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IUPUI ePortfolio Symposium
Friday, March 23 | UL 1126 | 9 a.m. - 12 p.m. Register » | Presenters: Debra Runshe and Mark Alexander
The IUPUI ePortfolio Symposium features a mixture of presentations by colleagues currently using ePortfolios and members of the ePortfolio team demonstrating new opportunities.
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Writing a Statement of Teaching Philosophy (full - no more seats available)
Tuesday, April 17 | UL 1126 | 1:30 - 4 p.m. Register » | Presenter: Brian Coppola | Organizer: Terri Tarr
This event is full. Please call the CTL at (317) 274-1300 or email thectl@iupui.edu to be put on a waiting list.
A statement of teaching philosophy is a discipline-centered argument about one’s instructional practices. As with any other professional argumentation, the essay ought to have a thesis (or claim), and a coherent text that focuses on providing evidence that warrants the claim. In this workshop, participants will prepare an outline for their personal teaching statement. In preparation, participants should think about one sentence: a global statement about student learning that represents your most significant instructional goal.
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Discipline-Centered Instructional Development and Educational Assessment
Wednesday, April 18 | UL 1126 | 9 a.m. - 12 p.m. Register » | Presenter: Brian Coppola | Organizer: Terri Tarr
On the first day of their new positions as professors, individuals have been incredibly well prepared to carry out a narrow range of activities, namely, how to design, implement, and assess discovery research. Ever since the publication of “Scholarship Reconsidered,” in 1990, the Academy has been wrestling with how (comparably incredibly) underprepared new faculty members are for the breadth of their responsibilities. As an advisor to departments and individuals who were thinking about pursuing faculty lines in discipline-centered education, I settled on a “top ten” list of the recurring questions that came up in these discussions.
In the first part of this session, I will use this “top ten” list as the basis for a presentation/discussion. In the second part of this session, I will guide participants through an exercise in designing educational evaluation for an instructional outcome from their own teaching. In preparation, participants should think about a tangible outcome or artifact from student learning in one of their classes, such as a paper, proposal, or project, along with the instructional goal the instructor has in mind for what is accomplished in this task.
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Doing Real Work, Not Homework
Wednesday, April 18 | Basile Auditorium - Eskenazi Hall | 1 - 2:30 p.m . Register » | Presenter: Brian Coppola | Organizer: Rhonda Huisman
An important goal in higher education is to inspire leadership, independence, and creativity. Mastery of the subject matter needs to be contextualized in the development of the social and societal skills that will advance and create new ideas. In order for the student’s work to have this higher value, it needs to integrate all of these goals. Isolated academic exercises (traditional “homework”) are limited in what they can accomplish. The more authentic a task is (“real work”), the better it can capture the complexity of real world situations.
We have defined a set of attributes for “real work,” and this presentation will feature designs that we have created, in university-level chemistry instruction, for (a) the use of authentic texts, (b) a balance of team and individual work, (c) a balance of convergent & divergent assignments, (d) peer presentation, review, & critique, (e) use of instructional technologies (by students), and (f) use of student-generated instructional materials.
This event is co-sponsored by the Center for Teaching and Learning and University Library.
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Original Test and Survey Migration Infosession
Thursday, April 12 | Adobe Connect Online Meeting Room | 2 - 3 p.m. Register » | Presenters: Mark Alexander & Randy Newbrough | Organizer: Tom Janke
This infosession will cover the details you need to know in order to successfully transfer your Oncourse Original Test and Survey assessments to the new Test tool. The deadline for the Original Test and Survey's retirement is fast approaching. CTL staff can assist you in the migration process. Come to this session and find out how.
This online workshop will be held in an Adobe Connect meeting room. The meeting room's address will be sent to workshop registrants a day or two before the workshop. To participate in the online workshop, you will need a high speed internet connection and a computer with working speakers. You are encouraged to use at least a 1024x768 monitor screen resolution.
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Submitting Final Grades
Thursday, May 3 | Adobe Connect Online Meeting Room | 12 - 12:30 p.m. Register » | Presenter and Organizer: Tom Janke
This fast-paced online workshop will guide you through the process of using Oncourse to submit your final grades with the SIS Grade Roster tool. For the greatest benefit, participants should have course grades calculated and displaying accurately in the Oncourse Gradebook's Course Grades page prior to the workshop.
This online workshop will be held in an Adobe Connect meeting room. The meeting room's address will be sent to workshop registrants a day or two before the workshop. To participate in the online workshop, you will need a high speed internet connection and a computer with working speakers. You are encouraged to use at least a 1024x768 monitor screen resolution.
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Introduction to the Collaborative Classroom
Wednesday, March 21 | ES 1117 | 3 - 4:30 p.m. Register » | Presenters: Mark Russell and Jacqueline Blackwell
University Information Technology Services (UITS) has installed a new Collaborative Classroom at IUPUI with plans for more of these types of classrooms in the works.
In this session, participants will get an overview of the room from Mark Russell, Assistant Manager for Learning Environments and Technology Services in UITS. Mark will demonstrate the technology that is available in the room that fosters student group work and the ability to share that work with other groups in the class. You will also hear from Jacqueline Blackwell, Ph.D., Associate Professor in the IU School of Education who has been using the classroom for her Early Childhood Education courses as she leads you through some of the activities that she uses with her students.
There will also be a panel of students who have participated in activities in the room and will share their experiences of what it is like to have class in this type of classroom.
The session will end with a question and answer period.
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The Last Lecture
Friday, March 30 | Basile Auditorium, Eskenazi Hall | 2 - 3 p.m. Register » | Presenter: James A. Lemons, M.D
The Last Lecture Series offers the university community the opportunity to hear reflections on life's lessons and meaning from a current or retired IUPUI colleague of exceptional merit. Each speaker will share the wisdom gained from past experiences and distill a life of inquiry, reflection, and service into important guidance for successive generations.
James A. Lemons is Hugh McK. Landon Professor of Pediatrics emeritus and past director of neonatal-perinatal medicine at the Indiana University School of Medicine. He has developed major research programs in fetal and neonatal metabolism with continuous NIH funding and other grant support for over 30 years. Under his leadership, the neonatal-perinatal section has burgeoned and acquired a faculty with unrivaled, internationally recognized clinical, teaching, and research accomplishments in stem cell biology, fetal and neonatal metabolism, clinical and translational research, and international health care research. His areas of focus include women's and children's issues, and he remains actively engaged in supporting the School of Medicine's ongoing partnership with the Riley Mother and Baby Hospital of Kenya in Eldoret, Kenya, which he was instrumental in establishing.
Lemons will present The Last Lecture, "The Unanticipated Consequences of Love", from 2 - 3 p.m., Friday, March 30, 2012, in the Basile Auditorium, Eskenazi Hall, Herron School of Art & Design.
A reception and chat with Dr. Lemons will follow the lecture from 3:00-4:00 p.m. For additional information, http://academicaffairs.iupui.edu/
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Brain Rules for Teaching
Friday, April 6 | University Place Hotel and Conference Center | 9 a.m. - 12 p.m. Register » | Presenter: Dr. John Medina, Author of Brain Rules
Dr. John J. Medina, a developmental molecular biologist, has a lifelong fascination with how the mind reacts to and organizes information. He is the author of the New York Times bestseller “Brain Rules: 12 Principles for Surviving and Thriving at Work, Home, and School” -- a provocative book that takes on the way our schools and work environments are designed. His l a test book i s a must-read for parents and early-childhood educators: “Brain Rules for Baby: How to Raise a Smart and Happy Child from Zero to Five.” Medina is an affiliate Professor of Bioengineering at the University of Washington School of Medicine. He is also the director of the Brain Center for Applied Learning Research at Seattle Pacific University.
This event is co-sponsored by IU School of Medicine, University College, FACET and the Center for Teaching and Learning.
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Nanotechnology Discovery Summer Camp for High School Students
June 11-15, 2012 or June 25-29, 2012 Register » | Organizer: Center for Research and Learning
The IUPUI Nanotechnology Discovery Academy (INDA) Summer Camp is a week-long day camp (June 11-15, 2012 or June 25-29, 2012) that provides a unique opportunity for high-school students entering their sophomore, junior, and senior years to explore the interdisciplinary field of nanotechnology on the IUPUI campus. Nanotechnology concerns the control of matter in the nanometer scale: one nanometer is one billionth of a meter, or 100,000 times smaller than the diameter of a human hair. This cutting-edge field is becoming an essential part of science, engineering, medicine, and many other disciplines. The camp fee ($295) covers all camp materials and supplies, and includes daily lunch and the cost of one IUPUI course credit. Need-based scholarships may be available; housing and transportation unavailable. APPLICATION DEADLINE: MAY 7, 2012
Participating high-school students will work with world-renowned faculty mentors to: - Discover innovative technologies - Gain hands-on laboratory experience - Engage in research and learning activities - Earn one college-credit hour For questions, contact
crlstaff@iupui.edu
or (317) 274-8880.
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Nanotechnology Discovery Summer Camp for High School Teachers
July 16-20, 2012 Register » | Organizer: Center for Research and Learning
The IUPUI Nanotechnology Discovery Academy (INDA) Summer Program is a week-long day workshop (July 16-20, 2012) that provides a unique opportunity for high-school teachers to explore the interdisciplinary field of nanotechnology on the IUPUI campus and its impact on innovative STEM education. This cutting-edge field rapidly is becoming an essential part of science, engineering, medicine, and many other disciplines. APPLICATION DEADLINE: MAY 7, 2012
Participating teachers:
- Will earn 45 Professional Growth Points (PGP)
- Will also receive a stipend of $500 or earn one graduate-credit hour in Engineering and Technology
Participating teachers will work with faculty mentors to:
- Gain hands-on laboratory experience
- Discover innovative technologies
- Learn about new frontiers of STEM
- Engage in daily research and learning activities
For questions, contact
crlstaff@iupui.edu
or (317) 274-8880
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