CONTACT INFO
The course meets on five Tuesdays (see schedule
below), from 3:40 - 5:30, in Smith Hall 407. The instructor is Professor
JW Harrington, whose office is in 408 Smith Hall, and who can be reached
with an e-mail to jwh@u.washington.edu
(to ask a question or arrange a meeting).
OBJECTIVES
The course objectives are to:
There is one required textbook/resource: Tools for Teaching by Barbara Gross Davis (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass Publishers, 1993. We will explicitly read and discuss seven of the twelve sections of this book; I have found all the sections (and constituent chapters) to be useful. I've placed two copies of the book on the "will call" shelf in the Department office, 408 Smith Hall. In addition, several graduate students in the Department have copies.
Because this course is required annually for graduate teaching assistants in Geography, I've developed two alternative assignments for Geography TAs who have taken the classroom version of Geography 599 at least twice before this year (and who have served as TA for at least two quarters):
GRADING
This one-credit course is graded with only "Credit" or "No Credit."
Course credit will be given to any registered student who attends all of
the scheduled meetings (with some possibility of prior excuse of one session),
or who completes one of the alternative assignments above.
Tuesday 8 October
In the
Classroom and in the Office
Davis: Section III (pages 63-95) and Chapters 44 &
45
Classroom
challenges in the aftermath of the September 11th attacks
Tuesday 15 October
Lecture
Fundamentals; Motivating Students
Davis: Chapters 13 & 14 and Section VI (pages 177-203)
Tuesday 22 October
Assessing Student Learning: Testing
and Grading
Davis: Section VIII (pages 239-311); also see the UW
guidelines on grading and academic dishonesty
>>> direct
link to "academic dishonesty"
Tuesday 29 October
The Scholarship of Teaching: Gathering
and Evaluating Information on Your Teaching
Davis: Section X (pages 345-366) and Chapter 48
Tuesday 3 December
Assessments of In-Class Practice