Cornell Center for Teaching Innovation

Cornell Center for Teaching Innovation



The Center for Teaching Innovation (CTI) supports Cornell University teaching community members, from teaching assistants and postdoctoral fellows to lecturers to professors, with a full complement of individualized services, programs, institutes, and campus-wide initiatives.

For more information, visit:
teaching.cornell.edu/

Teaching Practical Statistics

Teaching Practical Statistics

What I Wish I Had Known

What I Wish I Had Known

Ethical Data Science

Ethical Data Science

Interactive Economics

Interactive Economics

Pandemics Past and Pending

Pandemics Past and Pending

Making Room for Innovation

Making Room for Innovation

Пікірлер

  • @masandivlogofficial6457
    @masandivlogofficial64572 жыл бұрын

    i am interested with your kind explanations include how you guide students to have peer discussions, and that also I have did to my students there in indonesia. i think this is very really involved strong physical for helping them stimulated an ex trim activities because i had it full started in morning to afternoon meeting in the class. thank you after i listening a way you had going with so i can understood every thing the point,

  • @sophiamanukova2721
    @sophiamanukova27214 жыл бұрын

    To keep the students wonder the teacher needs to be in constant search .

  • @threellyai6893
    @threellyai68935 жыл бұрын

    Hi chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/threelly-ai-for-youtube/dfohlnjmjiipcppekkbhbabjbnikkibo

  • @brendanh8193
    @brendanh81935 жыл бұрын

    This was fascinating. However, at around 1:11, he asks the question "Who was John the Baptist?" and indicates that it was the second person on the right. However, John the Baptist was 6 months older than the baby Jesus, so it could not be the adult second person from the right. So, the question is, how does this method of teaching perpetuate misconceptions, by creating securing arguments within a group for the wrong answer? Even if there is a teacher-led discussion after the peer discussion, the incorrect peer discussion may reinforce the misconception in a stronger manner than the correction. Has there been any research on that?

  • @veeschay
    @veeschay7 жыл бұрын

    I wish that I could've seen the Q & A after.

  • @teanaboston-mammah7648
    @teanaboston-mammah76488 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for posting this, i found it very interesting and useful and has given me plenty to think about. i teach identity politics in art academy where the majority of students are middle class white and predominantly female. I am not that. So i am looking for meaningful ways to have these kinds of conversations.

  • @gamachissakata2138
    @gamachissakata21389 жыл бұрын

    I am grateful in your deed ''Peer Instruction" I have practically realized how much it is valuable__my students in Undergraduate Quantum Mechanics and I need to go through further

  • @theanimaster
    @theanimaster9 жыл бұрын

    I don't feel safe when the lecturer says he "guesses" that something ten years ago was different than what it is today -- how does he come up with that assumption? That's a tricky path to take when trying draw any support or attention to any particular topic, especially in the academic fields.

  • @satishsinghal101
    @satishsinghal10110 жыл бұрын

    Excellent presentation by Prof. Mazur. I am a Ph. D. Software Engineering Professor. I am glad that I am doing some of the things he advocates being correct. I need to do other things that his system pioneers. A technical error I am going to point out in thermal expansion explanation should not detract from the greatness of his lecture. Error: At 44 minutes a student asks that when metal cools would metal regain original shape? [My wording may not be exact.]. Prof. Mazur says that it would. Well answer to that question is not so simple. Precise answer is that it would regain shape if deformation was only Elastic. That is why expanded rubber band snaps back to original shape. But if you heat rubber band a bit and expand it, then it may not come back to original diameter. That is because plastic deformation has occurred and a permanent increase in volume has taken place. So here is the correct answer. Metal will snap back to shape if deformation was limited to elastic form. If plastic deformation has taken place then it will not come back to its original shape.