Instructors engaging with the following resource will discover a variety of pre-reading …
Instructors engaging with the following resource will discover a variety of pre-reading strategies for enhancing their students’ reading comprehension. The resource emphasizes the importance of activating students’ schemata, or prior learning, as a foundation for comprehending new material. Techniques like guided anticipation utilize thought-provoking yes/no statements to initiate conceptual learning, while cloze exercises actively engage students with filling in missing words based on their existing vocabulary. “Writing in the Round” is presented as a collaborative activity fostering an exchange of diverse views, while free writing encourages students to draw upon their memory for a creative exploration of related concepts. By the end of this resource, instructors will discover adaptable strategies applicable to various grade levels and subject areas, providing a comprehensive toolkit for promoting active reading and comprehension among their students.
Author: Sharon Haigler Editor: Mary Landry, C. Anneke Snyder Supervisor: Terri Pantuso
This resource contains activity handouts and considerations for facilitators. This resource is …
This resource contains activity handouts and considerations for facilitators. This resource is part of the Teaching Excellence Toolkit to help accomplish the College Readiness Goal: I want students to persist through challenges and failures.Activity Description:In this writing activity, students envision a future in which they are successful in the course, and reflect on strategies they need to make the success happen.
Upon successful completion of this assignment, students will - analyze five sources …
Upon successful completion of this assignment, students will - analyze five sources that reflect a supporting or opposing stance on the student’s chosen topic. - create an annotated bibliography that follows the conventions of the genre, such as following APA formatting guidelines, summarizing sources, evaluating source credibility, and explaining the relevance of each source to the research argument.
Author: Kimberly Stelly Editor: Mary Landry, C. Anneke Snyder Supervisor: Terri Pantuso
Upon successful completion of this assignment, students will - analyze the concepts …
Upon successful completion of this assignment, students will - analyze the concepts of “segregated coexistence” and “living in community” as proposed by Nicholas Ensley Mitchell in order to evaluate the situations described in the provided articles regarding food security, gentrification, and urban development. - use Mitchell’s framework to evaluate the quality of diversity in their local college or community context.
Author: Christopher Manes Editor: Mary Landry, C. Anneke Snyder Supervisor: Terri Pantuso
This resource contains a student activity handout, a facilitation guide, example solutions, …
This resource contains a student activity handout, a facilitation guide, example solutions, and class notes. Students work together to discover one-to-one correspondences between various infinite sets of numbers and the set of natural numbers. At the end of this activity the compiled results of their group work form a list of infinite sets that all have the same cardinality as the set of natural numbers. Instructors may take this lesson further by discussion countably infinite versus uncountably infinite sets. This activity aligns with MATH 1332 Learning Outcome 1: Apply the language and notation of sets.
This handout complements lessons on audience and purpose in writing. It offers …
This handout complements lessons on audience and purpose in writing. It offers questions and examples to help students grasp how understanding their audience and purpose shapes a piece’s content, tone, and structure.
Author: Brandi Morley Editor: Mary Landry, C. Anneke Snyder Supervisor: Terri Pantuso
Upon successful completion of this lesson, students will - Identify an audience …
Upon successful completion of this lesson, students will - Identify an audience and tone for your writing as well as explain why identifying these components are important. - Utilize the RAFT writing strategy to plan an appropriate style according to audience and purpose.
Author: Brandi Morley Editor: Mary Landry, C. Anneke Snyder Supervisor: Terri Pantuso
With this graphic organizer, students gain practice identifying devices relevant to literary …
With this graphic organizer, students gain practice identifying devices relevant to literary texts and reasoning through how these devices support the author’s purpose.
Author: Frances Santos Editor: Mary Landry, C. Anneke Snyder Supervisor: Terri Pantuso
This resource contains a rubric, an activity handout, a facilitation guide, and …
This resource contains a rubric, an activity handout, a facilitation guide, and tex files. The material is meant to be used for those teaching a college algebra course. The activities are meant to provide a deeper understanding (than a traditional course offers) of some of the topics covered in a college algebra course. The activities are intended for group activities and options exist for use in a single class or multiple classes.
By the end of this activity, students will be able to demonstrate …
By the end of this activity, students will be able to demonstrate their understanding of the First, Second, and Third Amendments of the Bill of Rights by completing a cloze exercise, using context clues and prior knowledge to fill in key terms without referencing their notes.
Author: Sharon Haigler Editor: Mary Landry, C. Anneke Snyder Supervisor: Terri Pantuso
Upon successful completion of this assignment, students will - create a persuasive …
Upon successful completion of this assignment, students will - create a persuasive classical argument following the Aristotelian structure, including an introduction, narration, confirmation, counterargument/refutation/concession, and conclusion.
Author: Kimberly Stelly Editor: Mary Landry, C. Anneke Snyder Supervisor: Terri Pantuso
Upon successful completion of this lesson, students will - read, reflect, and …
Upon successful completion of this lesson, students will - read, reflect, and respond critically to a text by actively annotating individual thoughts, questions, and responses for each paragraph.
Author: Claire Carly-Miles Editor: Mary Landry, C. Anneke Snyder Supervisor: Terri Pantuso
These worksheets are designed to help students practice the placement of the …
These worksheets are designed to help students practice the placement of the proper punctuation between independent clauses. These worksheets are designed to supplement previously generated lessons rather than as a stand-alone lesson.
Upon successful completion of this lesson, students will - analyze example sentences …
Upon successful completion of this lesson, students will - analyze example sentences to determine whether a comma is needed before the coordinating conjunction based on the presence of independent clauses.
Author: Nicole Hagstrom-Schmidt Editor: Mary Landry, C. Anneke Snyder Supervisor: Terri Pantuso
This resource contains activity handouts, a rubric, a facilitation guide, and tex …
This resource contains activity handouts, a rubric, a facilitation guide, and tex files. The material is meant to be used for those teaching a college algebra course. The activities are meant to provide a deeper understanding (than a traditional course offers) of some of the topics covered in a college algebra course. The activities are intended for group activities and options exist for use in a single class or multiple classes.
This resource contains class notes, an activity handout, and a facilitation guide. …
This resource contains class notes, an activity handout, and a facilitation guide. Students play the game “Let’s Make a Deal” to explore the underlying probability that guides the optimal strategy for contestants. This activity aligns with MATH 1342 Learning Outcome 3: Compute and interpret empirical and theoretical probabilities using the rules of probabilities and combinatorics.
In this section, you will learn about the importance of ethical considerations …
In this section, you will learn about the importance of ethical considerations and implications of Generative Artificial Intelligence (GenAI), particularly Large Language Models (LLMs) like ChatGPT. This section highlights that LLMs are not inherently good or bad. Instead, the importance of user engagement in ethical practices is emphasized to ensure responsible use of these tools.
Ethical considerations for educators include attention to student privacy, expectations, and consequences—all of which should clearly be defined in syllabus statements, classroom policies, or institutional statements. Meanwhile, ethical implications exist involving varying ethical standards for how people approach LLMs differently, how human and machine bias influence GenAI, and how style guides differ on citing information garnered from ChatGPT.
After reading this section, you should be able to articulate your own ethical queries and concerns related to LLMs, such as ChatGPT, both as a general user and an educator.
Author: C. Anneke Snyder Contributors: Gwendolyn Inocencio, Mary Landry, Jonahs Kneitly Designers: Irene AI, Sweta Kailani Supervisors: Terri Pantuso, Sarah LeMire
This resource contains activity handouts and considerations for facilitators. This resource is …
This resource contains activity handouts and considerations for facilitators. This resource is part of the Teaching Excellence Toolkit to help accomplish the College Readiness Goal: I want students to feel like they belong in the course.Activity Description:This is a writing activity where students reflect on the relevance of what they are learning and its applications to their future goals.
This resource models a possible research unit for instructors interested in guiding …
This resource models a possible research unit for instructors interested in guiding students through contextual literary analysis. As such, this resource outlines strategies for delving into the biographical, historical, and cultural contexts of recommended mentor texts, such as ‘The Yellow Wallpaper’ by Charlotte Perkins Gilman and ‘Hills Like White Elephants’ by Ernest Hemingway. Additionally, this resource provides a suggested pacing for the unit as well as an outline and rubric for crafting and evaluating the final essay. By the end of this section, instructors will be equipped to design their own contextual analysis research unit that suits their class interests and needs.
Author: Katherine Yoerg Editor: Mary Landry, C. Anneke Snyder Supervisor: Terri Pantuso
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