Category Archives: Faculty

Teaching Tip: Professor Describes Teaching In-Person This Summer During Pandemic

For those interested in what in-person teaching might look like this fall, here is an account from a professor who has been teaching in that setting this summer.

Experiencing COVID-Style Classroom Teaching

By Christine I. McClure July 22, 2020 from Inside Higher Ed

I’m not going to lie: COVID-19 scares me. But I’m a teacher. It’s not just what I do — it’s who I am. Plus, I have four kids to support, so I feel lucky to have a job, and I thoroughly enjoy it.

I love my university and my students, but it’s hard to balance that with my concern for my own children and my fears. I’m sure you are experiencing a myriad of emotions as well. I am teaching a summer course face-to-face and want to share my experience and observations with you. I don’t mean to frighten you but rather to prepare you if you are going to teach face-to-face in the coming months, as well.

When I first walked into my classroom after four months at home, it was surreal, but not just because it had been so long. The entire atmosphere felt different. It was as though the building — the very air — knew something was wrong. Read More

Have a teaching tip you’d like to share with your Middlebury colleagues? Email CTLR Director Jim Ralph at ralph@middlebury.edu. For additional faculty resources see go.middlebury.edu/ctlr including a list of past Teaching Tips.

Teaching Tip: Creating Community Online With Weekly Letters

This teaching tip comes from Lana Povitz of the History Department, who last spring, after the great disruption in mid-March, turned to Weekly email letters to help develop a strong sense of community among her students. Lana notes that it’s important to be clear that students should share to the extent that they feel comfortable. That said, she has found that inviting some level of “the personal”  made a huge difference, even if students are just talking about a podcast they listened to or sharing a photo of something they cooked.

Weekly Letters Assignment

You are responsible for two Weekly email Letters. Update your peer about your life (to the extent you feel comfortable!) and ask them questions. Although we cannot be together in person, staying connected remains essential! Letters can provide some camaraderie. Please take them seriously.

  • You will be paired at random with a different classmate each week. I will send the pairings through Announcements before each new week begins.
  • In addition to any life updates you can share, your initial letter should discuss the readings (highlights, critiques, questions, associations). Your response to your peer’s letter should engage what they shared as fully as possible. 
  • Keep the letters shortish – around 500 words – and feel free to check in about how you’re doing.
  • Initial letters should be sent by Tuesday midnight (EST). 
  • CC me on letters or send me a summary of the academic parts if you’d rather keep other content private.
  • Responses should be sent after optional Zoom meetings (even if you did not attend).

Have a teaching tip you’d like to share with your Middlebury colleagues? Email CTLR Director Jim Ralph at ralph@middlebury.edu. For additional faculty resources see go.middlebury.edu/ctlr including a list of past Teaching Tips.

Teaching Tip: Teaching In A Socially Distanced Classroom

Jim Ralph, director of Middlebury’s CTLR, recommends this column by Derek Bruff, director of Vanderbilt’s Center for Teaching.

Active Learning in Hybrid and Physically Distanced Classrooms

Posted by Derek Bruff on Thursday, June 11, 2020 in Resource.

by Derek Bruff, Director

If you’ve read Norman Clark’s hypothetical day in the life of a physically distanced classroom, then you’ve probably started to worry about how faculty and other instructors might facilitate discussion, group work, and other forms of active learning this fall. If I’m standing at the front of the classroom with half or a third of my students in the room with me, but sitting six feet apart from each other and wearing masks, while the rest of my students are joining class by videoconference, what strategies might I employ to engage all of my students in meaningful learning? Read More

Have a teaching tip you’d like to share with your Middlebury colleagues? Email CTLR Director Jim Ralph at ralph@middlebury.edu. For additional faculty resources see go.middlebury.edu/ctlr including a list of past Teaching Tips.

Midd Animation Lab Releases Migrant Family Separation Short “Estrellita”

The Burlington Free Press featured the Middlebury Animation Studio on 6/25/18. Director Daniel Houghton and student collaborators released the in-progress short film “Estrellita (Little Star)” early in response to the events occurring in detention centers on the border.

Read the story Immigration: Middlebury animated film ‘Estrellita’ depicts family separation in Vermont

Update: Seven Days also featured the film on 7/4/18. Read the article Middlebury Animation Studio Short Addresses Family Separation.

CTLR’s Learning Institute: Inspiring Students 5/31-6/1

CTLR’s Learning Institute
Thursday, May 31, and Friday, June 1

This year the Learning Institute’s theme is inspiring students.

John Elder, College Professor Emeritus in Environmental Studies and English and American Literatures, will offer the keynote address on Thursday afternoon.

On Friday, a number of workshops are planned, including one led by John. Patrick Coby, of Smith College, will lead the workshop, “Mind Games: Teaching Hard Books and Big Events Through Role-Play,” which draws on the “Reacting to the Past” role-playing pedagogy.

The full program and registration is available online at http://sites.middlebury.edu/2018li/, sign up to participate in this special opportunity.

Award-Winning Collinwood Fire Project Featured in Middlebury Magazine

Middlebury Magazine featured the award-winning Collinwood Fire research project, a collaboration between faculty, staff and students, on January 31, 2018.

“What Did I Just See?”
A schoolhouse fire in Cleveland shocked the nation in 1908 and then was largely forgotten—until now. A cohort of Middlebury scholars and students shines a new light on an American tragedy. read more

Engaging New Learning and Public Spheres with Technology

Engaging New Learning and Public Spheres with Technology
Monday March 5th, at 4:30pm in Axinn 229

A writing pedagogy panel will discuss how technologies in the classroom can be used to create complex, collaborative projects that challenge students cognitively and rhetorically. Faculty in this “Show and Tell” panel conversation will discuss how they develop invigorating learning spaces that include writing in digital spaces.

Panelists and topics:
• MaryEllen Bertolini, (WRPR, Writing Center): Digital Storytelling
• Laurie Essig, (GSFS): Feminist Blogging
• Ellery Foutch (AMST): Teaching with Tableau Vivants
• Jason Mittel (FMMC): Videographic Film Studies
• Hector J Vila (WRPR, CTLR): Online Writing for Publication (and will be moderator)

Contact Shawna Shapiro or see the Writing and Rhetoric Program for more information.

Contemporary Teaching in the Liberal Arts Schedule for Jan. 2018

See full descriptions and register online at https://sites.middlebury.edu/ctlrjan2018/

KEN WISSOKER: WRITING FOR READERS
Wednesday, January 10, CTLR, 12:00-1:30, lunch included
Individual Consultations with Ken Wissoker from 1:40-3:40 pm

THE NEW EDUCATION
Wednesday, Jan. 10
Discussions with Cathy Davidson in the CTLR at 10:30 am or 1:30 pm
Talk in Dana Auditorium, 4:30-6:00 pm

“GOOD” PROFESSORS, CAMPUS CULTURE, AND THE ROADBLOCKS TO INSTRUCTIONAL INNOVATION
Thursday, January 11, 11:00 – 1:30, CTLR, lunch included

BEYOND MIS-EDUCATION: DISCUSSING RACE IN COLLEGE CLASSROOMS
Monday, January 15, CTLR, 11:00-1:00, lunch included

LIGHTING A FIRE: TECHNIQUES TO INSPIRE STUDENTS MORE DEEPLY
Thursday, January 18, CTLR, 11:00-1:00, lunch included

THE DIGITAL DIVIDE IN EDUCATION AFTER NET NEUTRALITY: IMPLICATIONS FOR TEACHING AND RESEARCH
Tuesday, January 23, CTLR, 11:00-1:00, lunch included

SLOW TEACHING
Friday, January 26, CTLR, 11:00-1:00, lunch included

FLIPPING THE CLASSROOM: LESSONS LEARNED
Monday, Jan. 29, CTLR, 11:00-1:00, lunch included

Additional Tools for Teaching and Research Sessions

SWAPPING PLACES: THE STUDENT EXPERIENCE
Hybrid Experience – starting Monday January 8th

ANDROIDS: BRUCE DUNCAN & BINA48
Tuesday, Jan 16th, 1:00-5:00, Wilson Media Lab

CANVAS CREATIVITY: DEVELOPING COURSE SITES
Friday, Jan. 19th, 1:30 – 3:00, Wilson Media Lab

MANAGING YOUR DIGITAL SCHOLARLY IDENTITY: ORCID, GOOGLE SCHOLAR AND BEYOND
Tuesday, January 23, 1:00-2:00, Wilson Media Lab

GETTING YOUR CANVAS SITE READY FOR THE SPRING SEMESTER
Tuesday, Feb. 6th, 1:30 – 3:00, Wilson Media Lab

PANOPTO & CANVAS
Friday, Feb. 2nd, 1:30 – 3:00, Wilson Media Lab

STEM Skills through Inquiry Instruction: A Workshop on Active Learning

Promoting Student STEM Skills Through Inquiry Instruction
A Hands-on In-depth Workshop on Active Learning

June 1-2, 2017

This day-and-a-half long workshop on Thursday and Friday will feature workshop leader Gordon Uno, a renowned educator and leader in promoting active learning. He presented at the AAC&U conference Transforming Undergraduate STEM Education last fall in Boston. Gordon managed to be both entertaining and educational while never losing sight of the practical realities of teaching. We were inspired to bring him here for this more detailed, hands-on workshop and share the “Gordon Experience” with other interested colleagues.

Gordon’s training and research are in plant biology, but the workshop topics, examples, and methods span the STEM disciplines. The three sessions (two Thursday, one Friday) focus on evidence-based, active-learning methods and other high-impact practices appropriate for those just starting out as well as seasoned veterans. On Thursday evening there will be a reception and dinner for interested workshop participants (limited seating) to get to know one another and foster the developing active-learning community.

Support to organize this event was received from the Ada Howe Kent Fund and CTLR.

More workshop information and online registration details are available at: http://sites.middlebury.edu/stemskills2017/