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Teaching in Higher Ed
Author: Bonni Stachowiak
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Thank you for checking out the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast. This is the space where we explore the art and science of being more effective at facilitating learning. We also share ways to increase our personal productivity, so we can have more peace in our lives and be even more present for our students.
544 Episodes
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Derek Bruff shares about curation, collections, and collaboration and the insights he’s gained from UVA’s Teaching Hub on episode 543 of the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast.
Quotes from the episode
We're working with a ton of curators who have some expertise in an aspect of teaching and learning.
-Derek Bruff
The more diverse voices we have in it, the more powerful the teaching hub will be.
-Derek Bruff
Teaching is an ongoing creative process.
-Derek Bruff
Resources
Past POD Innovation Award Winners
Raindrop.io
Strengths Finder: Input Strength
RSS Feeds and Aggregators
Google AI tells people to put glue on their pizza
Stop Talking About Gaps in Education: Talk About Harm, by Betina Love (h/t Josh Eyler on LinkedIn)
Considerations for Creating Instructional Videos, by Tom Pantazes
Derek Bruff’s Collections
The First Day of Class, by Derek Bruff
Templated Canvas Courses, by Melissa Ellegood
Todoist
Journey Group
Hero Themes Word Press Plugin
Inoreader - Build your own news feed
A Pedagogy of Kindness, Cate Denial
Hollyland Microphones
Malley Farms Jams
Rob Morgan shares how creativity may just save us all on episode 542 of the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast.
Quotes from the episode
We have entire sections on collaboration, and failure, and empathy, and the importance of play.
-Rob Morgan
AI cannot replace the skills of dexterity, collaboration, and creativity.
-Rob Morgan
Resources
Creativity Clarion Call
Beyond Boundaries Program at Washington University
LinkedIn post about Rob’s collaboration with Bruce Lindsay for the Designing Creativity course
Norman Seeff
Photos: The “Lost Archive” of Norman Seeff, With Images of Michael Jackson, Andy Warhol, Mick Jagger, and Carly Simon, by Lenora Jane Estes for Vanity Fair
Van Phillips
Ken Robinson
The loneliness of the short-distance driver
Scribe
Range
Jeff Hittenberger discusses love, wisdom, and human flourishing in education on episode 541 of the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast.
Quotes from the episode
Curiosity isn't just about finding answers; it's about opening up to understand other perspectives.
-Jeff Hittenberger
Nurturing environments where students feel valued and guided towards their fullest potential can transform educational experiences.
-Jeff Hittenberger
Resources
Education for Love and Wisdom: Effective Teachers for Challenging Times, by Jeff Hittenberger, Pamela Tupy Scott, Andrew Ntzouras, Renee Rose, Alexander Lin, Jeffrey Kim, Joanne Van Boxtel, Megan Chaney, Rebecca Spady, Glen Warren, Christine Hittenberger-Corbin, Seon Chun-Burbank
The Path, by Laurie Beth Jones*
Inside Out 2
Harvard University Human Flourishing Program
Education for Love and Wisdom Podcast
Mendez v Westminster
Season 3 | Education for Love and Wisdom Podcast | Love, Wisdom, and the History of American Education with Sylvia Mendez
United Way Cultures United Series: Expanding Choice and Opportunities: Access to Meaningful Work and Housing Options for Adults with Disabilities
“We need to seek out the different. Curiosity is the key to progress as individuals and as a society in times of extreme complexity.” - A Unique Opportunity, by Harold Jarche
Glen Warren answers the question: what’s love got to do with learning? on episode 540 of the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast.
Quotes from the episode
"What matters to you matters.” - Glen Warren
“Begin with the endless in mind.” - Glen Warren
Resources
Education for Love and Wisdom: Effective Teachers for Challenging Times, by Jeff Hittenberger, Pamela Tupy Scott, Andrew Ntzouras, Renee Rose, Alexander Lin, Jeffrey Kim, Joanne Van Boxtel, Megan Chaney, Rebecca Spady, Glen Warren, Christine Hittenberger-Corbin, Seon Chun-Burbank
American Library Association
Glen Warren on LinkedIn
Laguna Beach Unified School District
California Department of Education Resources for Media Literacy and Computer Science
Education for Love and Wisdom Podcast
Teresa Thompson discusses joyful connections through intentional teaching practices on episode 539 of the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast.
Quotes from the episode
I've had students share with me in the past that they were considering dropping the class, and then they got that welcome email, and they thought, okay, this time, it's going to be different.
-Teresa Thompson
My syllabus was all Barbie themed. In the semester before that, it was Pokemon themed. Semester before that was Stranger Things themed.
-Teresa Thompson
I don't want their first impression of me to be me quickly cleaning the board or freaking out because I can't find a whiteboard marker that works. I want them to see me calm and ready and happy to greet them as they walk in.
-Teresa Thompson
We have to recognize that our students have a lot going on. Sometimes, even despite their best intention, they may not be able to be a 100% attentive in our classroom.
-Teresa Thompson
Resources
The Importance of a Good Bedside Manner for Doctors Teachers, Part 1, by Teresa Thompson
The Importance of a Good Bedside Manner for Doctors Teachers, Part 2, by Teresa Thompson
Syllabus: Financial Accounting (Where Every Barbie Counts!)
Syllabus: Financial Accounting (Pokémon-Themed)
Invisible Learning: The Magic Behind Dan Levy’s Legendary Harvard Statistics Class, by David Franklin
Rest of World
Teachers of Accounting at Two-Year Colleges
Lance Eaton’s AI policies Repository
Chappell Rone
Chappell Roan: Tiny Desk Concert
Dave Stachowiak and Bonni share lessons from the Teaching in Higher Ed Story Caravan on episode 538 of the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast.
Quotes from the episode
I had some small goals for the Teaching in Higher Ed Story Caravan, and they were all surpassed.
-Bonni Stachowiak
Resources
Teaching in Higher Ed Story Caravan
“Shifts | Alyssa B
Kirkland Caramel S’mores Clusters | Jennie B
696: The Habits That Hold Leaders Back with Marshall Goldsmith | Dr Sarah-Jane
Community Building Activities on OneHE Equity Unbound
MYFest22 Topic Mingle for Community Building with Heather Kretschmer
THIS IS WATER! by David Foster Wallace Kim T.
Getting Things Done, by David Allen | AnotherBonnie
An Educator’s Scope of Practice: How Do I Know What’s Mine? by Karen Costa | Claudia
TextExpander | Alison
Small Teaching, by James Lang | Jennie B
A Pedagogy of Kindness, by Cate Denial | Alison
The Undergraduate Experience | Dr Sarah-Jane
Sesame Street: Janelle Monae - The Power of Yet | Cindy
The Five Stairsteps - O-o-h Child | Jessica Savage
With a Little Help From My Friends Joe Cocker | Rob Morgan
CatchBox | Rob Morgan
Episode 314: Culturally Responsive Online Teaching with Courtney Plotts | Cindy
Episode 525: Four Common Arguments Against DEI and How to Dismantle Them with Amira Barger | Adrienne
Episode 230: Teaching with Compassion with Peter Kaufman | Gary
Episode 40: Developing Metacognition Skills in Our Students with Todd Zakrajsjek | Mark Sutton
Episode 422: The New Science of Learning with Todd Zakrajsek | Alison
Goosechase
Dan Levy and Angela Pérez share about Teaching Effectively with ChatGPT on episode 538 of the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast.
Quotes from the episode
It's very easy to be overwhelmed right now with AI.
-Dan Levy
AI has infinite patience.
-Dan Levy
ChatGPT is amazing for generating 10 topic ideas to get inspired.
-Angela Pérez
If you know how to prompt Chat GPT, you know how to create a customized bot.
-Dan Levy
You can think of the teacher being the designer of the feedback rather than the giver of the feedback.
-Dan Levy
I can ask the bot questions that I would be embarrassed to ask my instructor.
-Dan Levy
Resources
Teaching Effectively with ChatGPT
Teaching Effectively with Zoom
Teddy Svoronos
Building Customized Chatbots Chapter
How to use Speaker Progress in Microsoft Teams for Education
Flighty Pro
The Anxious Generation*
Becoming Great Universities: Small Steps for Sustained Excellence, by Richard J. Light and Allison Jegla
Streamdeck
John Warner explores stressing pedagogical principles over AI promises on episode 536 of the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast.
Quotes from the episode
Once they've done the writing or as even as they're doing the writing, they're reflecting on their own metacognitive understanding of their own practices.
-John Warner
While you are in the act of writing, you are processing your own idea.
-John Warner
Resources
Engaged Education, John Warner’s Newsletter
Structure + Freedom = Engagement: A Frankenstories case study, by John Warner
Just Say No to Historical Figure Chatbots: Against digital necromancy, by John Warner
The Science of...Writing? Teaching requires lots of experimenting, but that doesn't make it a "science" By John Warner
On Becoming: Bonni and Alexis’ MYFest24 Session
Frankenstories
Joy Comes Back
A reminder to myself to never take for granted how wonderful life can be.
Unashamed, by Harry Baker
Andrew Cross and Alyshahn Kara-Virani share about creating interactive experiences and shaping the future of teaching on episode 535 of the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast.
Quotes from the episode
A lot of play science comes down to being a safe space to learn from each other, to see how people respond to what you put out there in the world without it being this critical life or death situation.
-Andrew Cross
People disproportionately remember experiences based on both the peaks and the valleys, and then also the ending experience.
-Andrew Cross
Encourage students to freely explore the content on their own. Sometimes that's content, sometimes it's a physical space. Turn them loose to go off and find something that they find interesting, a little bit of free choice learning.
-Andrew Cross
Status quo is our enemy too often.
-Andrew Cross
Resources
Play: How it Shapes the Brain, Opens the Imagination, and Invigorates the Soul by Dr. Stuart Brown
The Play Conference by US Play Coalition
The Power of Moments: Why Certain Experiences Have Extraordinary Impact by Chip & Dan Heath
Peak–end rule
Episode 530 : Lessons from the Road: Share Your Teaching Stories with Dave Stachowiak
Episode 527 : Beyond Dichotomous Thinking: Strategies to Enhance Teaching and Learning with Alexis Peirce Caudell
The Museum Experience Revisited by John H Falk, Lynn D Dierking
Activity-Based Teaching in the Art Museum: Movement, Embodiment, Emotion by Getty Museum
The 5 “E”s
Josh Eyler helps us cultivate hope and action beyond grades on episode 534 of the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast.
Quotes from the episode
Teachers, instructors, educators at all levels can really work with students to find elements of what we are teaching that those students find individually interesting.
-Josh Eyler
We can help them learn how to ask questions that are meaningful to them, how to really dig in and find ways that the content becomes meaningful to who they are as people.
-Josh Eyler
We're in another period of significant grading reform right now, fueled, I believe, by mass communication and social media. People are now able to connect in ways that in previous eras of grading reform, they were not able to.
-Josh Eyler
Resources
Failing Our Future: How Grades Harm Students, and What We Can Do about It, by Josh Eyler
How Humans Learn: The Science and Stories Behind Effective College Teaching, by Josh Eyler
Kariann Fuqua
Range: Why Generalists Triumph in a Specialized World, by David Epstein
Moonwalking with Einstein : The Art and Science of Remembering Everything, by Joshua Foer
Self determination theory
Reconceptualizing Participation Grading as Skill Building, by Alanna Gillis
University of Virginia: Michael Palmer
Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life, by Anne Lamott
Premortums
Radical Hope: A Teaching Manifesto, by Kevin Gannon
How to Podcast: How to help a Loved One with Dementia
Failing Our Future: How Grades Harm Students, and What We Can Do about It, by Josh Eyler
Punished for Dreaming: How School Reform Harms Black Children and How We Heal, Bettina L. Love
Fugitive Pedagogy: Carter G. Woodson and the Art of Black Teaching, by Jarvis R. Givens
Indigenous Educational Practices
Matt Townsley
Josh Eyler shares even more problems with grades on episode 533 of the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast.
Quotes from the episode
Being a dad who is an educator takes things from the academic and intellectual and brings them immediately to the surface, to the real world and to the real consequences for students and families.
-Josh Eyler
The conflict between what we think and what we value and what we want for our kids and what the world and our school systems say are important can sometimes be almost irreconcilable.
-Josh Eyler
We need to create environments that will cultivate intrinsic motivation.
-Josh Eyler
In situations where grades are given, students tend to be more fearful of making mistakes. They produce more behaviors of trying to get the grade rather than learning.
-Josh Eyler
Grades are not objective accurate measurements of learning according to this research.
-Josh Eyler
If grades don't measure what they're supposed to measure, why are we using them, and why are we putting so much pressure on them?
-Josh Eyler
Resources
Failing Our Future: How Grades Harm Students, and What We Can Do about It, by Josh Eyler
How Humans Learn: The Science and Stories Behind Effective College Teaching, by Josh Eyler
Kariann Fuqua
Mind Over Monsters: Supporting Youth Mental Health with Compassionate Challenge, by Sara Rose Cavanaugh
Coaching for Leaders Episode 310: How to Reduce Drama With Kids, with Tina Payne Bryson
Difficult Conversations: How to Discuss What Matters Most (Revised), by Douglas Stone & Sheila Heen*
The Scarlet Letter, by Nathaniel Hawthorne*
Punished by Rewards: The Trouble with Gold Stars, Incentive Plans, A'S, Praise, and Other Bribes, by Alfie Kohn*
A meta-analysis on the impact of grades and comments on academic motivation and achievement: A case for written feedback, by Alison Koenka, et al.
A Century of Grading Research: Meaning and Value in the Most Common Educational Measure, by Susan M. Brookhart, Thomas R. Guskey, et al.
The Math Wars: Timed Tests, Math Anxiety, and the Battle Over How We Teach Our Kids, by Joshua Eyler for The Saturday Evening Post
Off the Mark: How Grades, Ratings, and Rankings Undermine Learning (But Don't Have To) , by Jack Schneider & Ethan L. Hutt *
The Test , by Anya Kamenetz
Lower Ed, by Tressie McMillan Cottom*
Mylien Duong discusses strategies for facilitating contentious conversations in your classroom on episode 532 of the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast.
Quotes from the episode
We were never really trained to have these difficult conversations. We were not really trained as instructors to facilitate these conversations.
-Mylien Duong
It is not realistic to not prepare our students to be civically engaged and be able to engage and work with people who are different from them who don't share the same beliefs that they do.
-Mylien Duong
My goal is to help students to fully understand students, to help them clarify their own thinking, and to ensure and to help them communicate that to the rest of the class.
-Mylien Duong
Resources
Constructive Dialog Institute
Foundations in Facilitating Dialog Course
Maintaining Campus Community During the 2024 Election: A Guide for Leaders, Faculty, and Staff, by Mary Aviles & Mylien Duong, PhD
Successful classroom discussions begin long before anyone speaks for Times Higher Education, by Mylien Duong and Jacob Fay
Becoming a Critically Reflective Teacher, by Stephen D. Brookfield
Use Perplexity AI to Evaluate Health Information
Cyclic sighing
Christopher Gilman and Adelmar Ramirez describe how to use IIIF in your teaching to bring the world’s image collections to students on episode 531 of the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast.
Quotes from the episode
I think that our responsibility as professors in the 21st century is to engage students more.
-Adelmar Ramirez
Think with your hands. Every step that you make, every button that you click is an operation.
-Christopher Gilman
Resources
Gain Richer Access to the World's Image and Audio/Visual Files with IIIF
Get Started: Access IIIF End-User Resources
Guides to Finding IIIF Collections and Resources
Get Started Guide: University of Cambridge
University of Cambridge Digital Collection
Get Started Guide: Harvard University Digital Collections
Harvard University Digital Collections
Get Started Guide: UCLA Digital Collection
UCLA Library Digital Collections
30,000 Getty Museum Images Published Online as IIIF
Digital Florentine Codex
Awesome International Image Interoperability Framework (IIIF)
Sample IIIF Content (e.g. Stanford and Harvard)
IIIF Experiments and Fun
An ‘Alles is Muziek | ‘Music is Everything’ IIIF Website Bonni Found While Compiling the Show Notes
Dave Stachowiak and Bonni invite you to share your teaching stories and they tell of a few lessons from the road on episode 530 of the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast.
Quotes from the episode
It's interesting how much comes back to a caravan and a road trip, because that's where it all started.
-Dave Stachowiak
There's a lot of people who want to help you. You need to teach them how.
-Dave Stachowiak
The more folks we can take along on the trip and share stories, the better.
-Dave Stachowiak
Resources
The Teaching in Higher Ed Story Caravan
Coaching for Leaders Podcast 661: How to Tell a Story About Yourself, with David Hutchens
Coaching for Leaders Podcast 691: Bringing Your Strengths to a Big Job, with General CQ Brown, Jr.
Permission Slip, by Bryan Mathers
Join the Story Caravan
Tell someone else about the Story Caravan
Donate a prize
Open Working
The Visual Thinker
Bonnie Powers
Free Hexagonal Thinking Digital Toolkit from NowSparkCreativity
5 Creative Ways to Use Hexagonal Thinking
Cult of Pedagogy episode on hexagonal thinking - where you can also hear the correct way to pronounce hexagonal, unlike how Bonni said the word throughout the entire episode 🤦♀️
Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption, by Bryan Stevenson
The Legacy Sites
James Lang reads his piece, Working the Gardens of Our Classrooms, on episode 529 of the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast.
Quotes from the episode
He quits worrying about whether Pangloss or Martin are correct, decides that he and his companions should turn their attention to the immediate work demanded by their current circumstances.
-James Lang
Writing is, number 1, a form of thinking, number 2, that produces learning, and 3, generates new ideas. That was true in 2000, and it's true in 2024.
-James Lang
In the meantime, the gardens need tending. If you continue to believe in the value of the plants that have always flourished in your garden, keep growing them.
-James Lang
Resources
Voltaire on Working the Gardens of Our Classrooms: Are you a Pangloss, Martin, or Candide?, by James Lang
Episode 19: Cheating Lessons with James Lang
Episode 374: Small teaching Reprised with James Lang
The Healing Power of Learning: After a health crisis, an academic finds that learning is not just joyful but restorative, by James M. Lang
Notre Dame Hub of Learning Excellence
Desirable difficulties
Kristi Rudenga is Director of the Notre Dame Learning | Kaneb Center as well as Associate Teaching Professor, with a concurrent appointment in Psychology
Jason Lodge discusses assessment reform for the age of artificial intelligence on episode 528 of the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast.
Quotes from the episode
Where does the capability of AI end and where does the impact of the teacher start?
-Jason Lodge
Our tendencies as teachers and the way that we wanted to teach was clashing with the way that the lesson plan had been structured by Chat GPT.
-Jason Lodge
We don't know where we're headed, but at least we can have a sense of what the direction might be.
-Jason Lodge
We have to get to the point where we stop looking for evidence that students are using these tools to cheat and shift our emphasis to looking for evidence that learning has occurred.
-Jason Lodge
It's less about the technology and more about the human, how we learn and how we understand ourselves.
-Jason Lodge
Small things can add up to make a huge difference.
-Jason Lodge
Resources
Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency (TEQSA)
TEQSA Assessment reform for the age of artificial intelligence
International College of Management, Sydney (ICMS) Academic Integrity in the Context of Artificial Intelligence
Assistant, Parrot, or Colonizing Loudspeaker? ChatGPT Metaphors for Developing Critical AI Literacies, by Anuj Gupta, Yasser Atef, Anna Mills, & Maha Bali
James Lang
Small Teaching, by James Lang
Jon Ippolito
MYFest
Episode 524: Toward a More Critical Framework for AI Use with Jon Ippolito
Assessment 2020: Seven propositions for assessment reform in higher education, by Boud and Associates
Higher Education Standards Framework (Threshold Standards)
National Artificial Intelligence Taskforce (2023)
Alexis Peirce Caudell shares ways we cen go beyond dichtomous thinking: strategies to enhance teaching and learning on episode 527 of the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast.
Quotes from the episode
It's about being able to sort of think across or beyond those boxes that we normally operate on every day.
-Alexis Peirce Caudell
Resources
Categories we live by: how we classify everyone and everything by Gregory Murphy
Ministry of Imagination Manifesto
Imagination: a manifesto by Ruha Benjamin
Ecologies card game
The vegetable garden pest handbook
NYT Connections Game
POV NYT Connections Author
Ann Taylor shares ways to offer accessible and affordable learning through open educational resources (OERs) on episode 526 of the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast.
Quotes from the episode
I have been surprised at how some of us don't think about the cost of what we're requiring our students to use.
-Ann Taylor
It's the instructor that's making the difference, that's making the content come alive.
-Ann Taylor
If you're boring face to face and monotone or you just kinda mumble and separate, you're probably not gonna come across great recorded either.
-Ann Taylor
Text first, not video first.
-Ann Taylor
We start with the written word, and then we make sure that anywhere it's gonna make a difference or it's gonna engage the students, we incorporate multimedia pictures and graphics and interactive tools and video and so forth.
-Ann Taylor
Resources
Penn State’s Course Marking Initiative
Discover OER at Penn State
Kay Dimarco, Multi-media specialist
Kaitlin Farnan
Video series shares sustainability lessons from trip to New Zealand, Australia
YouTube channel: Sustainable Business in New Zealand and Australia
27: The Most Perfect Album
Geology of the National Parks with Dr. Richard Alley and Dr. Sridhar Anandakrishnan
MYFest 2024
It’s OK, Nightbirde
Y Me Siento Bien, Cubaneros
Africa, Salif Keita
Coaching Real Leaders, with Muriel Wilkins
Dear HBR
Wiser Than Me
The Moth Radio Hour
UPCEA
Amira Barger shares four common arguments against DEI and how to dismantle them on episode 525 of the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast.
Quotes from the episode
Many people who are at the margins often know from lived experience that the playing field is not level, and that there are biases that leaders and individuals across any and every institution have to mitigate.
-Amira Barger
Many people tend to view the work of diversity, equity, and inclusion as this sort of a 0 sum game. That idea of we're lifting someone else up means you have to push or bring someone else down. And that's not at all what we're trying to do this work.
-Amira Barger
It really is about leveling the playing field. It's not about taking things away, but it's about understanding.
-Amira Barger
What are you creating so that others can see themselves represented in the spaces they're in with you?
-Amira Barger
I try to very intentionally surround myself with people who believe and think differently than I do so that I can understand where they are coming from.
-Amira Barger
Resources
4 Common Arguments Against DEI and How to Dismantle Them, by Amira Barger
To Overcome Resistance to DEI, Understand What’s Driving It, by Eric Shuman, Eric Knowles, and Amit Goldenberg
The Curb-Cut Effect
How AI is Transforming DEI - and What Leaders Should Keep in Mind, by Amira Barger
Navel Gazing: John Dickerson’s Notebooks: Sending Our Son to College
Navel Gazing: John Dickerson’s Notebooks: Remembering George and Defending the Morning
Navel Gazing: John Dickerson’s Notebooks: The Sneaky Pitfalls of the To-Do List
The Wake Up: Closing the Gap Between Good Intentions and Real Change, by Michelle Mijung Kim
The Moth Storytelling Podcast
Jon Ippolito on a more critical framework for AI use (amongst other topics) on episode 524 of the Teaching in Higher Ed podcast.
Quotes from the episode
We need to either rethink what intelligence means, beyond the scope of simply being articulate and knowledgeable when it comes to to putting words together, or we need to think about what other values we want to promote and encourage and teach that go beyond intelligence.
-Jon Ippolito
It's a problem because the average of 2 facts is not necessarily a fact.
-Jon Ippolito
Resources
Learning with AI from the University of Maine
Variable Media Network
UMaine's Digital Curation program
At the Edge of Art, by Joline Blais and Jon Ippolito
Re-collection: Art, New Media, and Social Memory, by Richard Rinehart and Jon Ippolito
The ‘Right to Unmake’
AI’s threat to elections is not what you think
The Misapplication of AI
Digital Curation in the Shadow of AI
Why you should generate AI images in your classroom
AI versus old-school creativity: a 50-student, semester-long showdown
How To Teach with AI and Still Put People First
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great points made😍 Enjoyed it. thank you
that was great! thank you both
I love the idea that to ignite learning start with application or real life problems and then learners will be keen to master the theory that supports the interesting problem they've been presented with