NISOD -- National Institute for Staff and
Organizational Development
Mark your calendar!
International Conference on Teaching & Leadership Excellence
May 29-June 1, 2005
Austin, Texas
NISOD celebrates teaching and leadership
excellence by inviting
proposals from college faculty and staff leaders, presidents, and
other key administrators including deans, department chairs, and
college teams. To submit a presentation proposal for the 2005
International Conference on Teaching and Leadership Excellence,
to be held May 29-June1, visit their website at
http://www.nisod.org/conference.
Innovation Abstracts 2004
Vol. XXVI, No. 18
"M. Vali Siadat, Professor and Chair of Mathematics, and Director of the Keystone Mathematics Project at Richard J. Daley College (IL) describes an innovative approach to teaching and learning mathematics, tracing the sources of students' difficulties with math to behavior patterns that can be addressed in the classroom. In "Keystone Method: A Dynamic System for Teaching and Learning," Siadat points to significantly improved student performance outcomes at all levels of algebra instruction.
"
Vol. XXVI, No. 17
"In "That, And...," June Karweick, Professor of Social and Behavioral Sciences at Bay de Noc Community College (MI) describes a useful strategy for stimulating student-to-student interactions in her online classes. The strategy can be employed in any discipline, helping students "think out" the details of a subject collectively while talking with each other in a conversational, yet structured, format."
Vol. XXVI, No. 16
"Some
Rules of the Road for New Teachers"-Bruce Gans, Professor
of English at Wright Community College (IL), provides
a list of "certain hard truths," or information that
can reduce frustration in new teachers as they enter
their college classrooms. Especially written for rookies,
these "truths" are also useful suggestions and reminders
for the more experienced-all in the interest of searching
for and rewarding "evidence of (student) engagement."
"Getting Them Excited the First
Day," by Alice Reinke, Karen Kemp, Rod Somppi, and Paul
Johnson, members of the Curriculum and Technology Planning
Team, at Confederation College (CN), describes the results
of a collegewide strategy for getting all students off
to a great start-first-day activities that keep them
coming back for more. Classes focus on answering
the usual first-day questions, faculty and staff team
up to get students connected with the college and with
each other-sound engagement with individuals and programs
that continues to promote improved academic success and
retention.
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Make plans now to attend the 26th annual International
Conference on Teaching and Leadership Excellence, May 23-26,
2004, in Austin, Texas.
The conference program is available online to browse
and plan your itinerary. Go to http://www.nisod.org/conference.
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You have been designated by your college as the contact
person to receive this email. This email and its
attachment can be distributed to all college faculty, staff,
and administrators.
In "Making the Research Paper
Relevant," James Mayo, Assistant Professor English and
Foreign Languages, at Jackson State Community College
(TN), challenges the value of the traditional academic
paper and offers another approach-students conducting
research on topics and about questions that they want
to answer for themselves. They play a proactive role
in developing the research question and then going about
answering it, driven by their own curiosity or "need
to know."
--------------------------
Make plans now to attend the 26th annual International
Conference on Teaching and Leadership Excellence, May 23-26,
2004, in Austin, Texas.
The conference program is available online to browse
and plan your itinerary. Go to http://www.nisod.org/conference.
---------
You have been designated by your college as the contact
person to receive this email. This email and its
attachment can be distributed to all college faculty, staff,
and administrators.
In "'Playing in the Mud': Teaching
Goofy (or Otherwise) Personal Research," Wade
Tarzia, Assistant Professor of English, at Naugatuck
Valley Community College (CT), describes an extraordinarily
successful approach to getting students involved and
excited about active research.
--------------------------
Make plans now to attend the 26th annual International
Conference on Teaching and Leadership Excellence, May
23-26, 2004, in Austin, Texas.
The conference program is available online to browse
and plan your itinerary. Go to http://www.nisod.org/conference.
---------
You have been designated by your college as the contact
person to receive this email. This email and its
attachment can be distributed to all college faculty,
staff, and administrators.
Vol.
XXVI, No. 12:
"College 101: Helping Dislocated
Workers Transition to College," by Angela Oriano-Darnall,
doctoral student in the Community College Leadership
Program at The University of Texas at Austin; and Joan
Williams, Vice President for Student Services and Athletic
Director at Southeastern Community College (IA), reports
on a highly successful college initiative to inform and
welcome new students to college. Retention and academic
success data challenge traditional notions about what
orientation sessions should do and demonstrate
what orientations must do, especially for today's
first-time college students!
Vol.
XXVI, No. 11
"Make Connections!
Bonding Freshmen, Student to Student," Kay Dean Bethea,
Writing Instructor at Mississippi Gulf Coast Community
College-Jefferson Davis Campus, describes Connections,
a mentoring program that combines sponsors, mentors,
and students for improved student retention.
Vol.
XXVI, No. 10
"Making Biology Lab Lovable," Wei Zhou, doctoral
student in the CCLP, and Dee Silverthorn, Senior Lecturer
in the School of Biological Sciences in the College of
Natural Sciences at The University of Texas at Austin,
describe a successful strategy for developing students'
multidimensional skills required in future professional
positions-strategies that break from tradition, requiring
critical work before the lab begins and building on critical
student portfolios.
Vol.
XXVI, No. 9
In "Abolishing Late Registration," Hank Dunn,
Vice-President for Student Services, and Anna Mays, Director
of Student Success Services at Sinclair Community College
(OH), describe the development, implementation, and outcomes
of a revolutionary plan to eliminate the student casualties
caused by traditional registration policies. Improved registration
policies improve retention and student success.
Vol.
XXVI, No. 8
In "Building Student Accountability in Group Work
Through Student-Generated Criteria," Lauren Servais,
English Instructor at Cascadia Community College (WA),
describes a process for helping students take ownership
of their own assessment via collaborative efforts and built-in
accountability strategies.
In "Effective Collaborative Writing Assignments," Bob
Hurt, Professor and Department Assessment Coordinator at
California State Polytechnic University-Pomona, describes
a collaborative process in which students best learn from
each other to improve their individual compositions.
Vol.
XXVI, No. 7
Alicia Ellison, Librarian, at Hillsborough Community College
(FL), shares tips for ensuring that students' library assignments
are successful for everyone involved-including what to
avoid and what to include in planning, collaborating, and "friend-making"-in "Positive
Relationships for Productive Library Assignments."
Vol.
XXVI, No. 6
In "A Practical Approach to Preventing Plagiarism," Jennifer
Dorhauer, Professor of English, and Crystal lee, Library
Faculty and Director of Library Services, at River Parishes
Community College (LA), describe a collaborative research
project that has improved students' abilities to locate
and use information, and to respect the intellectual work
of others.
Vol.
XXVI, No. 5
In "Academic Coaching: A New Approach to Supporting
Student Success," Thomas Greene, CCLP doctoral student
at The University of Texas, describes an academic coaching
program at Lake Tahoe Community College (CA), modeled after
the corporate world's "executive coaching" strategies,
designed to better serve at-risk students. Coaches, counselors,
and students collaborate for improved student success with
personalized services.
Vol.
XXVI, No. 4
"Some Thoughts on 'Interactivity,'" by Bill
Waters, Director of Staff and Program Development at Pensacola
Junior College (FL), explores some responses to a student's
question: "What am I doing here?" The concept
of interactivity, or information exchange, is spilling
over into our traditional views of "on-site" and "distance" learning.
In "Community Colleges as National Partners," Solomon
Iyobosa Omo-Osagie II, Associate Professor of Politics
and History at Baltimore City Community College (MD), seeks
to entice students into more critical analysis of government
in action with public policy option, studying policies
from practical perspectives.
Vol.
XXVI, No. 3
Adriana Palacios, a doctoral student in the Community
College Leadership Program at The University of Texas at
Austin, describes College Jeopardy, a college's highly
successful outreach strategy for increasing 10th-grade
students' interests in going to college, in "Financial
Aid for 30: Engaging High School Freshmen and Sophomores."
In "Student Perspectives on an Educated Person," Alice
Williamson, Assistant Professor of Mathematics at Sussex
County Community College (NJ) describes an opportunity
to answer students' eternal question: "Why do we have
to take this course?" Read about how turning the tables
on this question paid off.
Vol.
XXVI, No. 2
In "A Teacher Training Academy," Toni Holloway,
Project Leader for the Teacher Training Academy at Mountain
View College (TX) and Allatia Harris, District Director
of Faculty Development and Core Curriculum Evaluation in
the Dallas County Community College District (TX), describe
a model one-stop shop for student services, including support
networks and academic tracks, and a strategy for identifying
and training potential teachers to fill a critical shortage
in area public schools.
Vol.
XXVI, No. 1
In "Florida Construction Institute: Putting Students
on the Fast Track for Home Building Jobs," Edythe
Abdullah, Downtown Campus President, and Donald Green,
Executive Vice President for Instruction and Student Services
at Florida Community College at Jacksonville, describe
an innovative program that combines work and training for
students, and offers an effective, financially sound approach
to training students for fast-growing, stable occupations.
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