Dealing with Student Deceptions: What to do with ‘Death in the Family’ Excuses
I grew up watching M*A*S*H, a dramatic comedy set in a mobile U.S. Army hospital during the Korean War, and it has influenced my teaching in some surprising ways. One…
I grew up watching M*A*S*H, a dramatic comedy set in a mobile U.S. Army hospital during the Korean War, and it has influenced my teaching in some surprising ways. One…
…was three weeks. So, on average, these students used about half the available time to complete the assignment. Based on previous research, the investigators identified 10 constructs related to procrastination…
…differences between teaching a traditional class and teaching online, when it comes to educational assessment the same principles apply: clarity and consistency. In the recent online seminar Online Grading Tools:…
…– suspicious, levels unfounded accusations, blames others for personal limitations and failures. Litigious – makes threats or preparations to file lawsuits in response to every slight (real or perceived). Compulsive…
…is to make expectations clear at the outset of the course, says William Jennings, chair of the Department of Finance, Real Estate, and Insurance at California State University–Northridge. As chair,…
…contributed. The rationale for this approach comes from how groups function in the “real world.” In most professional contexts, leaders are to some extent responsible for how their groups perform,…
…research problem. When you are considering some new research, you want to review related literature and find where the approach you propose fits in the context of work underway or…
…recommend an equal partnership—the same roles, time requirements, and compensation. They also agreed to serve together and to not continue serving if one partner wanted to step down. Communicate the…
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