For faculty/librarian development events hosted by other offices, visit the faculty development calendar (updated weekly).
Join us
Friday May 17, 9:30 1:00pm for our May Part-Time Faculty Celebration in the
Maxwell Library Heritage Room (light breakfast and lunch included). The first
40 registered part-time faculty are receiving a $50.00
stipend. To register, please submit your name, department and food preference
right away at our
online registration form. Online registration is required, to help us track
enrollment (again not by replying to this email, but at the online form above).
The theme will be "Becoming a Critically Reflective Teacher,"
inspired by Stephen Brookfield's classic
book by the same name, which will be presented by Roben
Torosyan our own Director of the Office of Teaching
and Learning. For a sneak peek at Brookfield's ideas, see his intro chapter
plus other selected excerpts. In the spirit of learning, sharing and
reflecting together, three of our esteemed part-time colleagues -- Gloria
Moran, Elementary Education, James Norman, English, and Jamie Kern, Physics --
will share stories of change in their teaching as a highlight of our
interactive program. Looking forward to seeing you! Karen Richardson, Incoming
Fellow for Part-Time Faculty & Roben Torosyan, Director of the Office of Teaching and Learning
(OTL)
Monthly Mindfulness
Practice
Join us Fridays
once/month, 2:30-3:15pm, CARS Conference Room, Moakley 221, for mindfulness
practice: 2/1, 3/8, 4/5, 5/10.
These sessions provide a protected time and space for quiet observation and reflection amidst our busy professional days. A trained facilitator will provide guidance before and during the silent meditation period. Feel free to invite co-workers - you can forward this Mindfulness Flyer which has details. There is no need to commit ahead of time - just show up.
STREAMS Open Classrooms
Follow this link for open classrooms for the
spring 2013 semester. Thanks to these faculty for volunteering to
host others in their classrooms!
The idea here is that you might look at this list, and say, "gee, that
sounds neat." Then you email Allison Almeida (STREAMS Grad
Assistant) at a2almeida@student.bridgew.edu.
Allison helps find a good day for you to go visit. Allison will also work
with the Office of Teaching and Learning to see that a little money goes onto
the CONNECT card of the faculty member you are visiting, to pay for some
coffee, tea, or snacky thing when you meet after the class to talk about
things.
This is a great opportunity to learn by watching others and talking about what they are trying to do, especially in a subject area you don't teach. I hope you'll find that to be the case too.
Flipping the Classroom
Wed., Mar. 20, 10:00-11:00AM;
Fri., Apr. 12, 2:00-3:00PM (REPEAT)
Conant Science Center Conference Room 471
Light refreshments will be served
Facilitators: Tom Kling and Karen Richardson
"Flipping the
classroom" is jargon for arranging your traditional lectures or
content presentation to be delivered outside of class and allowing class time
to involve students in activities that build on the content. Flipping the
classroom has the potential advantage of giving students flexibility in
listening and digesting your lecture. It also has the distinct advantage of
allowing you to work with a student during class in a meaningful way that can
address the student's individual struggle. Or maybe it just opens possibilities
for active, collaborative learning and discussion.
In this active workshop, you will be asked to come prepared. (Do your homework, kids!) And once there, you will have the opportunity to discuss the practice of flipping your classroom with two faculty who use this technique. As an outcome, you will make plans for at least one flipped class to try out.
In preparation for the workshop please view the following clip (the first 7 ½ minutes are the critical ones), read the PDF on flipping the classroom, and think about the questions below.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nTFEUsudhfs
(1) In my discipline, what information and content is most important for me to convey? Can I use technology to convey it?
(2) In my discipline, what tasks are the most relevant tasks that students learn to do? What activities could I devise to most directly help them learn those activities if I had additional time with my students during "class" time?
(3) What does Kahn say that surprises you, challenges how you've thought about teaching, or inspires you? Does he say anything that you find to be simply wrong?
Please RSVP to OTL@bridgew.edu
Managing Classroom Interaction During Mid-course Doldrums
Wed., March 20, 2:00-3:00PM (canceled
due to illness and will be rescheduled in the fall)
Conant Science Center Conference Room 473
Light refreshments will be served
Facilitator: Maura Rosenthal (Movement Arts, Health Promotion and Leisure
Studies)
About 6-8 weeks into the semester, our energy and our students energy starts
to wane a bit. Come to this session where we will practice and share some
techniques designed to unlock the secrets of keeping students engaged in our
classroom discussions during this important time in the semester.
Light refreshments will be served.
Please RSVP to OTL@bridgew.edu
Webcast: "Integrating Information Literacy in the First Year"
Tues. March 5, 1-1:45PM
Conant Science Center Conference Room 473
Sponsored by the Office of Teaching and Learning and the Coordinator for First
and Second Year Seminars
Faculty and Librarians interested in developing first year classroom experiences with a meaningful focus on information literacy are invited to attend this free webcast. We hope to jumpstart a campus conversation about taking full advantage of the information literacy resources available to us and our students and how we, in our roles as teachers, can help students to become thoughtful, ethical users of the enormous amounts and sources of information available to them.
Click here for more details on this event.
Best Practices in Advising - What's the Fuss? (follow up on student success)
Wed., Mar. 6,
2:00 3:00 pm
East Campus Commons Room 113
How can your department
improve its advising? Come find out about two new practices adopted by
Bridgewater departments that are enabling faculty to be more confident in their
advising and that create conditions where students succeed.
Dr. Rebecca Metcalf (mathematics) will share the new faculty mentoring program centered on student advising that she has developed for mathematics faculty. This comprehensive approach includes written materials specialized to all of the most common student needs. While her materials are for math majors, they could be modified easily to meet your students needs.
Dr. Jennifer Mendell (biology) will share how the STREAMS grant has changed the culture of advising transfer students in the College of Science and Mathematics. This includes the creation of a Science and Math Transfer Working group, closer connections to advising at the local community colleges, and the development of expertise in transfer student advisors within departments.
Light refreshments will be
served
Please RSVP to OTL@bridgew.edu
Open Candidate Forum / Workshop:
Using Moodle To Help
Students Learn Better in Any Class
Meet John Gallagher, Jason FitzSimmons and Jin Li, the three finalists for the Instructional Design Specialist position in the OTL:
Wednesday, Feb. 20, 2:15 - 3:15 pm RCC 209 - John Gallagher
Thursday, Feb. 21, 2:15 - 3:15 pm Conant Science Room 473 - Jason FitzSimmons
Tuesday, Feb.
26, 12-1:00 pm, Conant Science Room 473 - Li Jin
By the end, participants should:
Please RSVP to OTL@bridgew.edu
Using Movement to Enhance Learning in any Classroom
Tues., Feb.19, 1:00PM -
2:00PM;
Wed.,Feb. 20, 10:00AM -
11:00AM (REPEAT)
East Campus Commons Room
113
Facilitated by Karen
Richardson and Deb Sheehy, Movement Arts, Health Promotion and Leisure Studies
Light refreshments will be served.
In this session, you will
experience engaging ways to use movement in your classroom to enhance student
learning and we will provide you with resources to expand your use of such
kinesthetic teaching methods.
Please RSVP to OTL@bridgew.edu
Working with Individuals Living with Disabilities at BSU: Part II
<<CANCELED DUE TO STORM NEMO;
TO BE RESCHEDULED IN APRIL>>
This workshop
will build on the disabilities workshop from last spring. There will be three
breakout sessions to choose from:
1) Disability
Etiquette & Accommodations
2) Designing Inclusive Instruction & Environments
3)
Self-Awareness Work & Disabilities Issues (See videos &
other resources)
This workshop
will continue to deepen our campus dialogue about effectively working with
individuals with disabilities at BSU. Delayne Connor,
Associate Professor of Special Education and Communication Disorders; Jenn Manak, Assistant Professor
in Elementary & Early Childhood Education; Sydne
Marrow, Staff Assistant to the Dean in the College of Education and Allied
Studies; Pat Connolly and Pam Spillane from the Office of Disability Resources;
Roben Torosyan, Director of
the Office of Teaching and Learning; and Sabrina Gentlewarrior,
Director of the Office of Institutional Diversity, will facilitate our workshop
and interactive discussions.
Lunch will be provided by the Office of Institutional Diversity. Please RSVP to donna.wood@bridgew.edu by February 1st, 2013.
Fostering Classroom Interaction (and Managing it)
In response to feedback from our
January faculty development event, here's the first repeat of one of the well
received sessions.
Wednesday, January 30, 2:00-3:00PM
Conant Science Center Conference Room
473
Light refreshments will be served
Facilitator: Maura Rosenthal (Movement
Arts, Health Promotion and Leisure Studies)
Appetizers: Get interactions started engage
people early in a class.
Main course: bring discussion on track or
use tangents to process content well.
Dessert: summarize or synthesize info
to ensure it all gets used in the future to produce more learning. Ensure
students leave with valuable nuggets over the course of a semester, or
even within a single session, with concrete methods colleagues find effective.
Please RSVP to OTL@bridgew.edu
Visiting Lecturer Faculty Development Program
At Bridgewater State
University, our "visiting lecturer" faculty (i.e.,
adjunct or part-time colleagues) teach a significant portion of courses.
Full-time faculty number 316 in all and part-time faculty
number 417 in all (NEASC 2012). You bear enormous responsibility
whatever you teach here and we therefore want to provide you with increasing
support in the months and years to come.
Therefore, back by
popular demand, we again offer the Visiting Lecturer Faculty Development
Program. Participants earn $150 for joining us for the full program: Thu. & Fri. January 3rd & 4th, 2013. Please see this link
to an agenda
and postcard
invitation.
Note that early
registrants receive (first come, first served) a copy of a handbook I consider
one of the top five resources for my teaching (it's like Bean's Engaging
Ideas meets Angelo & Cross's Classroom Assessment Techniques):
Student Engagement Techniques: A Handbook for College
Faculty (Higher and Adult Education Series)
by Elizabeth F.
Barkley (Nov 2, 2009)
Finally, here's some
housekeeping business for the event:
On the electronic campus map (http://www.bridgew.edu/CampusMap/)
Dunn is marked as "I". If you click the link for the PDF
version of the map, you will not (confusingly) find "Dunn" listed,
but it is part of the Crimson Hall facility and is marked #38 on the map.
I suggest you park either in the Lower Great Hill lot ("K" on
the PDF map) or Moakley lot ("P" on the PDF map). If you're
arriving by commuter rail, Dunn is adjacent to the MBTA parking lot.
Directions to campus and the various
parking areas are available here:
http://www.bridgew.edu/Conferences/Directions%20to%20Buildings%20and%20Parking.cfm
Look forward to our conversations and
work (and play) throughout the two days together.

Roben Torosyan, Ph.D.
Director, Office of
Teaching & Learning
Midcourse Focus Groups: Confidential
Student Feedback
Give us 20 minutes, we'll give you
what your students say is helping them learn, what would help even better,
and what *they* can do to improve learning in the course. Let me or an OTL
Fellow survey students and get them to rank top points. Then
meet. Learn
more or enroll. (Limit 1 course section per faculty member per
semester).
Classroom Observation
This involves a pre-observation conversation
with me or an OTL Fellow (ideally
addressing learning goals, teaching materials, etc. - this can be a short phone
call or brief meetup), a class visit (for either part
or all of a specific session), and a post-observation debrief (ideally within a
week of the observation). Learn more or enroll. (Limit 1 course section per faculty
member per semester).
Last Modified: May 10, 2013