What is Chunking and Why is it Important? Academically speaking, chunking is essentially the breaking down and selective grouping of the content you want your students to learn. OK, but why is that ...
Each school day, millions of students move in unison from classroom to classroom where they listen to 50- to 90-minute lectures. Despite there being anywhere from 20 to 300 humans in the room, there ...
After suffering a traumatic brain injury six years ago, Christina Beck, a senior at New York University, had to adjust to a whole new reality. This included learning how to cope with memory loss, ...
Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook Faculty Senate members gathered for senate assembly at the Ruthven G. Building Monday afternoon.
James Nowick has got the world on a screen. He’s logged into a big map of the planet and is cross-referencing it with a YouTube list of the top countries in which people have viewed one of his online ...
Take a 60-minute lecture. Cut the excess verbiage, do away with most of the details, and pare it down to key concepts and themes. What’s left? A “microlecture” over in as few as 60 seconds. A course ...
Why we are excited: Vaccines have been a very hot topic in both human and animal medicine, meaning clients are most likely going to be coming into clinics with questions for veterinary teams. By ...
Traditional lectures have long been a foundation of higher education, but it can be challenging to keep students engaged with this conventional format. With the modern prevalence of online education ...
Lectures remain by far the most common form of teaching in universities - right down to the way academics are called "lecturers". But many predicted that digital technology would have killed off the ...
More than two thirds of university students still have at least some of their lectures online despite the pandemic being over, a new report has found. A survey of 10,300 students by the Higher ...