For her upper-level course about daily life in colonial Peru, Professor Verónica Salles-Reese felt recreating the archival experience was crucial to understanding ancient cultures. She amassed documents and artifacts from her own trips to archives in South America and hoped CNDLS could help her facilitate student work with original texts and images online.
When Drs. Holmes and Swift were writing their grant proposal for The Diabetes Adolescent Research Project, they turned to CNDLS statistician Dr. Rusan Chen to support them in the use of statistical analysis packages and the data analysis itself. Ultimately, they received the grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to pursue a five-year longitudinal study that evaluates the role of memory and learning in diabetes self-care skills in adolescents, ages 10 to 17. CNDLS helped the faculty members analyze the data they collected between 2000 and 2005.
When professors from NHS developed the Summer Biomedical Science Institute (SBSI) to enhance the science education and healthcare awareness of high school students from rural areas, they wanted their curriculum to be technology-driven. The team hoped such an educational model would attract members of rural communities into institutions of higher learning to study biomedical science.
As American culture is increasingly transmitted through multimedia, education must adapt to mirror the culture in which it functions. The changing face of educational technology requires educators to encourage thinking that draws connections between various aspects of a project, concept, or course. Enter the Poster Tool.
Puzzled by his students' ability to listen intently during class, yet fail to comprehend concepts or be able to apply them later, Dr. Dahiya redesigned his multi-section Advanced Financial Management course to be completely based on the case study method. By spending class time with students reasoning through a series of situational cases in the business world, Dr. Dahiya has found a way to actively engage them in the real work of the discipline from day one.
Civic Engagement in Education originated from the idea of an undergraduate student, Sabrina Karim: to be effective in youth community leadership positions, students need opportunities to learn theoretical knowledge but they must also learn how to integrate this knowledge with real life experiences. She found a Georgetown faculty member, Dr. Heather Voke, and together they developed a course in which Georgetown students combined classroom instruction on youth civic engagement with direct experiences coaching teams of students in a local high school.
Connecting the Safety Net to the Heart of the Academic Environment is a Georgetown initiative funded by the Charles Engelhard Foundation and the American Association of Colleges & Universities (AAC&U). It is part of a larger national project that addresses student mental health and wellness through various forms of engaged learning and civic engagement. At Georgetown, our vehicle for engaged learning is curriculum infusion--the introduction of health topics into the academic content of the course-with the option to combine this with community-based learning.
In her course on Spanish language cinema, Professor Breiner-Sanders wanted to find new and creative ways to engage her students in film analysis and criticism. Based on her goals to sharpen students' critical analysis and oral presentation skills, CNDLS introduced her to the Poster Tool, an online application designed for users to easily create online web presentations.
Maite Camblor-Portilla set out to investigate whether exposure to foreign language input via different types of written feedback has a differential effect on learners' immediate and delayed written production of the uses of the Spanish noun-adjective agreement, when feedback is offered within a cognitive, attentional framework.
In their course in clinical ethics, Professor Dan Davis and Sister Carol Taylor (Director of the Center for Clinical Bioethics) felt it was crucial to improve their assessment of students' abilities to reason through ethically challenging medical situations. The traditional small group and case write-up methods used to determine moral agency, Davis believed, insufficiently measured the problem-solving and reasoning processes that students must employ in authentic care-giving situations.
Generated by the dual goals of moving the STIA Gateway course away from lecture format toward a case-based approach and of better integrating study abroad experiences within the curriculum, Dr. Hultman is creating a classroom environment where students learn about relevant topics through the real-world experiences of their fellow STIA students.
Georgetown University's NHS was awarded a five-year Human Resources and Service Administration (HRSA) grant to implement the Family Nurse Practitioner (FNP) and Nurse Midwifery Diversity Education Project. The Clinical Communication in Spanish for Nurses Program, a segment of the Diversity Education Project, integrates nursing and technology for participants to develop their listening and speaking skills in a second language both inside and outside the classroom.
Begun in 1982 in Shark Bay, Western Australia, Georgetown's Dr. Janet Mann leads the second longest running dolphin study in the world, which investigates questions about dolphin calf development, female reproduction, genetics, ecology and behavior. CNDLS helped Dr. Mann to assemble, organize, and analyze her data. The database CNDLS created now consists of over 870 animals, including 80 calves born to 50 females who have been observed from birth to weaning for over 1750 hours.
What makes a successful e-commerce website? The CNDLS staff worked with Prof. Betsy Sigman to develop a set of indicators to measure the efficacy of e-commerce sites and built Digital Discernment, an interactive online tool for evaluating e-commerce sites.
In his course Social Justice Documentary Video, Dr. Cook engages students in the art of video production in order to enable them to reach one of his intended learning goals -- developing critical arguments about history and culture in creative ways. By involving students in the entire process -- from archival and original research to producing, filming and editing the film -- Cook believes students gain unique skills, such as the ability to create visual evidence to support an argument.
The Georgetown Social Science Data Archive is a resource that provides readily accessible high quality 'real world' data to faculty and students for their research and teaching purposes. The mission of the GUSSDA is to collect, preserve, and distribute survey, census, and other research data of interest to the Georgetown community-especially to Sociology, Government, and Economics departments, as well as to public policy, health care, and educational researchers.
Seasoned philosophy professor Frank Ambrosio has sought to bring his students beyond literal levels of reading to deeper levels of allegory. Through a CNDLS' fellowship, he has been able to implement and refine a longtime project—an online, interactive version of Dante's Divine Comedy.
Given that her work in mental illness had always brought issues of diversity to the fore in the classroom, Dr. Edilma Yearwood, Assistant Professor in the School of Nursing and Health Studies (SNHS) approached the week-long Inclusive Teaching and Learning (IT&L) Seminar as a way to meet like-minded people at the university with whom she could connect and establish ongoing relationships. She left the seminar re-energized and armed with materials and resources she was determined to share with others in her department.
For her introductory intensive Italian course, Dr. Fulvia Musti hoped to move beyond the typical listening comprehension activities based on audio-taped dialogues and textbook exercises. She turned to CNDLS to help her integrate authentic sources and cultural stimuli in the classroom.
Poetry, literature, visual and multimedia arts might seem to take a back seat to science in medical teaching, yet Dr. Caroline Wellbery believes that by taking a closer look at the liberal arts and creative representations of the body, doctors-in-training can broaden their understanding of medical practice. After participating in the CNDLS Faculty Colloquium in 2004, Dr. Wellbery developed a website to help medical students learn about the patient-doctor relationship through the arts.
When over 150 students registered for his Jazz History course, former Georgetown University Professor José Bowen wanted to preserve the course's substance and still accommodate the large number of students by adding interactive elements. CNDLS helped Bowen reshape his course to ensure the key concepts remained meaningful by engaging selected students as small groups discussion leaders and enabling easy access to the course audio files.
JesuitNet, the online distance education network of the Association of Jesuit Colleges and Universities, received a federal LAAP grant ("Learning Anytime Anywhere Program") in February 2001 to develop an online course design model for online graduate-level courses at Jesuit schools. JesuitNet collaborated with CNDLS to develop the CADE (Competency-Assessment in Distance Education) course design model and to develop a faculty development process to disseminate the model within the network.
After years of designing and redesigning her introductory biology course for non-majors in order to better engage non-science students in science, Heidi Elmendorf had turned to Blackboard as the latest in a series of innovations. She hoped to draw in her liberal arts students by getting them to engage with the material before class to be able to participate more fully in class discussion.
While medical students usually know a lot about sophisticated imaging studies and exotic lab tests, they often don't know how to approach a patient, make a clinical diagnosis, and come to a sensible differential diagnostic hypothesis. With the help of CNDLS, Dr. Wolfgang Rennert designed a website on which students could work through case scenarios in order to practice their clinical thinking and decision making skills.
For an upper-level undergraduate course on optics for Physics majors, Prof. Ed Van Keuren envisioned a dynamic, "living" text that would offer students more than traditional optics textbooks can. Based on Prof. Van Keuren's needs, CNDLS designed a custom application, Optics WebText, a comprehensive online reference that allows for continual addition of new topics and revision of existing documents.
Developing fresh approaches to American politics is always a challenge, but it's even tougher in an introductory graduate class of 100 students. In his course, "Introduction to the U.S. Political System," Professor Mark Rom wanted to create an intimate feeling in the large class through a focus on class discussion.
As part of a larger curricular project, the Psychology department wanted to find ways to support deep, recursive learning through electronic resources as students progressed through the major. CNDLS assisted the faculty and undergraduate students in developing and assessing a website that would serve as a "bridge" resource between the required "Research Methods and Statistics" course and the remaining courses in the major.
Dr. Jim Slevin's "Literacy, Literacy Education, and Social Justice" course asks students how literacy mediates power, and how they, as students, figure in such power schematics based on their relationships to literacy and literature. As a CNDLS Fellow, Prof. Slevin translated the central issues of the course to the world of digital communication. His project posed the question: what can students gain from looking critically at new ways of writing?
Facilitated by CNDLS and supported by the Office of the Provost, the Seminar on Inclusive Teaching and Learning brings faculty, staff and graduate students together as a week-long learning community to reflect on diversity in the classroom and how it affects teaching and learning at Georgetown.
By reflecting on the path of his own academic career, Dr. YuYe Tong realized that the type of work required of him in research -- actively and continuously acquiring new knowledge, pursuing and testing hypotheses, investigating solutions, problem-solving, and connecting research to other branches of chemistry -- was not often the type of work that students were asked to perform in chemistry courses. He wondered if the strategies that assisted him in his research process could help students learn abstract concepts and effectively grapple with the application of those concepts.
One of the challenges for Alisa Carse has been to balance students' acquisition of critical philosophical knowledge with demanding significant personal engagement from each student in a time-intensive community-based learning (CBL) project. In her four-credit course, Responsibility, Resilience and Self-Respect, Dr. Carse worked with the Center for Social Justice Research, Teaching and Service (CSJ) to connect each of her students to a community-based organization, where they spent at least 30 hours working on-site throughout the semester.
Prompted by the CCRP mission to raise interaction and intensity in large core curriculum courses, the Government department embarked on a mission to determine how to best engage their students in introductory courses. They began by asking questions: How do you help students take a more active role in their learning in large courses? How do you maximize opportunities for questioning and discussion?
Law professor Diana Donahoe turned to CNDLS to help her design and create an online legal writing textbook. She envisioned an immersive environment that would simulate the activities of a junior partner in a law firm. By interacting with legal texts through the application (dissecting their parts, restating their arguments, and reviewing their structures), students would develop their legal writing skills.
What is a blog? A web log, or "blog," is a web-based communication tool. Weblogs can be used as online journals or advanced discussion spaces. The blog environment available through CNDLS is based on Geeklog, an open source, widely-used blogging tool. CNDLS refined Geeklog into a tool specifically designed for classroom use, and it has worked well in a variety of courses since the spring 2004 semester.
Jennifer Swift knew her "Organic Chemistry II" students weren't intellectually engaged with the material of the course due to its formulaic series of "cookbook" four-hour experiments. While this approach kept costs low and experiments efficient, it felt impersonal and failed to promote a meaningful understanding of the actual chemistry. A CNDLS Fellowship enabled Dr. Swift to restructure her course so as to better meet her students' needs.
What is a wiki? A wiki is a web application that allows users to freely create and edit content using any web browser. A wiki is a common or shared online space that can be changed by anyone ('open editing'), most frequently used in the classroom for collaborative document editing. A wiki supports hyperlinks and has a simple text syntax for creating new pages and crosslinks between internal pages on the fly.
Dr. Cristina Sanz studies the impact of cognitive variables on third-language acquisition. Her goal was to systematize an evaluation process that would measure the effects of different treatments, particularly computer lessons. Prof. Sanz asked CNDLS for assistance with a web application that delivers a series of pre-, post-, and delayed post-tests to bilingual subjects. The application was to record student responses and to collect data for subsequent analysis.
Nina Moreno studies the impact of cognitive variables (especially the role of types of feedback) on second-language acquisition. Her goal was to implement both the instruction and evaluation phases of the research she is currently pursuing for her doctoral dissertation within a computer-assisted environment, while at the same time incorporating design elements from attentional and cognitive frameworks.
A thorough review of Second Language Acquisition research designs revealed to Ph.D. Candidate Hui-Chen Hsieh the need to examine thoroughly the role of practice in second language acquisition. She then decided to research the unanswered question of whether it is practice, feedback, or a combination of these two variables that contributes to subsequent L2 performance. In addition, she planned to integrate measurements of awareness and perception of treatment conditions into her research.
Prompted by the College Curriculum Renewal Project (CCRP), the Department of Sociology and Anthropology instituted several ambitious changes to their program in order to "to foster sociological imaginations that envision a more just society." Collaborating with CNDLS, the department has refined the various pathways through the sociology major.
When he saw his "Foundations of Mathematics" students struggling to apply formulas, Jim Sandefur wanted to know how they were using the problem-solving methods discussed in class. Ultimately, he wanted to help them think and communicate like mathematicians. CNDLS helped him implement innovative assessment techniques that involved student collaboration.
