Posterous theme by Cory Watilo

Filed under: teaching

Are you a Teacher? Interested in going into Space?

A group calling itself 'Teachers in Space' is offering a cool looking workshop for those who teach science, technology, engineering, or math at the high-school level.

Participating teachers will fly in a glider and learn to pilot a flight simulator for the Lynx suborbital spacecraft now under development by XCOR Aerospace.

See [here] for more info and a link to the application. Encourage your favorite HS teacher to apply to participate!

Nerdgasm: Automating Student Peer Reviews, Part 2

The other day, I wrote about how I used Google Docs and Applescript to lubricate the peer review workflow in a class I’m teaching. My set-up is certainly imperfect, and here I want to comment on a couple improvements that I could make, when I can find the time.

At present, a student submits peer review comments to a Google Form that gets written to a Google spreadsheet that I need to download by hand to a Numbers spreadsheet and process with an Applescript. The script produces a PDF that I need to email to students by hand.

Read the rest of this post »

Nerdgasm: Automating Student Peer Reviews, Part 1

So, I’ve just had a chance to bend Google tools and Applescript to the service of teaching. In the event that someone else might find this interesting, I thought I’d share the story. Details are available to those who request them in the comments.

This semester, I get to teach an interdisciplinary seminar for juniors that’s writing enhanced. This means that the students need to write a lot and I need to read and comment on their writing. When I began teaching this course, I took advantage of peer reviewing. This is where each student has two other students read their writing and share comments. It gets the students to think about ‘good writing’ more (theirs and that of others). To keep them focused on the issues of interest to us in the course, I made a two-page ‘Writing Checklist’ for each peer reader to fill out as they read another’s writing.

Read the rest of this post »

What do you Make?

At Saturday's commencement, our speaker, Dr. David Russell, the new commissioner for higher education in Missouri, gave an address that included lots of goodies.  He also lifted a story that we quite similar to a poem by Taylor Mali, so I thought I'd put this out there for people to enjoy:

Remember, teaching is the profession that makes all professions possible.

Zakaria's "Restoring the American Dream"

This weekend, while I was playing hookey from Church, I stumbled upon this program on Fareed Zakaria's GPS, on CNN. It was a program titled "Restoring the American Dream" and it talks about what America needs to do get back on track to be the world's greatest economic powerhouse.

http://rss.cnn.com/~r/services/podcasting/fareedzakaria/rss/~3/-EpSlZG9tW8/gp...
I liked this program so much I made the students in my Senior Seminar (for mathematics majors) sit through it. I hope it gave them a sense for the ideas in Zakaria's The Post-American World and Thomas Friedman's The World is Flat. it also suggested that Seth Godin's Linchpin could be useful for those who are about to graduate from college.