Monday, October 7, 2019
12:00 p.m. – 1:00 p.m.
|
Renee Bricker, Victoria Hightower, Tamara Spike
|
Serious Gaming, Serious Learning
“Serious gaming” in the classroom is growing in popularity. Serious games can take many forms: computer games, board games, puzzles, etc. This presentation will focus on role-playing games and simulations. Within these games, students take on roles informed by historical sources and/or current events. There is no fixed script, no predetermined outcome. Students are guided by the philosophical and intellectual beliefs of the people they have been assigned to play, and seek to achieve their goals in papers, speeches, other kinds of public presentations, or subrosa alliances and other machinations. Gamification of difficult, complex, real-world situations reinforces concepts, creates greater engagement, and provides multiple means of approaching course material as well as develops skills in speaking, writing, critical thinking, problem solving, leadership, and teamwork.
|
*Blue Ridge rooms are not available.
Cumming 246
Dahlonega Hansford 312
Gainesville Dunlap-Mathis 137
Oconee SRC 581
|
Monday, November 4, 2019
12:00 p.m. – 1:00 p.m.
|
Carl Ohrenberg
|
Critical Reading and the Use of Lecture Outlines in Teaching Freshmen Classes
Critical Reading is an essential skill for our students, yet we often spend little time on helping them develop it. The way one reads a particular text varies widely depending on content and audience and students often lack the skill set to read certain types of writing. To address this, lecture outlines have been developed for use with teaching General Chemistry courses to college freshmen. These outlines represent a first step in developing critical reading skills in the sciences and provide a template for students to incorporate textbook reading with in class material. They are designed to help the students organize the content, as well as, engage the textbook on their own. This presentation will introduce the concept of the lecture outlines and explore their effectiveness in teaching General Chemistry.
|
*Blue Ridge rooms are not available.
Cumming 246
Dahlonega Hansford 312
Gainesville Dunlap-Mathis 137
Oconee SRC 581
|
Monday, February 3, 2020
12:00 p.m. – 1:00 p.m.
|
William Black
|
Teaching Ethics Across Disciplines
Many of us believe teaching ethics is important, but how do we know if we are making progress? The ARBC instrument (Action Research into Business Conduct) provides a measuring tool that can be used to diagnose current levels of perceptions about ethics, or used as a pretest / posttest evaluation of whether ethics instruction is effective. ARBC is a free online tool, created at the University of North Georgia that can support action research efforts to improve ethics instruction. The scenarios it asks participants to evaluate are drawn from common everyday situations that may have ethical implications. ARBC can be useful in contexts beyond business courses, for example in confirming assurance of learning measurements of progress towards ethics awareness goals.
This session will illustrate how to use ARBC in ethics assessment, and provide examples of ongoing research that is being conducted using ARBC.
|
*Blue Ridge rooms are not available.
Cumming 246
Dahlonega Hansford 312
Gainesville Dunlap-Mathis 137
Oconee SRC 581
|
Monday, March 2, 2020
12:00 p.m. - 1:00 p.m.
|
Sheila Schulte
|
International Communication in the Classroom How do we can we best assist non-native speakers of English in the classroom setting? This session is devoted to sharing model practices to ensure a positive learning environment for a diverse student body. After a basic review of intercultural communication theory, there will be a panel discussion with UNG international students, followed by an open discussion.
|
*Blue Ridge rooms are not available.
Cumming 246
Dahlonega Hansford 312
Gainesville Dunlap-Mathis 137
Oconee SRC 581
|