Friday, November 13, 2009
Goals following graduation
Summary of Blog 11
1. Get out in the community and expand my contacts and network to help in the job hunt.
2. Get a residency/internship/post-doc position but find a good on that fits your goals
3. Adjust your goals as conditions change
4. Keep your plan over your desk and update it weekly
5. Use your time in grad school for more than just completing your classes. Use all the resources available to benefit your future goals.
6. Align your graduate projects, thesis, dissertation to your future goals; plan your activities in graduate school to benefit you beyond your diploma.
7. Enter your goals into your time management system and give them priority in your daily actions
8. Collaborate with others and let them help achieve my goals
9. Focus! on what is really important and spend time on that.
10. Have a backup plan that is attractive to you as well, just in case things don’t work out.
11. Do things during graduate school that you want to do after graduation; it will help you learn whether that is really what you want to do; if so, it will give you valuable experience.
12. Get involved in something you are really passionate about, it makes everything more worthwhile
Wednesday, November 4, 2009
Resources at UTEP
1) Electronic databases such as ISI Web of Science and Pub Med are wonderful. Learn how to search effectively using these database tools and they can be very helpful. The librarians will teach you how.
2) Career Services will work with you on your resume.
3) Check the “Job Mine” website
4) Learn how to use RefWorks or EndNote to create literature databases for each of your research projects. Check the UTEP library website or Endnote’s site, http://www.endnote.com/ because if you are not using these tools in your writing, you are wasting a lot of time.
5) Going to the library to make copies of articles is inconvenient; not all articles have full-text online copies. The UT-TeleCampus digital library is a much better resource for online copies.
6) You have to pay for the interlibrary loan service, but it’s not too expensive. Just make sure you really need the article.
7) If you want to survey your class use Survey Monkey. The free version allows 10 questions and 100 responses and it’s easy to set up, http://www.surveymonkey.com/Home_Pricing.aspx
8) Mspace is a useful place to store documents you may need when you are away from home or campus.
9) Check into Alliance for Graduate Education and the Professoriate (AGEP) and attend their conferences on preparing future faculty.
10) http://www.pubmed.gov/ is a helpful tool as are other niche sites within your discipline such as http://www.diabetes.org/ and others.
11) Don’t forget Google Scholar, Bing, and other discipline specific sites such as http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/ to get started with your searches.
12) The UTEP Writing Center is a place you should definitely visit.
13) The Disabled Student Services Offices can be of great help, and can set you up with helpful software such as Dragon speech recognition software http://www.nuance.com/naturallyspeaking/
14) A few more databases: WorldCat (World Catalog), IIMP (International Index to Music Periodicals), Academic Search Complete, ProQuest, and JSTOR (Journal Storage). ERIC (Educational Resources Information Center), PsychInfo and Proquest for dissertations and theses.
15) The CETaL and ORSP workshops have been helpful, especially on how to use rubrics to grade more efficiently and effectively.
16) YouTube has a wealth of science-related instructional videos on topics such as micropipetting, cell cultures techniques, and others. Great tools to help students in lab sections.
17) Build and tap into your networks through attending seminars, workshops, meetings, visiting with colleagues and faculty in your area and outside.
18) Instructional Support Services can help with instructional technologies and supports “i-Peer” which allows students on teams to evaluate each other’s team work behavior anonymously
19) The UTEP-VPN login allows you to access your UTEP computer and resources from off-campus sites.
20) Goldmine has been a great resources to make registering and paying for classes online easy.
21) The UTEP license for Turnitin (turnitin.com) is helpful in allowing students to submit their papers to check for plagiarism before they turn it in for a grade.
22) You may also want to check into the support program Human Resources offers. You will be surprised. http://admin.utep.edu/Default.aspx?alias=admin.utep.edu/hr
Recommendations on Moving Your Research Projects Forward
1) visit with your professor(s) on a weekly basis;
2) Manage your time effectively and on a daily basis;
3) Learn how to use relevant databases, websites, and search engines effectively;
4) Learn to use RefWorks or EndNote to build your own database of articles.
5) Finally, and we have not talked about this much, adopt healthy liefstyle behaviors. Instead of going out to lunch, bring your own healthy sandwich and keep plugging along. Take an exercise break around mid-day for 30 min or so. It will keep you in much better spirits during the afternoon. Cook your own dinner on Sunday afternoon/evening. Freeze/refrigerate daily portions so you can just pop them in the microwave when you get home. This save you many hours over going out to eat or cooking each day, and you’ll like the food. It also saves you a ton of money. Stop drinking sodas, they only give you empty calories, a sugar/caffeine boost and then you crash. Drink tea instead.
Here are your suggestions
Blog 9 Summary: Research Success and Expectations
1) Early communication with advisors can be difficult. Going to your advisor with a plan and taking initiative may be one solution.
2) It’s important to have in-depth discussions with your advisor about your topic, but go prepared as best as possible. Narrow down your topics to a few that really appeal to you and you’re excited about, learn how to use databases and search engines well, and then read the relevant literature. Knowing what is relevant and what is not, can save you lots of time.
3) Set up a regular schedule of meetings with your advisors, preferably on a weekly basis especially if you are signed up for independent study, research project, or thesis/dissertation. Insist on it.
4) Get clarity on what is expected of you.
5) Daily planning and managing your time is critical to stay on track with your research. Congratulations.
6) Teaching and grading easily takes over; have to be careful in your time management and adopting efficient grading strategies.
7) Partnering with other grad students on research can be helpful
8) Make sure to live a healthy lifestyle: eat healthy and exercise. It really does help, you’ll be amazed at the amount of energy you gain.
9) Getting into research projects can be very rewarding and exciting: Discovery always is.
10) If you can get on a grant or be part of a group that applies for one, do it. It will be a helpful experience to go through that process. If the grant funds your thesis or dissertation research, even better.
11) Get started with research in your very first semester, even if it is just helping out a more senior graduate student. It would also have been helpful if you had been involved in research projects during your undergraduate years.
12) Apply for graduate scholarship and fellowship. They greatly benefit your resume/CV
13) Research usually takes more time than you think it will; it is easy to get pulled into non-productive directions as well. Keep your focus when looking for resources and don’t get distracted by other interesting topics.
Monday, October 19, 2009
Classroom Observations
It is important to note that teaching is a very complex activity, the success of which is influenced by a large number of variables. To demonstrate successful teaching we cannot solely rely on the perceptions of our students, but have to show its impact from multiple perspectives using multiple, relevant measures. Student feedback is only one of those measures, even though their input is important because they are the ones doing the learning.
To know good teaching depends on experience, and the study of teaching and learning literature, Fortunatly, a large body of research exists from which "best practices" can be derived. Unfortunately, many faculty members are too busy with other responsbilities to engage in the study of teaching and learning. This is where centers for effective teaching and learning can play a critical role.
To class this blog I want to share the valuable comment I read in your blogs on classroom observations.
Blog 8 summary: Observations
1) Observations are effective in that you got to observe different methods of teaching; you can ignore the content and look at the actual teaching behaviors and actions.
2) Fascinating to watch student interaction with the teacher and their body language
3) Difficult to assess folks who just give a talk (lecture) to distribute valuable information [HM Comment: distributing information can be done on a pamphlet or in a book. What is the role of the person who distributes the information? Shouldn’t s/he do a bit more than rattling off a PPT and list of items to ensure participants in the session really do understand the important points? You know that we all “filter” information based on our own experiences and knowledge. If you want folks ‘to get it right” you probably have to do a bit more than simply give them the information].
4) Explaining tasks clearly at the beginning of the session is key to success for the students’ learning and the flow of the session.
5) The observation provides new ideas on teaching, especially active learning techniques.
6) Just because you gave a good lecture doesn’t mean the students actually understood the material.
7) Being observed really helped because of the constructive feedback received.
8) It was not clear initially how you could benefit from a peer observation, but the observation helped see what grabs students’ attention and things (mistakes) to be careful of.
9) Good teachers guide students in discovery rather than provide them with answers.
10) Observing a class is completely different from attending it as a student, because now you see the “finer points” of good teaching.
11) Received very practical feedback on classroom management
12) Teaching strategies have changed for the better over the last decades in a number of instances, but there are still stalwarts and traditionalist teachers who only deliver information.
13) Some people should not be teachers because they have no teaching skills and don’t understand the process.
14) Lectures results quickly in a loss of attention by the students.
15) Big classes are intimidating.
My Professional Development Plan
My Professional Development Plan
I have to be honest here. I never really put together a professional development plan. My plan was to work hard. I have to say that this approach has paid off, especially at UTEP, but it also left me wishing I had done things differently.
I still am painfully aware of how much a good mentor could have helped me early on in my career. My career path would likely have been completely different had I had the support I needed at that time. I scrambled to get publications and presentation and it did not matter whether my efforts were focused. I just worked hard to get those pubs out, which left me without focus and little expertise in any area.
A good development plan would have helped me lay out my path (especially important during the pre-tenure years) that I could have sustained after tenure. The lack of focus, not having developed a core research group of graduate students, and consequently a well-functioning lab, my research program did not amount to much. If I had to do it again, I would do it very differently. It's not use crying over spilled milk, therefore I now try to help young faculty establish a better career path early in their profession through the UTEP Collaborative Faculty Mentoring Program.
My professional development plan for the future is somewhat ill-defined. I have numerous goals related to the tasks in my portfolio as an Associate Provost that are important for UTEP. Maintaining the current mentoring program, growing CETaL and making sure its events help faculty, establishing a sustained leadership development program, and ensuring that our interim report to SACS is of high quality are foremost in my mind.
As many of you have commented, I am too busy taking care of business to be able to think where I want to go or achieve over the next 3-5 yrs. To be honest, a personal retreat and vacation would be nice about now to help me prioritize and set some goals.
From Your Personal Development Plan
I read your blogs on your personal development plans and distilled a few themes.
1) Create goals and put them in a schedule, a timeline, focused on achieving the tasks necessary to accomplish those goals
2) Stick to your schedule and complete the tasks needed to achieve your important goals first
3) Dedicate substantial quality time and effort to your most important goals
4) Update your current documents and maintain them in your electronic portfolio
5) Rewarding yourself for your accomplishments
6) Some of the things you have to do may not contribute to reaching your goals (like some of the elements covered in this course)
7) It’s difficult to think beyond one year and identify targets to work towards
8) It is difficult to create a plan for TA responsibilities because they change from semester to semester and even within one semester.
9) Thinking about all the uncertainties can be overwhelming, but you can handlge it by taking one step at a time.
10) Set regular meetings with your advisor to make sure your progress steadily towards graduation.
11) Collect essential information that will help you in your decision making processes.
12) Making a plan is difficult, but sticking to it is even more so.
13) Identifying the smaller tasks and steps needed to complete larger goals is even more difficult than identifying those goals.
14) The really difficult thing is to manage time effectively on an hour to hour basis.
15) Grading responsibilities are taking a toll on educational responsibilities, balancing all activities is difficult
16) Take concrete steps towards completing goals for graduation; Get an advisor, narrow down your topic of research.
17) The most difficult part is deciding on 3-yr (long term) goals, because they don’t align you’re your current education or you can’t see beyond the daily responsibilities that need your attention
a. Taking time to develop a plan to manage time is a waste of time. Focus on what needs to be done now and take things one semester at a time. The future will present itself.
b. No plan, just do what needs to be done now, but some organization will make life better
18) What does a professional development plan look like?
So what is your next step?
In your philosophy statements many of you identified what was important to you and what you would like to accomplish. Reflect on that again. Your values and beliefs can point you in the right direction. If you love teaching, for example, you may not want to consider a position at a research institute no matter how good you are at research. Your values can be your guides in determining your longer terms goals. Similarly, if you have longer term goals you’re passionate about, see whether your current activities will allow you to achieve them. If you perceive mismatches, you may want to adjust your plan.
Constructing a Teaching Philosophy
Writing a clear and coherent teaching philosophy is not an easy task. It requires intense self-examination and reflection focused on your most sincere beliefs and values about teaching and learning. That process takes time and a lot of effort.
As you know by now, there are a number of helpful documents, and I have shared a few with you that can help you get started. You can find copies of these materials on the course’s Blackboard site and on the CETaL website at http://cetalweb.utep.edu/home under resources.
I developed my teaching philosophy a number of years ago, and to be honest, I haven’t looked at it in a while. That means that the old version is likely hopelessly out of date…or it may surprise me. So I looked for it and here is the most recent version from 2006. It was part of my professional statement as a department chair.
“As a teacher it is my duty and responsibility to help students gain the skills and knowledge necessary to become independent learners, who can successfully navigate an increasingly complex society, and take leadership responsibilities for their personal lives, their family, as well in larger contexts. Through the application of collaborative teaching strategies in my classes, I have been able to more actively engage students and help them gain confidence in their abilities to learn independently and socially (i.e. in small groups). The learning and study strategies I weave into my course reportedly have helped them perform better in courses they took afterwards. I have found students to be more engaged and interested in their own learning when they are given personal responsibility and are held accountable for their actions. They become less dependent on the instructor and participate more in the course activities. I am convinced that active, cooperative learning strategies in the classroom should no longer be an option. These are strategies all instructors need to employ in their classrooms. The evidence is clear: cooperative learning effectively employed is far superior to any other teaching strategy. As a department chair, I encouraged faculty to open their classrooms to peer visits and mentoring to enhance their personal teaching strategies and incorporate models of cooperative and active learning. Teaching and learning are the reasons why universities exist, and preparing future leaders through education is our primary purpose and legacy. In order to serve our students best towards that goal, we should adopt the most effective strategies, even if this requires continuing education and additional effort”.
Based on the documents and criteria I shared with you, I need to take some time and revise this version. Many of the ones you wrote are much better than my version. I promise I will do so, but I don’t know when that will happen.
Monday, September 14, 2009
Compilation of Your Grading Strategies
few internet links.
Here are the things I learned from you with some suggestions from me.
- If you have to grade work by 200 students you will feel overwhelmed and you need to ask your fellow TAs and the professor of the class what strategies they propose you use. Don't try to figure it out on your own and make the same mistakes all those other people made. Ask questions.
- Many of you use rubrics and you find that your grading of lab reports is still subjective. Yes there is a subjective element to a rubric. However, if the criteria and standards are clearly written with no ambiguity, both the students and you should know exactly what good performance looks like. The rubric template puts the standards in terms of beginning, developing, accomplished, and exemplary. If you set your rubric up like this, you can help students identify where their work fits and show them what they need to do to move to a higher level of performance. This is easier to interpret and use than a rubric than contains no more than a check table ranging from "poor" to "excellent" where the different standards are poorly or not at all described. A well written rubric can also help multiple people grade similarly on the criteria and standards although you may need some training to "get on the same page" and apply the criteria and standards in the same way. The professor teaching the class should help you with this. Once you get used to using the rubric grading will go much faster.
- When you use a rubric, and you grade a lab report or paper, you should look for the elements spelled out in the rubric in the report or paper. Focus your attention on finding just those elements and ignore the superfluous stuff. You do not have to read every word the students write. In other words, your reading of their work has to become a focused search of how well their work matches the criteria and standards described in the rubric. Understand the rubric in depth and know what you are looking for in the students' work. This will speed up your grading.
- Using the rubric correctly and consistently will also make your grading fair. You also don't need to see the name of the student to grade their work. If you are afraid your grading will be biased, put sticky notes over the student names before you start grading and shuffle to pile of papers.
- To provide feedback you should provide the students with a copy of the completed rubric. If the standards for the various criteria are clearly and unambiguously described, circling that "box" in the rubric let's the student know what performance level they achieved and what they need to do next to get to the higher level. You can still provide general feedback about the average performance in the class when you return their work. Address the criteria on which the average performance was poor and let the entire class know what they need to do to perform better. Point to the requirements for the next performance level (standard) in the rubric.
- The standards described in the rubric provide the basis for the feedback you can provide the students. If you are consistent in applying the rubric you can quickly identify the students that completely missed the boat, contact them individually, and ask what went wrong. Some of you wrote that you do this already. Applying the rubric consistently really help with this. Believe me, most students will greatly appreciate it when you do this and be better motivated to improve on the next assignment. This is what teaching is about; helping student learn and perform at a higher level.
- If you use a rubric, you can almost eliminate the comments you would normally write on a paper. If you leave some space at the bottom of the rubric sheet, you can write comments there.
- Just like having your own annotation system for reading, you can also develop an annotation systems for commenting on a paper. Develop symbols (share their meaning with your students) that you use to mark up a paper and that can serve to point out problems in their work. This will reduce the amount of writing you have to do.
Have students submit electronic versions only. Reviewing a paper electronically can be faster than doing it by hand because almost all of us type faster than we can write and it will be legible. The "Tracking" tool in MS-word under the "Review" tab is quite powerful and you can comment on items as well - If you use Multiple Choice (MC) quizzes, see if you can set them up on Blackboard. The automatic grading feature will make life so much easier. There are numerous faculty members who have figured out how to use the Blackboard quiz feature effectively for student learning. To learn more about this attend the September 23, 2009 workshop. See http://cetalweb.utep.edu/home/ events page and registration.
If you use scantrons for quizzes find a scantron machine so you don't have to hand score hundreds of them. There is no need for wasting your time that way.
Some of you ask students to write journals and use guidelines. Journaling and reflections can be very helpful in learning, but you do need to specify what you expect them to write about so that your expectations are clear to the students. - Getting students to prepare for an assignment is a challenge but there are ways to do it. Check with your faculty member, but the Blackboard quiz module is a great tool for this.
Some of you worried about the grade distribution. When grading students' work, you have to discriminate between those who did excellent work and those who did not. Not doing so makes education a farce. Besides, the students know who did good work and who did not, so your assessment of their work should discriminate. If you don't, you are not being fair and you are not helping the students in their education. To improve their performance level you have to be honest with them and not let them falsely believe they are doing fine. That false sense of competency you are giving them will come to haunt them in the future.
Item 14 also related to being lenient versus being strict. That is really not the issue. The question is what is your most honest assessment of their performance. If it's poor they need to know it is poor; not "oh, for now it's o.k." That is not the way to help our students do better. Tell them what they did not do well and give them error-correction feedback that allows them to do better the next time. You can also allow them to correct their work based on your feedback and resubmit it (if the faculty member you're working for allows it). - Be persistent in asking for high quality work, and grade that work consistently. If a student did well on the first couple assignments but dropped the ball on a later one, grade that performance truthfully and don't assume that "she knows how to do this" and give a higher grade.
- Publish your rubric and grading criteria to the students in advance so they know what is expected of them. This should not be secret. Knowing this allows them to prepare will for the work and focuses your feedback on the things that count.
- In general, when you provide feedback try to ensure that the students do something with it. Ask them to decide what they will do different next time and have them write those decisions down. You can then ask them to look back at what they wrote and let them assess how well they stayed with their own decisions. Too often we assume that students will do this automatically. They do not.
- Give students links to online resources that can help them do better. There is a lot out there so pick and choose what you believe may be best, and let them know how they can use it, and what they are not allowed to do with it.
- Finally, looking at your learning styles blogs it appears that some of you are thinking that learning styles determine learning. That is not necessarily the case. Learning styles reflect the preferred ways in which people process information. For example, I am a visual learning which means I like to learn from visual images much more than I like to learn from reading text. That does not mean I cannot learn from text, but I pick things up quicker when I see it done. You cannot possibly satisfy all the variations in learning styles you will have in your classroom. What you can do is vary your delivery of information. Use numerous combinations of text, graphics, multimedia, animations, etc. That also keeps the presentations interesting from a student's perspective and increase motivation to learn. More important than the delivery mode of information is that you engage the students in doing something with that information.
HM~