Articles That I have Read

Getting Students to Act on Our Feedback

By Maryellen Weimer, PhD
I'm still pondering why students don't make better use of the feedback we provide on papers, projects, presentations, even the whole class feedback we offer after we've graded a set of exams. Yes, we do see improvement as we look back across a course, but we also see a lot of the same errors repeated throughout the course. 


Enhancing Out-of-Class Communication: Students’ Top 10 Suggestions

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Out-of-class communication makes student-teacher relationships more personal and contributes to student learning. It is also the wellspring for continued academic exchange and mentoring. Unfortunately, electronic consultations via email have diminished the use of in-person office hours. Although students and faculty favor email contact because it’s so efficient, interpersonal exchanges still play an important role in the learning process—much research verifies this. As teachers we have a responsibility to encourage, indeed entice, our students to meet with us face-to-face.