Basic Skills in Complex Contexts

FIN Commons

Los Medanos / Puente / Carnegie Foundation

Posted by Maria Tuttle on March 4, 2009 in Faculty Inquiry Groups (FIG), Proposals with No Comments


Revised Inquiry

Revised Budget

Math Lesson Study: Math is Fun!

Data and English: An Undiscovered Country

Student Voices: Why We Hate Math

LMC Spotlight: Case Study David Lopez


In collaboration with the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, this project aims to address the low persistence and success rates within developmental Math across the state. Instead of the standard three- to four-semester developmental path toward Calculus, this project will create an open-entry, one-semester accelerated course that prepares students for transfer-level Statistics. This course will be part of a one-year sequence within the Puente Learning Community at Los Medanos. The sequence will build on the spirit and principles of the Puente Program by addressing issues relevant to Latino(a) and Generation 1.5 students; utilizing student-centered, process-oriented pedagogy; and fostering student self-efficacy and leadership. The primary inquiry: How does this experiment impact student outcomes, including rates of transfer-readiness?

Team Leaders:
Maria Tuttle / Puente Director
Myra Snell / Math
925-439-2181 (Maria x 3381; Myra x 3135)
mtuttle@losmedanos.edu / msnell@losmedanos.edu

Team Member:
Marco Godinez / Puente Counselor

Los Medanos / Puente / Carnegie Foundation Proposal

Glendale Community College

Posted by Mark Maier on March 4, 2009 in Faculty Inquiry Groups (FIG), Proposals with No Comments


Glendale College Mid-term Inquiry Update Video

Revised Inquiry

Revised Budget

A team of three Glendale College faculty members from ESL, Natural Sciences, and Social Sciences will use an incremental classroom to strengthen student outcomes. 

Over the last few years, Chris Juzwiak has developed the incremental” approach for developmental English courses at Glendale Community College (see http://courseweb.glendale.edu/thefullemersion/)  In brief, the incremental approach divides course learning goals into many small steps, engaging students in tasks using color-coded analyses of texts, daily homework, in-class small group work, and tasks repeated with less and less support, all building toward significant work such as a complete essay that experience has shown to be a difficult task for many students. These protocols are based on learning principles that recognize the importance of metacognition, immediate feedback, explicit instruction on expert-like thinking, varied visual and auditory prompts, and the sequencing of tasks based on Bloom’s taxonomy.

In adapting the incremental approach to other disciplines we recognize that the learning goals will differ from the primarily text-based essay writing goals of the English course.  In addition, large class size and other constraints make it impossible for faculty to adopt all aspects of the incremental approach. Thus, we ask: what is the impact of partial use of the approach and which aspects are most appropriate and feasible for use in other disciplines?

Team Leader:
Mark Maier / Economics
818-240-1000 x 5468 Fax: 818-549-9436
mmaier@glendale.edu

Team Members:
Sarah McLemore / English, Incremental-technology mentor
Lara Kartalian / English, Incremental-technology mentor
Paul Vera / ESL
Jennifer Krestow / Astronomy
Cameron Hastings / Political Science
Chris Juzwiak / English

Glendale Community College Proposal

About FIN

The Faculty Inquiry Network’s (FIN) purpose is to support professional development which includes: conducting faculty inquiry; revisiting basic skills assumptions; interpreting and integrating data; accessing student voices; developing students as co-inquirers; making visible; using technology for teaching and learning; creating and supporting new initiatives, curriculum and program development; constructing educational tools using digital media; and hosting dialogue around student and faculty learning.

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