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Response Journal Assignments as a Technique for Student Comprehension and Engagement Center for Teaching and Learning Symposium III April 16, 2013 Genna Reeves-DeArmond, Ph.D. School of Design and Human Environment

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Page 1: Response Journal Assignments as a Technique for Student Comprehension and Engagement Center for Teaching and Learning Symposium III April 16, 2013 Genna

Response Journal Assignments as a Technique for Student Comprehension and Engagement

Center for Teaching and Learning Symposium III April 16, 2013

Genna Reeves-DeArmond, Ph.D.School of Design and Human Environment

Page 2: Response Journal Assignments as a Technique for Student Comprehension and Engagement Center for Teaching and Learning Symposium III April 16, 2013 Genna

The Pedagogy of Response Journals

April 16, 2013

Reflective Practice and Thinking

Reflective practice is the capacity to reflect on action so as to engage in a process of continuous learning.

Reflective thinking helps you to recognize and clarify the important connections between what you already know and what you are learning.

Page 3: Response Journal Assignments as a Technique for Student Comprehension and Engagement Center for Teaching and Learning Symposium III April 16, 2013 Genna

The Pedagogy of Response Journals

April 16, 2013

"Writing is more than living. It is being conscious of living."-Ann Morrow Lindbergh (1965)

Reflective

WritingResponse

Journals

Diary

Log Book

Self Assessment

Peer Review

Page 4: Response Journal Assignments as a Technique for Student Comprehension and Engagement Center for Teaching and Learning Symposium III April 16, 2013 Genna

April 16, 2013

Reflective practice is rooted in the paradigms of phenomenologyand critical theory

http://www.open.ac.uk/cetl-workspace/cetlcontent/documents/4bf2b48887459.pdf

Page 5: Response Journal Assignments as a Technique for Student Comprehension and Engagement Center for Teaching and Learning Symposium III April 16, 2013 Genna

What is a Response Journal? Why Should I Assign a Response Journal?

April 16, 2013

*Encourages active learning

*Challenges students to take ownership of their learning in the course

*Offers continuity and flexibility in course assignments

*Challenges students to adopt new perspectives

*Encourages students to further develop a variety of critical thinking functions

*Provides a safe environment to express thoughts via a “trial-and-error” process

-Increases confidence and comfort level with material

Page 6: Response Journal Assignments as a Technique for Student Comprehension and Engagement Center for Teaching and Learning Symposium III April 16, 2013 Genna

Deciding to Use a Response Journal Assignment

April 16, 2013

1. Decide what you want the journal to be for your class. A record of responses to readings? A collection place for all class writings? Both?

2. What is the format of the journal? Informal jottings? A log? Formal short papers collected together with an introduction?

3. What is the pay off going to be for the students? That is, how will the work they put into the journal benefit them in terms of the larger class goals?

4. How do you want to incorporate the journal into class time?

http://www.writing.ku.edu/~writing/instructors/guides/documents/Teaching_Journals.pdf

Page 7: Response Journal Assignments as a Technique for Student Comprehension and Engagement Center for Teaching and Learning Symposium III April 16, 2013 Genna

“You Want Me to Do A Free-Writing Assignment!?”:Student Reactions of Fear and Anxiety to Journaling

April 16, 2013

Students are used to being given clear parameters and thinking “inside the box.”

Response journals allow students to “build the box”(i.e., individualize their learning)

ANDthink “outside the box” (i.e., discover new perspectives and information).

Page 8: Response Journal Assignments as a Technique for Student Comprehension and Engagement Center for Teaching and Learning Symposium III April 16, 2013 Genna

“You Want Me to Do A Free-Writing Assignment?!”:Getting Used to an Unstructured Assignment

April 16, 2013

Developed and created by Dr. Genna Reeves-DeArmond, Oregon State University

Page 9: Response Journal Assignments as a Technique for Student Comprehension and Engagement Center for Teaching and Learning Symposium III April 16, 2013 Genna

April 16, 2013

“You Want Me to Do A Free-Writing Assignment?!”:Helping Students Get Started with the Journaling Process

Use of Prompts

-Students receive a small amount of structure

-Assists in bringing focus to the assignment

http://www.busyteacherscafe.com/worksheets/bookmarks/readersresponsebookmark.pdf

Page 10: Response Journal Assignments as a Technique for Student Comprehension and Engagement Center for Teaching and Learning Symposium III April 16, 2013 Genna

Helping Students Get Started with the Journaling Process:Prompt Example

April 16, 2013

Developed by Dr. Genna Reeves-DeArmond, Oregon State University;Adapted from previous documents by Dr. Elaine L. Pedersen, Oregon State University

Page 11: Response Journal Assignments as a Technique for Student Comprehension and Engagement Center for Teaching and Learning Symposium III April 16, 2013 Genna

April 16, 2013

Reflective Activity #1

Take out a sheet of paper and brainstorm, write down, and discuss at your table:

- what course you would use a response journal in and your reasons for doing so.

- possible prompts that you might use in a response journal assignment for your course/discipline.

Page 12: Response Journal Assignments as a Technique for Student Comprehension and Engagement Center for Teaching and Learning Symposium III April 16, 2013 Genna

Developing Instructions for a Response Journal Assignment:My Response Journal Assignment Experience

April 16, 2013

*Why choose a response journal assignment?

EXAMPLE: Assignment initiated after I noticed that students were struggling with their comprehension of research articles

*Response Journal Content Requirements: DEFINE CLEARLY!

1. Length(Word count, paragraphs, page, etc.)

2. What constitutes a single journal entry?3. How many journal entries are required for each

submission?4. Format

(Hand-written vs. typed, text vs. visual, pencil vs. marker/pen, etc.)

5. Required topics or up to the student? Or a mixture of both?

(Required use of prompts, etc.)6. Structure and direction: What are students responding to?

Page 13: Response Journal Assignments as a Technique for Student Comprehension and Engagement Center for Teaching and Learning Symposium III April 16, 2013 Genna

April 16, 2013

EXAMPLE OF TRADITIONAL RESPONSE JOURNAL APPROACH

(TYPED, FULL-SENTENCES, ESSAY STYLE)

Page 14: Response Journal Assignments as a Technique for Student Comprehension and Engagement Center for Teaching and Learning Symposium III April 16, 2013 Genna

April 16, 2013

EXAMPLE OF RESPONSE JOURNAL USING TABLE FORMAT

(“READ AND RESPONSE FORMAT”)

Page 15: Response Journal Assignments as a Technique for Student Comprehension and Engagement Center for Teaching and Learning Symposium III April 16, 2013 Genna

April 16, 2013

EXAMPLE OF DOMINANTLY-VISUAL RESPONSE JOURNAL FORMAT

Page 16: Response Journal Assignments as a Technique for Student Comprehension and Engagement Center for Teaching and Learning Symposium III April 16, 2013 Genna

April 16, 2013

EXAMPLE OF RESPONSE JOURNAL USING MIND MAPPING APPROACH TO ORGANIZE IDEAS

Page 17: Response Journal Assignments as a Technique for Student Comprehension and Engagement Center for Teaching and Learning Symposium III April 16, 2013 Genna

“The Students Have Turned in Their Journals…Now What?”: Response Journal Grading Practices

April 16, 2013

To determine the grading criteria that will work best for you, answer the following questions:

1. Do I want to use a rubric or provide qualitative comments?

2. How many times will I collect the journals during the term?

3. What constitutes an “A-level” entry?4. What constitutes a single journal entry?5. How many journal entries are required for each

submission? 6. What is the required length of each entry? (Word count, paragraphs, page, etc.)7. How will I provide feedback?

Page 18: Response Journal Assignments as a Technique for Student Comprehension and Engagement Center for Teaching and Learning Symposium III April 16, 2013 Genna

April 16, 2013

Assessing Students Based Upon a Semantic Grading Scale in the Rubric

Developed and created by Dr. Genna Reeves-DeArmond, Oregon State University

Page 19: Response Journal Assignments as a Technique for Student Comprehension and Engagement Center for Teaching and Learning Symposium III April 16, 2013 Genna

Pedagogy Meets Practice: Self-Evaluation

April 16, 2013

*Refer to sample self-evaluation form handout

Developed by Dr. Genna Reeves-DeArmond, Oregon State University;Adapted from previous document by Dr. Leslie Burns, Oregon State University

Page 20: Response Journal Assignments as a Technique for Student Comprehension and Engagement Center for Teaching and Learning Symposium III April 16, 2013 Genna

April 16, 2013

“The Students Have Turned in Their Journals…Now What?”: Conceptual Assessment Strategy

Interpret the “big picture”: Justify, solve, conclude, etc.

Address larger implications and

make connections: Values, beliefs, etc.

Reflect on the self: personal

and past experiences

Student: Awareness of the present

CriticalThinking

ReflectiveThinking

BEGIN HERE

Adapted fromhttp://freepdfdb.com/pdf/reflective-writing-the-learning-centre-the-university-of-3999919.html

*The goal is for students to reach the highest level; this constitutes an “A” entry

Page 21: Response Journal Assignments as a Technique for Student Comprehension and Engagement Center for Teaching and Learning Symposium III April 16, 2013 Genna

This is How I Conceptualize the Movement from Reflective Thinking to Critical Thinking for My Students:

April 16, 2013

*A description of each of these critical thinking functions is given to the students at the start of the term and then modeled/practiced in class.

Page 22: Response Journal Assignments as a Technique for Student Comprehension and Engagement Center for Teaching and Learning Symposium III April 16, 2013 Genna

Assessing Students Based Upon a Classification System in the Rubric

April 16, 2013

Self-Directed Responder (90-100%)

Maturing Responder (80-89%)

Emerging Responder(70-79%)

Novice Responder(60-69%)

Unsatisfactory Responder: Students earning below 60% need additional

help

*Refer to sample rubric handout

http://www.docstoc.com/docs/8012379/Reading-Response-Journal-Rubric---PDF

Page 23: Response Journal Assignments as a Technique for Student Comprehension and Engagement Center for Teaching and Learning Symposium III April 16, 2013 Genna

April 16, 2013

Assessing Students Based Upon a Classification System in the Rubric (see Classification System in Previous Slide)

Developed and created by Dr. Genna Reeves-DeArmond, Oregon State University

Page 24: Response Journal Assignments as a Technique for Student Comprehension and Engagement Center for Teaching and Learning Symposium III April 16, 2013 Genna

April 16, 2013

Reflective Activity #2

Take out a sheet of paper and, over the next three minutes, brainstorm and write down the grading criteria that you would put in place for your response journal assignment.

Would you use a checklist, rubric, semantic scale, etc.?

Page 25: Response Journal Assignments as a Technique for Student Comprehension and Engagement Center for Teaching and Learning Symposium III April 16, 2013 Genna

Benefit for Instructor:Simultaneously Engaged in Reflective Practice with Students

April 16, 2013

Read student journals

Provide feedback to

students

Reflect and make

teaching decision

Page 26: Response Journal Assignments as a Technique for Student Comprehension and Engagement Center for Teaching and Learning Symposium III April 16, 2013 Genna

Response Journal Resources

April 16, 2013

Page 27: Response Journal Assignments as a Technique for Student Comprehension and Engagement Center for Teaching and Learning Symposium III April 16, 2013 Genna

April 16, 2013

Thank you for your attendance and participation!

As you move forward, consider the following questions:

What are the differences between response journals in the sciences and the humanities? How do we maintain the educational value of response journals across disciplines?