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If You are Using One Teaching Technology In your Class, It Should be Clickers

Professional Development Opportunity
April 11, 12:00 - 1:30 PM
Searle Center Library.
Hosted by Searle Center Graduate and Postdoctoral Learning. 

Registration is free, but required. 

Description: Clickers, which go by more formal names like Audience Response Systems (ARS), have both supporters and detractors among faculty and students. A strong supporter will lead this workshop and discuss the several benefits of clickers for both the instructor and the class, and what the detractors are missing. They will provide some practical ideas for using clickers, and participants will write at least one clicker question.

*This workshop is part of CIRTL at Northwestern which strives to advance learning in the STEM disciplines by providing professional development programs for graduate students and postdoctoral fellows. Create a CIRTL Network Account 

Workshop Facilitators:

Professor Robert Linsenmeier is the Institutional co-leader of CIRTL at Northwestern. He has appointments in Biomedical Engineering (McCormick School of Engineering and Applied Science) and Neurobiology (Weinberg College of Arts and Sciences) and a secondary appointment in Ophthalmology. Part of his research is in retinal physiology, particularly related to oxygen transport and the microenvironment, and part is in engineering education. 

Dr. Suzanne Olds is Assistant Chair of the Biomedical Engineering Department at Northwestern University and Chair of the Undergraduate Program. She has been active in engineering education and has used clickers in the classroom for over 15 years.

Categories: Broad Interest