Preparing for the first day of classes: Introducing yourself to your students.

The Eberly Center at Carnegie Mellon University suggests the first class meeting should serve at least two basic purposes: 

  • To clarify all reasonable questions students might have relative to the course objectives, as well as your expectations for their performance in class. As students leave the first meeting, they should believe in your competence to teach the course, be able to predict the nature of your instruction, and know what you will require of them.

  • To give you an understanding of who is taking your course and what their expectations are.

A few actions that can help facilitate those purposes are:

The Center for Excellence in Teaching and Learning at Iowa State recommends that you Visit the classroom prior to the first day your class meets, and try out the technology, microphone, lights, etc.. I add that if you need assistance with technology in your classroom, contact your university’s support team early so they can have a chance to address the problem in a timely manner. If you have not been on campus for a while and your classroom is located away from your department, travel to your class to see if your walking route is the same, or if you need to allot more time for travel. (Especially if you are on a campus that is able to build and redesign).

“Professors who established a special trust with their students often displayed the kind of openness in which they might, from time to time, talk about their intellectual journey, its ambitions, triumphs, frustrations, and failures, and encourage students to be similarly reflective and candid.” 

–From the chapter “How Do They Treat Their Students” in Ken Bain’s What the Best College Teachers Do (Harvard Press, 2004), available in the CFT Library 


Vanderbilt’s Center for Teaching Excellence recommends that you Arrive early on the first day your class meets and greet students as they arrive. Introduce yourself and post how you want students to address you, (Professor, Dr., first name?) course name, and section of the class on the projector screen, so that when students walk in, they know that they are in the correct place. IU’s Center for Excellence in Teaching and Learning reminds that you can send a welcome email to your students, perhaps inviting them to use NameCoach (if you have access to it https://cloud.name-coach.com/) to record and learn the pronunciation of each other's names.

The Center for Teaching and Learning at Washington University suggest you consider, What do students want to know about you as their instructor? Consider sharing with students how you teach and/or how you expect students to learn. One way to help increase engagement with students is to share with students why the subject is interesting to you, or ways of learning successfully in the class. You can also include comments from students in previous classes, personal history of your work in this subject, or examples showing:

  1. how you apply the course content in your work or use it to solve problems

  2. how content is used in industry or other parts of society.

Share some information that will personalize you – your teaching experience, the reason you entered your discipline, an anecdote from your undergraduate learning days. This point is meant to encourage you to let your students see the enthusiasm you have for your subject and your love of teaching. It’s much more effective to begin the course letting students know that this is a course you want to teach with content you love, and that you are there to help them learn. If you have graduate teaching assistants, introduce them, and let them tell something about themselves as well.

Set up clear communication strategies for the students. These could include when you will have office hours, the best way to contact you, e-mail parameters, phone policies, as well as whether you will use a backchannel such as Microsoft Teams or Slack in your course, and if so, how will it be used.

Most of these tips align with the key principles provided by James Lang (author of Small Teaching), in an article for the Chronicle for Higher Education. These principles are intended to help faculty decide which activities and approaches will best draw students into the course and prepare them to learn. https://www-chronicle-com.proxyiub.uits.iu.edu/article/how-to-teach-a-good-first-day-of-class/


How UDL Helps Us Create Classes Where Everyone Can Learn and Succeed

A few weeks ago we talked about UDL in the conversation around accessible syllabi. This post provides more back ground on what UDL or (Universal Design of Learning) is, and how it can be useful to you when you for the purposes of teaching and learning. The information I am providing was adapted from the work of Flower Darby, author of Small Teaching Online. and the UDL Higher Education Special Interest Group.

Within the higher education landscape, there are unique challenges. Some of these include: differing school models and missions, degrees of faculty’s focus on research (sometimes over instruction), the size of classes and campuses, the connections between faculty and students, the lack of  background in the area of teaching for many individual faculty, the relationship among faculty and other service providers (e.g., disability services), and the impact of legislative accessibility standards (different for different countries).

Although UDL first took hold in K12 education, the neuroscience and the principles that undergird this framework certainly apply to higher education as well, to address the wide variety of students that an institution may serve. When we think about the college context and about today’s students, we realize that other considerations come into play in addition to students’ needs and preferences relating to both learning and technology.

For example, today’s college students [at both the graduate and undergraduate level] are more likely than ever to be juggling at least one of the following challenges, and often more than one:

  • Working to pay for college

  • Raising a child on their own

  • Dealing with mental health challenges such as anxiety

  • Facing food or housing insecurity, if not both

  • Or a myriad of other issues.

Given this reality, it’s important that we build in support and options within the very design of the class. While students  at IU can request accommodations based on need, Newt Miller, Associate Dean at Ashford University has said, we can “accommodate off the bat,” (2020) so that students don’t need to request special treatment, deadline extensions, or opportunities to revise and resubmit, as examples.

General Resources:

This video provides more information about the importance of UDL in our college classes.

Additional Resources

Evidenced Based Teaching in STEM and activating prior knowledge

Reading time: Approximately 5 minutes

The Center for the Integration of Research, Teaching and Learning (CIRTL) offers a Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) designed to provide STEM educators with evidence-based strategies they can employ to improve their teaching as well as effectively conduct teaching as research projects. The course, An Introduction to Evidence-Based Undergraduate STEM Teaching, is offered every few weeks at: https://www.edx.org/course/an-introduction-to-evidence-based-undergraduate-stem-teaching-6

This course aims to "provide future STEM faculty, graduate students and post-doctoral fellows with an introduction to effective teaching strategies and the research that supports them. The goal of the eight-week course is to equip the next generation of STEM faculty to be effective teachers, thus improving the learning experience for the thousands of students they will teach".

If you don't want to enroll in the course, you can review all course modules and resources for free at https://www.stemteachingcourse.org/home.

The modules contain several brief microlectures that focus on key pedagogical concepts and assessment strategies contextualized for various STEM disciplines. For example, this video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ecDmvafcDDY&t=7s (found in Module 2 - approximately 10 minutes), focuses on how to activate prior knowledge in students. The instructor uses a famous example from the field of psychology, to illustrate how students in a statistics class have a higher chance of understanding hypothesis testing when you use real world examples students may be familiar with, as opposed to discipline specific symbols and abstract language to solve problems.

This is not to say you should avoid using the language of the discipline. The point of activating prior knowledge is to help students make connections from what you are teaching, to what they already know, so that they have a better chance of understanding and retaining what you want them to know. This also helps increase the chance that students will be able to transfer what they learn to related contexts.

Flippity

Flippity https://www.flippity.net/ is a free resource that allows for the quick creation of quizzes, flash cards, presentations, memory games, word searches, and more. Flippity allows users to customize premade Google Sheet templates with their own content. Instructors can use Flippity as a presentation tool, or to create low- or no-stakes assignments through Google Sheets. Further, students can use Flippity to create their own projects. This resource can be used in face-to-face and online courses, at the individual, group, or whole class level.

This video: briefly describes how many of the templated activities available on the site work.

Flippity is not a plug-in to Google Sheets, so it does not require the creation of a username or password. As such, this tool is primarily recommended for creating activities aimed at engaging students in your course.  Some of the activities can be downloaded as PDFs and distributed to students, in which case they could submit the activity via Canvas or in class.

Research in Action Podcast

Last year, Oregon State University concluded the podcast series, Research In Action. The archives remain available for review. The podcast covers a wide variety of topics related to research, teaching, and/or higher education. Some specific titles include:

Each podcast comes with an instructor guide as well as resources connected to each segment of the podcast. The instructor guides include:

  • A brief abstract describing what is discussed in the podcast

  • The guest bio and segment topics

  • Learning outcomes for the episode

  • Time stamps for each segment

  • Link to the episode show notes and transcript

  • Guiding questions for listening to the episode

  • Potential classroom activities that could be paired with the episode

  • Links and/or citations related to content mentioned in each section

What podcast are you listening to that help inform your teaching and learning?