Posted by (0) Comment
Most of you are aware that the JagSuccess Early Intervention Program will be required for all 100- and 200-level courses this Fall. This means that all faculty teaching 1oo- and 200-level course syllabi should contain information about the program.
The following paragraph is recommended by Academic Affairs:
JagSuccess
JagSuccess is a program intended to help students be successful in 100-200 level courses. If you are not doing well, you will receive an email instructing you to see your professor along with instructions to access an online tutorial intended to help with common problems affecting academic performance. Watch for this email during week 8 of this semester.
Also, it is recommended that you have a syllabus statement on plagiarism and academic honesty. The latest “official” version I have is as follows:
The University of South Alabama is committed to the fundamental values of preserving academic honesty as defined in the Student Handbook: The Lowdown. Plagiarism is a form of academic dishonesty and must be avoided. Plagiarism is using somebody else’s ideas in your writing without correctly identifying such sources. As one resource for helping students avoid plagiarism, your written work in this class may be submitted to Turnitin.com, or a similar detection service, or require you to do so, for an evaluation of originality and proper use and attribution of sources. Assignments submitted to Turnitin.com will be included as source documents in a restricted access database solely for the purpose of detecting possible plagiarism in such documents. As part of this process, you may be required to submit electronic as well as hard copies of your writing. You agree that by taking this course all assignments are subject to submission for originality review. A paper not submitted according to procedures set by the teacher will normally be penalized or not be accepted at all.
Finally, you should have a statement on your syllabus about students with disabilities.
If you have a specific disability that qualifies you for academic accommodations, please notify the instructor/professor and provide certification from Disability Services. (OSSS is located in Room 270 of the Student Center – 460-7212).
I’ve had debates with several faculty over the years about Turnitin–whether we should use it as a teaching tool, whether we should use it at all, etc. As the campus administrator of Turnitin, I must say that I have long been ambivalent about the program. I certainly recognize that it is needed, given that academic dishonesty, both here and nationwide, seems to be ever trending upward. However, I must also say that there is something about it that makes me uncomfortable. I’ve never liked the term “Orwellian,” but it would seem to apply here.
It just seems to me that academic dishonesty is a lot like crime: if we really want to be serious about stopping it, we have to take a serious look the conditions that cause it to happen in the first place. A recent article by Emrys Westacott in Philosophy Now, as luck would have it, right as we renew our Turnitin contract for another year, looks at this issue from a different angle by exploring the moral and cultural effects of the kinds of surveillance that Turnitin represents.
Does Surveillance Make Us Morally Better?
I encourage you to check it out and let me know what you think in the comments below.
This might be a good opportunity for someone to present.
| Engaged STEM Learning: From Promising to Pervasive Practices March 24-26, 2011 Miami, Florida Call for Proposals Deadline: August 31, 2010 Project Kaleidoscope (PKAL), in partnership with AAC&U, announces the 2011 Network for Academic Renewal conference, Engaged STEM Learning: From Promising to Pervasive Practices. This interactive, hands-on conference will help campuses adapt, scale up, and sustain effective practices in STEM teaching and learning. The conference is designed for participants who wish to develop faculty and institutional leadership in STEM reform, broaden student participation and success in STEM fields, better assess engaged STEM learning in both the majors and general education, and connect the revitalization of STEM learning with ongoing campus work in Liberal Education and America’s Promise (LEAP). We invite proposals on five key themes:
Learn more about this conference and the call for proposals online. For more information, please call 202-387-3760 or write to network@aacu.org. We look forward to reading your proposals. |
| 2010-2011 Network for Academic Renewal Conferences
Facing the Divides: Diversity, Learning, and Pathways to Inclusive Excellence Creativity, Inquiry, and Discovery: Undergraduate Research in and Across the Disciplines General Education and Assessment 3.0: Next-Level Practices Now |
| Questions about any of AAC&U’s meetings? E-mail meetings@aacu.org. |
Sir Ken Robinson gives an excellent testimony to how we need to move beyond data-driven quantification to more organic, more poetic ways of teaching and learning.
from TED Talks, 2010.
I was stumbling around the Internet today and happened upon an article on The University of Chicago Center for Teaching and Learning’s website. “The Nine and a Half Commandments of Good Teaching” were compiled by Robert A. Ferguson, a former Literature Professor at Chicago (he is now at Columbia).
Ferguson’s commandments are:
Ferguson chooses to have nine and a half commandments instead of ten because he wants to keep the list open-ended. So his 9.5th commandment is: It is what your students take outside of the classroom, not what they do within it, that counts.
To read Ferguson’s discussion of each of these “commandments” and several additional insights as well, visit http://teaching.uchicago.edu/handbook/tac04.html.