
HIGHER ED TEACHING STRATEGIES FROM MAGNA PUBLICATIONS

Enhancing Student Access to Course Content: The Advantages of a Customized Website
Online Course Design and Preparation

A Perfect Match: How UMGC Leveraged MyLab to Improve Student Outcomes
Teaching with Technology

Building Community and Connection Between Students and Instructors in Asynchronous Courses
Online Course Delivery and Instruction

The Power of Choice: Unlocking Student Engagement in the Online Classroom
Online Student Engagement

Increasing Student Reading and Discussion in Higher Ed: A Co-creation Based Approach
Educational Assessment

Using the Appreciative Inquiry (AI) Framework to Examine an Authentic Project-based Research Symposium
Effective Teaching Strategies
- Maryellen Weimer, PhD
- August 24, 2008
A large study of students enrolled in geography courses at multiple universities in Australia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States looked at their conceptions of geography,…
- Rob Kelly
- August 23, 2008
Faculty roles are defined by a combination of institutional culture and discipline standards, and achieving the right balance among teaching, scholarship, and service should be an important consideration for…
- Maryellen Weimer, PhD
- August 22, 2008
The relatively new pedagogical periodical Academy of Management Learning & Education has a regular feature I very much enjoy and wish was part of more of the discipline-based periodicals…
- Rob Kelly
- August 21, 2008
Early advocates of online learning focused their efforts on demonstrating online learning’s legitimacy to the broader community. Now, as an increasing body of literature supports the notion that there…
- Rob Kelly
- August 20, 2008
With the growth of distance education and changes in student demographics, the traditional class schedule, when a class meets two or three times a week, may no longer be…
- Rob Kelly
- August 19, 2008
Colleges and universities need leadership at every level, but often faculty are reluctant to lend their leadership abilities because the notion of them as leaders is often at odds…