intellectual community
How Do Open Education Resources Acquire Their Value for Teaching and Learning?
Posted March 18th, 2009 by Tom Carey, University of Waterloo
0 Comments | 2188 Page Views
How can faculty from diverse disciplines
cultivate and share knowledge about teaching practice? In
these essays, Tom Carey and Jennifer Meta Robinson explore the challenges
of creating a digital repository for teaching resources, envision what
a SOTL repository might look like, and discuss how such a repository
would influence the emerging field of SOTL and its growing community
of practitioners. The pieces are introduced by John Rakestraw, who reflects
on the distinctive nature of SOTL as a field and points out further
questions to consider in the process of developing a SOTL repository.
Can a Repository Make the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning Usable?
Posted March 18th, 2009 by Jennifer Meta Robinson, Indiana University, Bloomington
0 Comments | 1182 Page Views
How can faculty from diverse disciplines
cultivate and share knowledge about teaching practice? In
these essays, Tom Carey and Jennifer Meta Robinson explore the challenges
of creating a digital repository for teaching resources, envision what
a SOTL repository might look like, and discuss how such a repository
would influence the emerging field of SOTL and its growing community
of practitioners. The pieces are introduced by John Rakestraw, who reflects
on the distinctive nature of SOTL as a field and points out further
questions to consider in the process of developing a SOTL repository.
The Importance of Conversation in Learning and the Value of Web-based Discussion Tools
Posted January 7th, 2009 by Heidi Elmendorf and John Ottenhoff
0 Comments | 2581 Page Views
In this essay Heidi Elemendorf and John Ottenhoff discuss the central role that intellectual communities
should play in a liberal education and the value of conversation for
our students, and we explore the ways in which web-based conversational
forums can be best designed to fully support these ambitious learning
goals. Coming from very different fields (Biology and English Literature) and in different course contexts (Microbiology course for non-majors and Shakespeare seminar), they nonetheless discover core values and design issues by looking closely at the discourse produced from online discussions. Centrally, they connect what they identify as expert-like behavior to the complexities of intellectual development in conversational contexts.
Connecting the Dots: Learning, Media, Community
Posted January 7th, 2009 by Elizabeth Stephen, Georgetown University
0 Comments | 955 Page Views
Sometimes
the research question you ask isn’t the one you end up
answering. Elizabeth Stephen recounts how a debate about the use of
films in a freshman seminar led to an experiment in forming a
community of scholars which could be sustained over time and across
distances. Creating online spaces for students in this group to
share their reflections with one another strengthened the ties among
them, while allowing Stephen to analyze the multiple elements, both
academic and social, which made this a successful learning community.
