Login
Tag Cloud
area of concern art attitude beginning point challenges choice citizen discussion reports citizen discussions civic engagement Classroom Discussions communication skills conceptual possibilities consensus consequences contrasting possibilities conversations creativity deliberation democracy democratic discussion developing possibilities developing questions discussion discussion process Discussion Reports educational implications embeddedness exploration facilitation first year seminar forest generating possibilities generosity governance higher education IF discussion process information interactivity learning by doing limitations limits note-taking online discussions participation partisanship pedagogy personal development policy-making process possibilities prediction Project Discussions public discussion Public Discussions purpose reasoning skills recruiting sanctuary discussions shy participants small groups starting point statistics stories student-centered discussion student evaluation student success testing usefulness WisconsinArchives
Contributors
Adolf Gundersen 58 Jeff Prudhomme 46 Pete Shively 44 Dennis Boyer 29 Sue Goodney Lea 27 Mark Notturno 27 Maria Villar 18 Ieva Notturno 16 Michael Gettings 14 Debra Swoboda 6 Laura Black 4 Keally McBride 4 Jack Crittenden 4 Matthew Martin 4 Deborah McGrath 4 Natalie Hopkinson 3 S. Pixy Ferris 3 Jill Bouma 2 Timothy Steffensmeier 2 Pradip Malde 1 David Gutterman 1 Alan Freitag 1 Jonah West 1 Taiyi Sun 1 Tikki Magon 1
Communication, Discussion, or Facilitation Skills in Your Courses?
For those of you teaching an IF sponsored course this spring, your fourth blog post should tell us about some of the facilitation, discussion, or communication skills that you’ve focused on with your students. You might find it helpful to review Section Five and Eight of the Guidebook for Student Centered Discussions. You also might want to look at the Practical Approaches to Communications that was included in your Summer Institute binder. Tell us about some of the following (there’s probably a lot to tell, so you might just think of an illustrative example or two):
–Jeff Prudhomme
Share: