Teaching Strategies and Techniques

Tips from the Pros: Use of Copyrighted Video

During a recent Magna Online Seminar, Linda Enghagen, an attorney and professor in the Isenberg School of Management at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, responded to two commonly asked questions about use of copyrighted videos in online courses.

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Getting Students to Do the Reading

Getting students to do their assigned reading is a struggle. Most teachers don’t need anyone to tell them what the research pretty consistently reports. On any given day, only 20 to 30 percent of the students arrive at class having done the reading. Faculty are

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Use Team Charters to Improve Group Assignments

A recent and excellent article that proposes a model for “building teams that learn” recommends that teachers have students develop a team charter early in their interaction. “Completing a team charter encourages team members to set goals and discuss how they will work together; it

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Quieting the Little Voice

For the past several semesters I’ve have had students in my border community college classes who are part of our grant-funded migrant student program, known as CAMP. These students are usually first-generation college students. Their parents work in the fields from dawn until dusk, and

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Helping Students Who Are Performing Poorly

Unfortunately, all too often performance on the first exam predicts performance throughout the course, especially for those students who do poorly on the first test. Faculty and institutions provide an array of supports for these students, including review sessions, time with tutors, more practice problems,

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Inquiry-Based Instruction: Learning How to Teach It

For many of us, learning to teach in a different way is a long and not always easy journey. Old habits die hard. Moreover, most of us are not particularly well-prepared to confront the task. We have copious amounts of content knowledge but lack great

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Nudge: Improving Student Decisions to Increase their Academic Success

Much research documents that motivation is a major factor in student success. However, although students often know what they should do (attend class, do extra credit, and get help), many of them don’t. Thaler and Sunstein’s popular book Nudge: Improving Decisions about Health, Wealth, and

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During a recent Magna Online Seminar, Linda Enghagen, an attorney and professor in the Isenberg School of Management at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, responded to two commonly asked questions about use of copyrighted videos in online courses. Is it ever permissible to stream a video in a distance education course that is not owned by the institution? “Based on the current state of the law, the answer is no with one possible exception. The possible exception is when the institution does not own the video but has permission from the copyright holder to stream the video. Because it is lawful to show a video not owned by the institution in a face-to-face course, many people find this frustrating or counterintuitive. Nevertheless, it is one of those rules that is in the law.” Can I embed YouTube videos in an online course? “Assuming the videos were lawfully posted by the copyright holder or someone else authorized by the copyright owner, it is usually OK. However, you have to make a judgment about that, and if it doesn't pass the smell test, don't link to it and don't send your students to it. You run the risk of having committed a type of copyright infringement called contributory copyright infringement. Essentially that refers to situations in which you do not commit the direct infringement but take advantage of it when someone else did—and you knew or should have realized that.”