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  • Open Access Icon
  • Research Article
  • 10.36021/jethe.v4i3.216
Facilitating Culturally Responsive Teaching Through Online Courses and Coaching
  • Jan 4, 2022
  • Journal of Effective Teaching in Higher Education
  • Trish Lopez + 2 more

Teacher professional development and education programs are enhancing job-embedded experiences to address the disparity between theory and implementation. Simultaneously, higher education is now offering online courses to attract geographically distant educators, especially in high-needs fields such as teaching English Learners and Culturally and Linguistically Diverse students. There is a need to investigate what online teacher professional development and education programs can do to promote teachers’ application of what they learn. This pilot study utilized the Inventory of Situationally and Culturally Responsive Teaching (ISCRT) to investigate 23 in-service teachers’ culturally responsive teaching (CRT) practices before and after receiving online coursework and coaching. When compared to the control group, treatment teachers’ scores on four of the five ISCRT standards—Joint Productive Activity, Language and Literacy Development, Challenging Activities, and Instructional Conversations—as well as the composite were statistically significant. Findings suggest online CRT coursework with complementary instructional coaching supports teachers’ implementation of new knowledge and pedagogy.

  • Open Access Icon
  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 1
  • 10.36021/jethe.v4i3.247
Videos in Online Courses
  • Jan 4, 2022
  • Journal of Effective Teaching in Higher Education
  • Eric Litton

Many instructors use videos to support their teaching in online courses to convey course content that would normally be taught in a traditional setting. Prior studies have shown some connection between utilizing online videos and student performance but do not always support their finding statistically or consider the nuance of the online videos, such as if the videos are required and how long the videos are. This article uses various quantitative analysis techniques to investigate the relationship between video length, student video viewing patterns, and grades. The findings indicate that videos should stay within a certain length to encourage student engagement with the videos and course assignments. Also, watching online videos is only positively related to grades when students are not required to watch, a result that is consistent across course-level and student-level models. Student viewing patterns also differ for courses that require watching videos versus those that do not. The article concludes by discussing the relevance of these results and how instructors can best utilize online videos in their courses.

  • Open Access Icon
  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 1
  • 10.36021/jethe.v4i3.126
Role of Mindfulness Practices in the College Classroom
  • Jan 4, 2022
  • Journal of Effective Teaching in Higher Education
  • Erica F Kosal

The following study examined the effect of mindful practices on college student attitudes and learning comprehension using two sections of an introductory biology course taught by the same instructor. One section used lecture complemented with active learning formats while the other section additionally included mindful practices. Comparisons were made between the students’ surveys and quiz/exam scores. Students in the mindful section also kept journals. Results showed no significant differences in quiz and exam scores between the two groups; however, students in the mindfulness section found value in the practices both in and outside the classroom. Students reported a gain in their attitude towards the value of mindfulness practices as well as the use of mindfulness practices and reported a decrease in anxiety levels. Students identified these practices as helping them with focused attention, peace, and relaxation. At the end of the semester, over 90% of students agreed that mindfulness has a valuable place in the college classroom.

  • Open Access Icon
  • Research Article
  • 10.36021/jethe.v4i3.232
Play in Three Acts
  • Jan 4, 2022
  • Journal of Effective Teaching in Higher Education
  • Michelle Yeo + 1 more

In some fields, written reflection is commonplace whereas in others it is uncommon. While athletic therapy education aims to produce reflective practitioners, written reflection is not a typical pedagogy employed. In 2014, the athletic therapy program at our institution began the implementation of a clinical presentation (CP) approach to facilitate competency-based curriculum requirements. This innovation to pedagogy required a reimagined approach to teaching, learning, and assessment. We describe one aspect of a larger SoTL study on this transformation, inquiring into the development of reflective practice through reflective writing. Students were asked to regularly reflect on their experiences in the clinic or field as part of their program. In this qualitative component of the study, we were able to gain insight into how students perceived the reflective process, how that evolved over their program, what were enablers and barriers to their reflection, and what was the role of feedback in their learning. The characteristics of student perceptions in each year, which followed a learning arc which we describe sequentially as “confused, conflicted, and convinced,” is explored, along with implications for pedagogy in assisting students to develope reflective professional practice.

  • Open Access Icon
  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 6
  • 10.36021/jethe.v4i3.250
Creating an Inclusive Learning Community to Better Serve Minority Students
  • Jan 4, 2022
  • Journal of Effective Teaching in Higher Education
  • Phoebe S Lin + 1 more

As campuses become increasingly diverse, it is important that faculties maintain inclusive classrooms. Students of underrepresented ethnic/racial groups are more likely to experience disengagement in an academic setting (Nagasawa & Wong, 1999), which can lead to underperformance (Major et al., 1998). Students with LGBTQA+ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, or asexual) identities are at higher risk of poor mental health and lower academic performance compared to cisgender and heterosexual students (Aragon et al., 2014). These detrimental experiences can lead to even more harm in a remote learning environment, where students have fewer opportunities to feel a sense of belonging and connect with their peers and/or instructors. This paper will consider strategies of inclusiveness in the online classroom and in-person learning environment within a social psychology framework to better support underprivileged students to improve academic performance and the overall educational experience. The suggestions and discussions provided apply to both in-person learning as well as remote delivery.

  • Open Access Icon
  • Research Article
  • 10.36021/jethe.v4i3.274
Letter from the Editor
  • Jan 4, 2022
  • Journal of Effective Teaching in Higher Education
  • James Devita + 1 more

  • Open Access Icon
  • Research Article
  • Cite Count Icon 1
  • 10.36021/jethe.v4i3.131
Science, Poetics, and Immersive Field Ecology
  • Jan 4, 2022
  • Journal of Effective Teaching in Higher Education
  • Karin R Gastreich + 1 more

Complex global challenges and declining scientific literacy demand novel approaches to engaging students with science and the natural world. While evidence supports integrating creative and scientific modes of inquiry, these approaches are often separated in undergraduate education. We designed Ecology Through the Writer’s Lens (ETWL) to allow students to explore an ecosystem of critical importance, the tall grass prairie, through an interdisciplinary field experience. Co-taught by Biology and English professors and open to students of all majors, ETWL leverages classroom activities to prepare for and process the immersive field experience over the course of one semester. Field-based exercises include natural history observations, hypothesis building, experimental design, analysis of the literature, and creative/reflective writing. Learning was assessed through multiple assignments, including a final creative project that spanned diverse writing genres. Students met and exceeded expectations with respect to course objectives. Non-science majors learned how scientific knowledge is generated; science majors learned how creative approaches can open new pathways for exploration. Many students overcame fear of natural spaces. Several students independently engaged with tall grass prairie in post-course activities. We conclude that interdisciplinary approaches to field-based inquiry can generate transformative experiences, even when the immersive component is short-term and close to home. ETWL provides one model by which different modes of inquiry can be blended to enhance student appreciation of science, literature, and the environment.

  • Open Access Icon
  • Journal Issue
  • 10.36021/jethe.v4i3
  • Jan 4, 2022
  • Journal of Effective Teaching in Higher Education

  • Open Access Icon
  • Journal Issue
  • 10.36021/jethe.v4i2
  • Oct 19, 2021
  • Journal of Effective Teaching in Higher Education

  • Open Access Icon
  • Research Article
  • 10.36021/jethe.v4i2.255
Letter from the special issue editors
  • Oct 18, 2021
  • Journal of Effective Teaching in Higher Education
  • Terah J Stewart + 1 more

Over the past year we have labored to curate this special issue of the Journal of Effective Teaching in Higher Education titled In The Along: Curricular and Pedagogical Imperatives for Black Mattering. This process began during a global health pandemic and the already ongoing assault on Black people and lifeways, and we complete the issue in the same, if not more precarious place.