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The First-Year Seminar: Designing, Implementing, and Assessing Courses to Support Student Learning and Success, a five-volume series, is designed to assist educators who are interested in launching a first-year seminar or revamping an existing program. Each volume examines a different aspect of first-year seminar design or administration and offers suggestions for practice grounded in research on the seminar, the literature on teaching and learning, and campus-based examples. Because national survey research suggests that the seminar exists in a variety of forms on college campuses -- and that some campuses combine one or more of these forms to create a hybrid seminar -- the series offers a ...
The first year of college represents an enormous milestone in students' lives. Whether attending a four-year or two-year institution of higher education, living on campus or at home, or enrolled in a highly selective school or a college with an open-admissions policy, students are challenged in unique and demanding ways during their first year. Although many students rise to the challenges they face, for some the demands are too great. Retention rates beyond the first year are disappointing: one third of first-year students seriously consider leaving college during their first term, and ultimately one half of all students who start college complete it. What are the factors that impact studen...
While the first-year seminar is a common fixture on many American campuses, some institutions are just beginning to explore this option while others are looking for ways to revamp an existing course. The first-year seminar: designing, implementing, and assessing courses to support student learning & success is designed to assist both efforts. Each volume examines a different aspect of first-year seminar design or administration and offers suggestions for practice grounded in research on the seminar, the literature on teaching and learning, and campus-based examples.--from book cover.
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While the first-year seminar is a common fixture on many American campuses, some institutions are just beginning to explore this option while others are looking for ways to revamp an existing course. The first-year seminar: designing, implementing, and assessing courses to support student learning & success is designed to assist both efforts. Each volume examines a different aspect of first-year seminar design or administration and offers suggestions for practice grounded in research on the seminar, the literature on teaching and learning, and campus-based examples.--from book cover.
Suggests strategies for designing and presenting a comprehensive faculty development program in support of the first-year seminar. Chapters focus on the organisation of one-shot and ongoing development efforts, content for training programs, evaluation as a development activity, and strategies for recruiting and maintaining a dedicated instructor team.
Building on the conversation begun in Volume II, Garner delves deeper into the concepts and strategies undergirding effective educational practice. Highly practical in nature, yet grounded in educational theory and research, Volume III offers a concise guide to teaching in the first-year seminar from organising a syllabus, structuring individual class sessions, and engaging students.
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