About the Editors.
About the Contributors.
Topic Location Guide.
Preface.
Part One: Key Concepts.
Chapter 1. Course Design for Large Classes: A Learning-Centered Approach (Judith Grunert O'Brien).
Chapter 2. That's Not a Large Class; It's a Small Town: How Do I Manage? (Lynda G. Cleveland).
Chapter 3. Planning and Assessing Large Classes (Michael Theall and Raoul A. Arreola).
Chapter 4. Promoting Civility in Large Classes (Mary Deane Sorcinelli).
Chapter 5. Engaging Students Actively in Large Lecture Settings (Peter J. Frederick).
Chapter 6. Team Learning in Large Classes (Larry K. Michaelsen).
Chapter 7. Learning in the Dark: Applying Classroom Technology to Large Lecture Formats (Michael Smilowitz and Anne S. Gabbard-Alley).
Chapter 8. Teaching for Inclusion (Mathew L. Ouellett).
Chapter 9. Working with Teaching Assistants and Undergraduate Peer Facilitators to Address the Challenges of Teaching Large Classes (Jean Civikly-Powell and Donald H. Wulff).
Chapter 10. Maintaining Intimacy : Strategies for the Effective Management of TAs in Innovative Large Classes (Leta F. Deithloff).
Chapter 11.Teaching the Large Class: An Administrator's Perspective (J. Douglas Andrews).
Chapter 12. Teaching Large Classes: A Brief Review of the Research (Christine A. Stanley and M. Erin Porter).
Part Two: Examples Across the Disciplines.
Agriculture.
1. What I Wish I had Known Before I Taught a Large Class (Emily Hoover).
Business.
2. A Management Lesson (Steven Tomlinson).
3. Eleven Very Basic Tips for Teaching Large Business Classes (Tom Campbell).
Clincial Sciences.
4. Teaching Large Classes in Pharmacy Practice (James McAuley and Marialice Bennett).
5. Teaching Large Classes in Veterinary Medicine (Laurie A. Jaeger and Deborah Kochevar).
Education.
6. Making Large Classes Small Through Creative Teaching (John R. Hoyle).
Engineering.
7. A Learning-Focused Approach to a Large-Section Engineering Course (Robert Lundquist).
8. Getting Students in a Technical Class Involved in the Classroom (Doug Jacobson).
English.
9. Managing Discussion in Large Classes (J. Dennis Huston).
Law.
10. Defying the Norms: Teaching Large Law School Classes in Accordance with Good Pedagogy (Derrick Bell).
Mathematics.
11. Mathematics and the Large Class: Meeting and Mastering the Challenge (Nancy J. Simpson).
Sciences.
12. Strength in Numbers: Making the Large Chemistry Lecture Class Work (Brian P. Coppola).
13. What My Students Have Taught Me (Brent L. Iverson).
14. Large-Class Instruction: Having a Private Conversation in a Crowded Room (James H. Stith).
Social and Behavioral Sciences.
15. Personalizing the Large Class in Psychology (Richard P. Halgin and Christopher E. Overtree).
16. Teaching Social Science to a Small Society (Linda B. Nilson).
17. Transforming the Horde (Robin Nagle).
Summary of Key Concepts for Teaching Large Classes (M. Erin Porter and Christine A. Stanley).
Bibliography.
Index.
Christine A. Stanley is Assistant Professor Higher Education
Administration in the Department of Educational Administration and
Human resource Development, and Associate Director of the Center
for Teaching Excellence at Texas A&M University. She has also
served as president (2000-2001) and chair of the Diversity
Commission (1994-1998) of the Professional and Organizational
Development (POD) Networking Higher Education, the North American
organization dedicated to faculty, organizational, and
instructional development issues in higher education. Prior to
joining the faculty at Texas A&M University, she was Associate
director of Faculty and TA Development and Adjunct Assistant
Professor of Educational Policy and Leadership at The Ohio State
University, where she received the Distinguished Staff Award in
1999. She is the recipient of the Texas A&M University College
of Education Development Council's Outstanding New Faculty Award
(2000-2001).
A biologist, teacher, consultant, and faculty developer, she has
taught courses on college teaching, professional development, and
diversity and social justice in higher education. She is a
consultant to many colleges and universities on faculty
development, and multicultural faculty and TA development
initiatives in higher education.
She has contributed numerous articles on faculty development to
such publications as Journal on Excellence in College Teaching;
Journal of Staff, Program, and Organizational Development; and To
Improve the Academy: Resources for Faculty, Instructional and
Organizational Development and has an extensive record of
presentations and professional organization service.
M. Erin Porter is Senior Lecturer in the Department of
management Science and Information Systems at The University of
Texas, Austin. She teaches undergraduate and graduate courses in
business communication in the red McCombs School of Business and is
departmental coordinator for the undergraduate multi-section
business communication course. Prior to her current appointment,
she was Director of Faculty Programs at the Center for Teaching
Effectiveness at the University o f Texas, Austin. She has
published in The Journal of Staff, Program, and Organizational
Development; To Improve the Academy, and has a chapter in
Practically Speaking: A Sourcebook for Instructional Consultants in
Higher Education. She cowrote Business Communication, a textbook
published by the American Press. She received the student generated
Eyes of Texas Award for fall semester 2001.
She has been a tenured Associate Professor of Speech Communication
at Southwest Texas State University where she was director for
speech fundamentals and business speech coursed at two
universities, director of the forensics program, taught graduate
and undergraduate classes, and supervised graduate teaching
assistants for large sections of introductory classes. She has been
an adjunct professor at St. Edward's University and Austin
Community College, as well as a consultant in the high-tech
industry in Texas.
An educator, faculty developer, business consultant, and
communication specialist, she has consulted on issues involving
trends in communication skill sets for businesses, teams in the
workplace, and interpersonal communication skills for business
professionals, cross disciplinary teaching projects, and effective
teaching methodology in university classrooms. She has authored
articles on faculty development and business communication and has
an extensive record of presentations, workshops, consulting
assignments, and professional organization service.
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