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Showing posts from February, 2020

By the End

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By the end of my Interpersonal Communication course (COM110) a student should be interpersonally compotent. Duh.  Clearly, survival in a social world depends greatly upon the extent of interpersonal competence, and its requisite communication skills, that a person can demonstrate across a wide variety of situations and episodes. Interpersonal competence is when a student knows and demonstrates the appropriate and effective management of interaction among people ( NCA Interpersonal Outcomes ). For a student to be appropriate they must be able to demonstrate standards of propriety and legitimacy in certain contexts such as 1) friendships, 2) romantic relationship, 3) family, 4) work and 5) organizational.  For a student to be effective is for them to show they can obtain valued outcomes relative to the constraints of the context they are in. They should be able to assess themselves (their self) and other interpersonal skills in the context of conversation. Their skills should be d

Death of Expertise?

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I am thinking about the flipped classroom. Last week a teacher asked me to reflect on the challenges I encountered with flipping my classes. Challenges? We sat in a group with other teachers charged with trying new teaching methods.  I answered the teacher's question.  I said, although I flip parts of my course, I don't flip all of it.  I found the flipped classroom fun, but flipping all of it was like erasing my expertise from the class as a content professional. I spent a lot of time becoming an expert in Interpersonal Communication, and Performance, so turning over the class to discussions with students, peer-to-peer teaching, team activities rather than lectures, felt like the death of expertise.  Tom Nichols' book, The Death of Expertise: the campaign against established knowledge and why it matters, reminds me of our need for balance in education and how the digital revolution (social media, and the internet) have helped to foster a cult of ignorance.  That doe

Escape Room

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I was challenged to create an Escape Room activity with my flipped classroom in my Interpersonal Communication course (COM110). What a challenge! I did not know where to begin. I found a few web-resources, and I thought I would share them with you, dear reader.  I imagined a group of students locked in the classroom, where the only exit was a key, hiding in the answers of various puzzles. It sounds like the start of a horror movie, but for my students it could be a fun activity over the chapter. I looked at a few Escape Rooms for a general sense of the design. The rooms aren’t just conveyor belts of puzzles. They’re also stories, with plots and characters, either portrayed by recorded voices and movies or by live actors. As this is my first Escape Room, I wouldn’t be hiring any actors. Save that for next time. First, the creators of the first Escape Room recommend starting with a story and characters. I decided to create a story from the components of the textbook for the Interperso

Doing the Chat

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Flipping a course can be one of the easiest pedagogical methods I use to make my courses unique. This .method maybe why many of my students stay in the class. My low drop rate might be connected to the scaffold of smaller flipped activities I build into each module. At home the students watch short videos and answer questions about what they identify in the video with the theory or the concept. Or they do the chapter reading and watch a PowerPoint lecture, then come to class prepared to discuss key questions posed in the lecture.  One of my favorite flipped techniques is Chat Stations. The activity reminds me of kindergarten with Stations, and the timer, and rotating from station to station.  For the Chat Stations on Perception 101 I set up six stations with grouped tables, and sets of discussion questions for each. One station concerns self-disclosure, another is presentation of self on social media,  another is a gender introduction table, and another is masks and face, and so