Weekly Teaching Tips

Rest is Essential for Learning & Productivity

Are you getting enough sleep lately? Do you feel like your day includes enough breaks to rest when you’re working? If we’re being honest, many of us would likely answer no to these questions. According to Kelly Baron, many people’s sleep problems have worsened during the pandemic, and some have developed sleep issues they didn’t […]

Teaching with Videos

Videos are one of many tools we can use in our teaching in any modality, but now that many of us are teaching remote or online courses, we may be using them more than we ever thought we would. When faculty first start teaching with videos, there are a few technical hills to climb: We need to […]

The Goldilocks Zone: Not Too Fast, Not Too Slow

Have you noticed time distorting while you’re working remotely during the pandemic? Somehow, time seems to be moving both much more slowly and much more quickly than usual. Combined with the unfamiliarity of teaching by Zoom, or by recording, this probably makes it even more difficult than usual to get the pacing right in our […]

Mental Health Awareness & Resources

Many of our colleagues have reported hearing from students who are “lost,” disconnected, discouraged, overwhelmed, or otherwise struggling to manage their coursework or their mental health. Stress and anxiety seem to be hitting young adults especially hard right now. In a recent report from the CDC, 25.5% of survey respondents aged 18–24 years had seriously considered suicide […]

Designing Hands-On Activities

In his now-classic book Learner-Centered Teaching, Terry Doyle describes a fundamental shift in faculty’s thinking about course design: instead of focusing so much on the work that we will do (reading, taking notes, lecturing, working problems, doing demonstrations, etc.), he encourages us to focus more on what we will ask students to do because, as […]

Start by Setting the Tone

During the toughest summer of many of our professional lives, faculty across the university have been working tenaciously to design effective and resilient learning experiences for our students. We’re all making compassion and flexibility our themes for the fall. When facing uncertainty, it’s helpful to have a supportive community around us. As the first day […]

Making the Most of Small Groups

Students’ interactions with us and with each other are essential parts of the invigorating learning environments we work so hard to cultivate. Especially during the pandemic, when many people are feeling isolated, students benefit when we provide opportunities for them to connect. If we’re teaching remotely, these interactions need more planning and communication, but allowing […]

Preparing for Fall

First, a warm welcome to all of our new colleagues joining us at FSU this semester, and a warm welcome back to our returning colleagues. As we begin a new academic year in extraordinary circumstances, some things remain familiar: We’re preparing our courses, writing our syllabi, meeting our new students, and helping them to grow […]

Better than cramming 

Do your students seem to wait until the last minute to prepare for exams? Do they use ineffective study strategies like rereading, highlighting, or cramming? With two weeks left in Summer A and C, we can give our students a head start, and even help them develop more effective study strategies, by encouraging them to prepare […]

Making the most of teaching online: Adaptive release

When moving from in-person to online teaching, you may have lost some instructional options you would normally use to help your students learn, but as you become more familiar with the different features available in Canvas and other tech tools, you may find that you’ve gained some useful options as well. The book Small Teaching […]