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CIS Professional Development CIS requires teachers to participate in CIS discipline‐specific workshops and webinars for as long as they teach in the UMTC‐CIS program. Led by University of Minnesota faculty, CIS teacher workshops and webinars address the content, pedagogy, and student assessment issues related to the University of Minnesota course they are teaching. A sampling of activities includes: Studying literary theories and critical lenses such as deconstructionism, ecocriticism , and feminism; Hearing from UM history faculty about their research and the strategies and resources they use in their on‐campus courses; Discussing current nonfiction books addressing critical issues in contemporary or historical American political life; Learning to use databases and technology tools used in the anatomy and physiology class on campus. Reviewing student work, developing or modifying grading rubrics, and discussing effective feedback on student writing in courses other than English courses. In 2011-12, CIS provided each teacher an average of nearly 23 hours of workshop‐based, discipline-specific professional development (teachers new to CIS received 8 - 36 additional hours). In addition, University faculty coordinators observe CIS teachers in the classroom and provide feedback from this process. Teachers describe their experience in the CIS workshops with enthusiasm: CIS is the only staff development I am offered (in my district) that has truly allowed me to grow in my academic field. The exchange of knowledge is phenomenal. CIS has broadened my knowledge of English literature beyond what I studied in college. It has challenged me and allowed me to be the best that I can be for my students. I am stimulated as a teacher and reinvigorated.” The requirement that teachers attend CIS workshops and webinars is one of the primary means the program uses to ensure that content and instruction in CIS classes meet University standards. While other Minnesota concurrent enrollment programs require a master’s degree in the discipline as a means of ensuring quality instruction, CIS chooses to ensure University quality by providing teachers with ongoing professional development and support. Workshops and webinars keep CIS teachers up to date with changes in the U of M course as well as in the discipline itself. CIS teacher cohorts become vital learning communities that enhance not just CIS courses, but all the courses CIS teachers conduct. The sample workshop agendas that follow illustrate the quality of staff development provided to teachers through CIS.
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CIS Professional Development - UMN CCAPSCIS Professional Development CIS requires teachers to participate in CIS discipline‐specific workshops and webinars for as long as they teach

Jul 15, 2020

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Page 1: CIS Professional Development - UMN CCAPSCIS Professional Development CIS requires teachers to participate in CIS discipline‐specific workshops and webinars for as long as they teach

CIS Professional Development CIS requires teachers to participate in CIS discipline‐specific workshops and webinars for as long as they teach in the UMTC‐CIS program. Led by University of Minnesota faculty, CIS teacher workshops and webinars address the content, pedagogy, and student assessment issues related to the University of Minnesota course they are teaching. A sampling of activities includes:

Studying literary theories and critical lenses such as deconstructionism, ecocriticism , and feminism;

Hearing from UM history faculty about their research and the strategies and resources they use in their on‐campus courses;

Discussing current nonfiction books addressing critical issues in contemporary or historical American political life;

Learning to use databases and technology tools used in the anatomy and physiology class on campus.

Reviewing student work, developing or modifying grading rubrics, and discussing effective feedback on student writing – in courses other than English courses.

In 2011-12, CIS provided each teacher an average of nearly 23 hours of workshop‐based, discipline-specific professional development (teachers new to CIS received 8 - 36 additional hours). In addition, University faculty coordinators observe CIS teachers in the classroom and provide feedback from this process. Teachers describe their experience in the CIS workshops with enthusiasm:

“CIS is the only staff development I am offered (in my district) that has truly allowed me to grow in my academic field. The exchange of knowledge is phenomenal.” “CIS has broadened my knowledge of English literature beyond what I studied in college. It has challenged me and allowed me to be the best that I can be for my students. I am stimulated as a teacher and reinvigorated.”

The requirement that teachers attend CIS workshops and webinars is one of the primary means the program uses to ensure that content and instruction in CIS classes meet University standards. While other Minnesota concurrent enrollment programs require a master’s degree in the discipline as a means of ensuring quality instruction, CIS chooses to ensure University quality by providing teachers with ongoing professional development and support. Workshops and webinars keep CIS teachers up to date with changes in the U of M course as well as in the discipline itself. CIS teacher cohorts become vital learning communities that enhance not just CIS courses, but all the courses CIS teachers conduct. The sample workshop agendas that follow illustrate the quality of staff development provided to teachers through CIS.

Page 2: CIS Professional Development - UMN CCAPSCIS Professional Development CIS requires teachers to participate in CIS discipline‐specific workshops and webinars for as long as they teach

Updated 1/2012

CIS WRITING STUDIO NEW TEACHER WORKSHOP JUNE 21, 2011

Understanding the Context for the CIS Writing Studio Course

What is College in the Schools?

o CIS video

How is WRIT 1201: Writing Studio different from WRIT 1301: University Writing

o 1201 vs. 1301

What is the Department of Postsecondary Teaching and Learning?

o mission statement

What is the Entry Point Project and how are its courses different from other CIS

courses?

o Universal Instructional Design

How is CIS Writing Studio designed to fulfill Entry Point Project goals?

Interactive pedagogy

o Sample discussion prompts and small-group assignments

o Survey comments on working with classmates, breaking down barriers

Practice coupled with feedback

o Peer review protocols

o Teacher feedback protocols

o Survey comments on importance of feedback from teacher

Critical reflection on learning

o Sharon Ornelas’ action research project: building students’ ability to self-assess

o Irondale photos

o Survey comments on understanding what it means to be a college student

Encouraging “writing that matters”

What matters to us? What would we change if we could? (Lee and Gallagher 62)

What matters to students?

Following one strand in Barbara’s Fall 2006 class:

Writing about harassment and name-calling, using articles from Rethinking Schools

o Pre-reading discussions that prompt writing used in essays

o Post-reading exercises that prompt writing used in essays

o The skeleton of Sysouda’s Paper 3: Planning, elaborating, discovering an

argument

o Sysouda’s skeleton compared with Maivue’s: Could Maivue have discovered an

argument?

o Transitioning from Paper 3 to Paper 4: How are earlier topics recycled?

o Who really benefits from the Writing Studio course? How would you assess

Sysouda’s need for the course? Maivue’s need for the course? What issues do you

struggle with in selecting students?

Page 3: CIS Professional Development - UMN CCAPSCIS Professional Development CIS requires teachers to participate in CIS discipline‐specific workshops and webinars for as long as they teach

CIS Anatomy and Physiology Summer 2011 Teacher Workshop New and Returning Teachers Monday July 25

8:30 Coffee and polite happy conversation

9:00 Introduction of new folks -- and introductions of everyone

9:45 Coop quiz -- yes, you're still expected to do one coop quiz per week next year

10:30 POGIL introduction -- process skills -- big overview of the project Develop one "model" for an introduction to homeostasis. 5 or 6 groups will independently develop an activity, and we'll have a Darwinian like competition to see what happens ...

1:00 David Parkin and Ron Gerrits -- guest speakers ...

2:30 Coop Quiz #3 of the day ..

3:00 Judging "homeostasis" activity -- who has the best activity?

POGIL Workshop for Human Anatomy and Physiology Tuesday July 26

8:30 Introduction to POGIL Pedagogy - lead by Patrick

12:00 Lunch (NSF Group meets to discuss long term planning)

1:00 Writing Intro / Session I - 100 minutes estimate (Murray or Patrick Leads)

3:00 Break and Curriculum Group Brainstorming (Large Post It Notes)

4:00 Report Out – What concepts make for a good POGIL activity

4:30 Adjourn

Wednesday July 27 8:30 Writing Session 2 - Intermediate Writing (Lead by Murray or Patrick)

10:00 Writing teams begin developing learning goals.

11:00 Speed “dating” – 2 People at poster / 2 people “roam”

12:00 Lunch - (NSF Group meets to discuss accounting - evaluation)

1:00 Writing groups work on learning objects

4:00 or 4:30 First draft of activity due (Copies made for start of next day)

Thursday July 28

8:30 Writing Activity #3 / Advanced Writing (focuses on feedback)

10:15 Feedback rubrics

11:00 Using rubrics, review other group’s activities

12:00 Lunch (NSF group meets to discuss evaluation)

1:00 Revise activities

2:30 Share / present activities

4:00 Submit files – Wrap Up

Friday July 29

8:30 Coffee and happy polite conversation

9:00 Debrief -- POGIL workshop

9:30 Review POGIL activities .. review feedback forms -- process for providing feedback

12:00 Go to Appleby Hall. Use computers in biology lab; work on Moodle documents; update our files

Afternoon on Friday -- individual meetings with Murray and Allison

Page 4: CIS Professional Development - UMN CCAPSCIS Professional Development CIS requires teachers to participate in CIS discipline‐specific workshops and webinars for as long as they teach

CIS Animal Science, AnSc 1101

New CIS Teachers Summer Workshop

Tuesday and Wednesday; June 14 and 15, 2009, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Agenda

Welcome and introductions Syllabus for AnSc 1101 Course outline

Fulfilling the laboratory requirements of the course Materials needed. CIS announcements – Julie Williams

Use of WebCT Methods of class presentation.

Go over lecture materials Tour of St. Paul Campus – AnSc facilities. Discuss AnSc major at the “U” – trends, future, careers

New and Veteran Teachers Summer Workshop

Monday and Tuesday – June 20 and 21, 2011

Monday 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Welcome and Introductions

Announcements relative to CIS – Julie Williams, College in the Schools Teaching schedule for next year – student registration and WebCT access

Discussion of grades and common final exam questions Sharing of materials developed, things that worked and did not work –

lectures, labs

Plans for field trips to campus next year Update lecture material developed in the past year – companion animal and

reproduction Set dates for Student Campus Workshops, Webinars, and Summer 2012

workshops. Tuesday 7:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.:

We will be leaving in a van from Haecker Hall on a field trip to Animal Enterprises.

Miscellaneous:

Dress is casual.

Coffee and snacks will be available at 9 a.m. for the campus sessions. Lunch will be on your own (45 minutes). You can eat at the student center,

across the street or bring your own.

Page 5: CIS Professional Development - UMN CCAPSCIS Professional Development CIS requires teachers to participate in CIS discipline‐specific workshops and webinars for as long as they teach

HISTORY CIS SUMMER AGENDA

Monday June 20, 2011 8:30 am-8:40 am: Welcome and Announcements 8:40 am-9:25 am: 1307/1308 Course Objectives & Skills Sets 9:30 am-11:30 am: Kate Peterson, Library Resources Workshop Wilson S30-C 11:30 am-12:15 pm: Lunch 12:15 pm-2:20 pm: Discussion: Common Assignment 2:30 pm-4:00 pm: Guest Speaker: Kirsten Fischer, Associate Professor University of

Minnesota History Department “Religion and the Founders”

Tuesday June 21, 2011 8:30 am-9:45 am: Workshop Session, Wilson S30-C 10:00 am-11:30 am: Guest Speaker: Evan Roberts, Assistant Professor

University of Minnesota History Department “Sex, Love, Contraception and Population in 20th Century U.S.”

11:30 am-12:15 pm: Lunch 12:15 pm-2:00 pm: Student Assessment 2:10 pm-3:15 pm: Discussion: Syllabi 3:15 pm-3:45 pm: Wrap-Up Discussion: Common Assignments 3:45 pm-4:00 pm: Closing Remarks

Page 6: CIS Professional Development - UMN CCAPSCIS Professional Development CIS requires teachers to participate in CIS discipline‐specific workshops and webinars for as long as they teach

COLLEGE IN THE SCHOOLS SPANISH

NEW CIS INSTRUCTORS

Friday August 19, 2011

9:15 Introductions: (background, why transition to CIS? Distribute new instructor packet.)

9:30 Introduction to Spanish 1003-04 Program at the U of MN (Text and all its components,

special features of Conexiones, online features, cds etc)

10:00 Break

10:15 View online activities for Conexiones http://www.pearsonhighered.com/conexiones/

View Online Workbook My Spanish Lab http://www.myspanishlab.com/

View the online archive MOODLE

11:00 What does the 1003 /1004 Program look like at the U

(Syllabi and Orientation Packet: what are grades based on; explanation of the mesa

redonda, homework, oral interview, contexualized activities, oral presentations etc.)

12:00 Lunch (there are many good places to eat in Dinkytown)

1:00 Differences between 1003 and 1004- how this translates into CIS

2:00 Adjourn

AUGUST 22, 2011

NEW AND RETURNING TEACHERS

9:05 Introduction of all new and returning instructors.

9:20 Cristina Castro (1004) David Jons (1003). Presentations of 4th edition exams for 1003,1004 Exams. What has been created, themes, etc. How exams have been laid out. Divide into 1003 and 1004 sections: (all look at new, 4th ed exams) 1003 exams. With Angela and David- Reviewing the exams, making corrections, taking exams etc. 1004 edition exams. Groups assigned for each exam. Work with Cristina and Susan on reviewing. exchange exams with other groups to take as if they were students

11:15 Handing out Assignments for Mon afternoon/ Tuesday- Preparation of a more difficult

lesson; presenting in a contextualized, engaging, and meaningful way (some presented today, some tomorrow)

12:00 Lunch

Page 7: CIS Professional Development - UMN CCAPSCIS Professional Development CIS requires teachers to participate in CIS discipline‐specific workshops and webinars for as long as they teach

1:15 Susan and Cristina: Field Day/ Workshop Issues (see below) and any other

announcements.

• Establish dates for Fall Field Day and Fall / Spring Workshop/Test correction

• Elect Course Advisory Board Members

• Topics: interview policy of instructors. 3015 issues: accessibility (course abroad?); OPI completion and enforcement. Comments about visits to classes; use of worksheets.

1:45 Presentation of more challenging lessons- Break into 1003/1004 groups 3:00 Adjourn

Returning instructors: Please come ready to PRESENT your successful lesson tomorrow.

AUGUST 23, 2011

NEW AND RETURNING TEACHERS

9:00 Coffee

9:15 Announcements

9:30 Consistency in Grading (Grading Mesa Redondas, Oral exams, chapter exams)

10:30- 10:45 Break

11-11:45 Kate Clements. University Language Center; The Tandem Program. Kate’s talk will focus on the 3 different Tandem aspects -- face-to-face exchanges, class-to-class, and also the new Skype exchanges, for which she’s overhauled the Tandem registration site.

11:45 Lunch

1:00 Joanne Peltonen; LPE Testing and Proficiency Questions Specific to 1003 or 1004 Cristina and Angela will field these questions here

1:30 Presentation of other challenging lessons 2:15 Review syllabi in small groups. Pair up according to schedules.

Wording of syllabus to curb cheating and aid in enforcement of UMN policy. Suggestions from returning instructors on both syllabi questions and wording.

3:00 Adjourn