Organizing for Successful Teaching

Author(s):  
Jana R. Fallin ◽  
Mollie Gregory Tower ◽  
Debbie Tannert
Keyword(s):  
1981 ◽  
Vol 20 (4) ◽  
pp. 28-32
Author(s):  
Jean Pieri Flynn ◽  
Marianne Taft Marcus ◽  
John Charles Schmadl

2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 65-81
Author(s):  
Liliana Conlisk Gallegos

This essay documents forms in which repressed supremacy—with the purpose to ultimately push out and exclude people of color professors—is enacted. My endurance within toxic spaces is the result of channeling Tlazolteotl and putting my Coyolxauhqui together, referring to the act of constantly reinventing myself by turning excrement into life and rejoining the pieces of my experience. I also share a successful teaching, research, and service agenda of resistance that fulfills requirements as it is simultaneously defiant. By referring to covert acts of violence as the methodology of the repressed, my goal is to expose and promote their collective eradication.


ADFL Bulletin ◽  
1979 ◽  
pp. 47-51 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kurt E. Müller
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Richard Terry ◽  
Jon Taylor ◽  
Matt Davies

Author(s):  
Sophia Palahicky ◽  
Donna DesBiens ◽  
Ken Jeffery ◽  
Keith Stuart Webster

Pedagogical values directly affect student performance and, therefore, are essential to successful teaching practice. It is absolutely critical that post-secondary educators examine and reflect on their pedagogical values because these principles pave the path for student success. This chapter describes four pedagogical values that are critical to student success within the context of online and blended learning environments in higher education: 1) value of care; 2) value of diversity; 3) value of community; and 4) value of justice.


Author(s):  
Sophia Palahicky ◽  
Donna DesBiens ◽  
Ken Jeffery ◽  
Keith Stuart Webster

Pedagogical values directly affect student performance and, therefore, are essential to successful teaching practice. It is absolutely critical that post-secondary educators examine and reflect on their pedagogical values because these principles pave the path for student success. This chapter describes four pedagogical values that are critical to student success within the context of online and blended learning environments in higher education: 1) value of care; 2) value of diversity; 3) value of community; and 4) value of justice.


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