As you flip through your convention program, check out the outstanding teaching sessions sponsored by AEJMC’s division and interest groups. Sheri Broyles, a member of the AEJMC elected Standing Committee on Teaching, is compiling a list of teaching-oriented activities to help you find these gems. That list will be available for pick-up near the registration desk at the convention.

The AEJMC Teaching Committee also is sponsoring three sessions in Boston designed to bring out the best in all journalism and mass communication educators. All sessions are open and no pre-registration is required.

A roundtable session, “So many projects, so little time: Faculty concerns over balancing teaching, research, service and life,” set for Friday 8:15 to 9:45 a.m. Administrators and veteran faculty members will discuss the stress of earning tenure, work-life challenges for a parent, and how to say no while not alienating your colleagues or chair. The session will start with brief remarks by each panelist. Participants at the interactive session will then have their anonymous questions answered by the panel members.

An interactive small-group discussion session, “The doctors are in,” set for Thursday from 1:30 to 3 p.m. This teaching consultation session, now in its third year, is billed as “where speed dating meets group therapy, all in the name of better teaching.” At the session, participants choose one of five tables, each with its own topic, and participate in a small group discussion, sharing ideas and tips with a moderator. Every 20 minutes the chimes will sound and participants can move to another area. Tables will discuss teaching diversity, using online teaching tools, student evaluations, the Fulbright program, and preparing a teaching portfolio.

A panel presentation highlighting the winners of our “Best Practices in Teaching Diversity” competition, set for Wednesday from 11:45 a.m. to 1:15 p.m. The top six entries of the 30 we received in the 2009 Best Practices competition will present their ideas, which range from short activities for any class to full course designs on diversity-related topics. Winning entries include: “Civic engagement, new media and journalism: A template for the organic incorporation of diversity into a new journalism curriculum” by Joel Beeson, West Virginia; “Professor for a day,” by Lisa E. Baker Webster, Radford; and “Voices of Utah” by Kimberley Mangun, Utah.

In addition to these open sessions, the Teaching Committee will train incoming teaching chairs for the divisions and interest groups on Saturday from 8:15 to 9:45 a.m. If you are in line to be elected a teaching chair, please plan to stay in Boston through Saturday morning for this session.

By Jennifer Greer,
University of Alabama
AEJMC Teaching Committee

<< Teaching Corner

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Tips from the AEJMC Teaching Committee

November 17, 2010 by Kyshia

How to turn an Intellectual Property “incident” into a teaching moment

(Article courtesy of AEJMC News, September 2009 issue)

After more than 25 years of full-time teaching, I thought I had seen it all. But after the last meeting of the Visual Communication course I team taught this spring, a student emailed my colleague and me to thank us for the great panel discussion that day. A panel of professionals had answered students’ questions and freely shared valuable insights about their on-the-job experiences.

It wasn’t the “Thank you” that got my attention. It was the fact that the student had digitally recorded the panel discussion in its entirety. Apparently, the recording turned out so well that the student wanted to make it available to the rest of the class.

I had visions of lectures showing up on YouTube without us ever knowing about it. I’ve been known as an early adopter of technology for teaching. But I was not comfortable with this possibility. I saw this as an opportunity for a teaching moment and responded to the student’s request as follows:

While we encourage active participation and appreciate the proper use of technology in class, we do not appreciate that you recorded the panel discussion without letting us know ahead of time. It was unethical for you to do this. Our syllabus clearly states that you need prior permission from the people involved before you start recording. To refresh your memory, here is the part of the syllabus that addresses that:

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY PROTECTION
Lectures given in this course are the property of the instructors and Kennesaw State University. Class lectures may not be recorded in any form without prior permission from the instructors and any guest lecturers that may speak to this class. Recordings, including class notes, may not be used for commercial purposes.

I can’t speak for my fellow panelists, but I would not have hesitated to give you permission to record our discussion and to share it with your fellow students from this class. But now, it is after the fact.

Since this is an educational environment, however, we are giving you a second chance. If you can get written permission from [the panelists], you may proceed with sharing your recording with your fellow students.”

Within a few hours, the student responded with an apology. Apparently, he decided to record the panel at the last minute as a test of his new digital recorder and didn’t expect the recording to turn out so well. He thought it would have been a shame for this panel discussion to go unheard for those who were unable to attend class. He admitted that he learned a valuable lesson from this experience and thanked us for giving him a second chance.

So, here are a few lessons we can learn from this experience:

1. Have an “Intellectual Property Protection” statement in your syllabus and discuss it with your students at the beginning of the semester. Feel free to adopt and adapt the one provided above, but make sure to include any specific guidelines from your own institution. While each institution usually has policies regarding intellectual property, you may not find one that specifically addresses lectures.

2. Add your name, date and copyright (©) to every slide of your PowerPoint presentation. Do the same for any handouts you author. This helps protect your intellectual property, and it allows students to properly cite you in their papers. In order to assure the best legal defense, one professor I know sends hard copies of his lectures and handouts to himself via snail mail and never opens the postmarked envelope.

3. While we might feel honored to see some of our best lectures show up on YouTube, some of our worst might end up there, too. In either case, it is not the kind of distance-learning we intend. I recommend monitoring “shared resources” by Googling your name and/or your lecture titles and check YouTube.com on a regular basis. You may not need to take legal action, but, at least, you will know what students notice about your lectures. At best, you can turn “incidents” into teaching moments.

By Birgit Wassmuth,
Kennesaw State University,
AEJMC Teaching Committee

<< Teaching Corner

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Teaching Tips Corner: From the AEJMC Teaching Committee

November 17, 2010 by Kyshia

Articles explore teaching topics of interest to journalism educators. These articles, written by members of the elected Committee on Teaching Standards, were featured in past issues of AEJMC News, the association newsletter.

March 2021 • Atypical Tips • By Kevin Williams, Mississippi State University

January 2021 • Being a Crash Test Dummy for My Students • By William C. Singleton III, University of Alabama

October 2020 • Testing Tolerance Offers Teaching Tips for Classroom Controversies • By Tracy Everbach, University of North Texas and Candi Carter Olson, Utah State University

July 2020 • Media Literacy as a Way of Living • By Ralph Beliveau, University of Oklahoma

March 2020 Article • Service Learning in Journalism & Mass Communication • By Emily T. Metzgar, Indiana University

January 2020 Article • Make the 2020 Election a Teachable Moment • By Marcus Messner, Virginia Commonwealth University

July 2019 Article • Documenting and Demonstrating Quality Teaching • By Amanda Sturgill, Elon University

March 2019 Article • Infecting Students with the Research Bug • By Raluca Cozma, Kansas State University

January 2019 Article • Learning to Teach, Finally • By Mary T. Rogus, Ohio University

March 2018 Article • Five Tips to Make the Second Half of Your Class Better than the First • By Jennifer Jacobs Henderson, Trinity University

January 2018 Article • Some Thoughts on Advising • By Natalie Tindall, Lamar University

November 2017 Article • Strategies for Leading Discussions of Race and Diversity in the Classroom • By Karen M. Turner, Temple University

September 2017 Article • Are your students jittery, jaded or jazzed after the first day of class? •  By Carol Schwalbe, University of Arizona

July 2017 Article • Drones: Just Another Tool • By Mary T. Rogus, Ohio University

March 2017 Article • Facilitating a Conversation about Race • By Karen M. Turner, Temple University

January 2017 Article • What Did We Learn? • By Earnest L. Perry Jr., University of Missouri

November 2016 Article • Turning Students into News Junkies • By Raluca Cozma, Iowa State University

September 2016 Article • Social Media and Social Change: A Lesson in Biased Product Development and Collective Action • By Jennifer Grygiel, Syracuse University

March 2016 Article • Teaching in the Eye of a Storm • By Earnest L. Perry Jr., University of Missouri

November 2015 Article • Capturing Students’ Attention • By Leslie-Jean Thornton, Arizona State University

September 2015 Article • The Device Du Jour Is Changing and Challenging • By Amy Falkner, Syracuse University

July 2015 Article • San Francisco and the Amazing Teaching Race: Get Your #AEJMCPARTAY On! • By Linda Aldoory, University of Maryland

March 2015 Article • Finding Success with Student Evaluations • By Natalie T.J. Tindall, Georgia State University

November 2014 Article • Using Research to improve Teaching Skills • By Catherine Cassara, Bowling Green State University

September 2014 Article • Enroll in Online Courses to Improve Teaching Skills • By Leslie-Jean Thornton, Arizona State University

July 2014 Article • Montreal: The Best Programming on Teaching at an AEJMC Conference • By Linda Aldoory, University of Maryland

March 2014 Article • Rewarding Good Teaching • By Karen Miller Russell, University of Georgia

January 2014 Article • Letting Online Students Know You’re There • By Susan Keith, Rutgers University

November 2013 Article • Incorporating Diversity into Course Curricula • By Anita Fleming-Rife, University of Northern Colorado

September 2013 Article • Transformation Involves Collaboration • By Charles Davis, University of Georgia

July 2013 Article • What are your TLOs for DC? • By Amy Falkner, Syracuse University

March 2013 Article • The Effective Use of Guest Speakers • By Chris Roush, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill

January 2013 Article • Incorporating Websites and Blogs into Your Curriculum • By Chris Roush, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill

November 2012 Article • Tweet up with Your Colleagues  • By Amy Falkner, Syracuse University

September 2012 Article • How to Live on 24 Hours a Day • By Birgit Wassmuth, Kennesaw State University

July 2012 Article • Continuing AEJMC’s Mission 100 Years Later • By Jennifer Greer, Chair, University of Alabama

March 2012 Article • “The Doctors Are In” Slated for Chicago Convention • By Charles Davis, University of Missouri

January 2012 Article • Incorporating “Diversity” into Course Curricula and Class Discussions • By Linda Aldoory, University of Maryland

November 2011 Article • Fun in the Classroom? Seriously, Here’s How • By Amy P. Falkner, Syracuse University

September 2011 Article • Thwarting Trouble: Creating an ethical foundation through a good syllabus and meaningful conversation • By Bonnie J. Brownlee, Indiana University

July 2011 Article • AEJMC Plenary — Grade inflation: Does ‘B’ stand for ‘Bad’? • By Sheri Broyles, University of North Texas

March 2011 Article • Student Attendance: Being Present for the Teaching Moment • By Birgit Wassmuth, Kennesaw State University

January 2011 Article • Top 10 Tips for Great Mentoring • By Debashis “Deb” Aikat, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

November 2010 Article • Follow the Syllabus • By Marianne Barrett, Arizona State University

September 2009 Article • How to turn an Intellectual Property “incident” into a teaching moment • By Birgit Wassmuth, Kennesaw State University

July 2009 Article • Honing your teaching skills using the 2009 convention teaching committee sponsored sessions • By Jennifer Greer, University of Alabama

May 2009 Article • Helping your students beyond the classroom • By Jennifer Greer, University of Alabama

<< Teaching Resources

Filed Under: Teaching Tips

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