This page includes selected materials from the brilliant creators of UC Berkeley's teaching workshop, adoptions from friend-colleagues, and essays from a handful of others who have mastered aspects of this art -- nearly none is my own.
Building inclusive classrooms
Dummy text is text that is used in the publishing industry or by web designers to occupy the space which will later be filled with 'real' content. This is required when, for example, the final text is not yet available. Dummy text is also known as 'fill text'. It is said that song composers of the past used dummy texts as lyrics when writing melodies in order to have a 'ready-made' text to sing with the melody.
ESSAYS
Encouraging participation by productive failure
Encouraging participation
TEMPLATES
Best practices for creating inclusive classrooms
Fostering inclusion in our teaching (podcast)
Recognizing and interrupting microaggressions
Addressing your own microaggression
Lesson planning
Dummy text is text that is used in the publishing industry or by web designers to occupy the space which will later be filled with 'real' content. This is required when, for example, the final text is not yet available. Dummy text is also known as 'fill text'. It is said that song composers of the past used dummy texts as lyrics when writing melodies in order to have a 'ready-made' text to sing with the melody.
Pre-semester checklist
Pre-course survey
Syllabus template
Lesson plan template
Creating activities
Teaching for remote learning
Dummy text is text that is used in the publishing industry or by web designers to occupy the space which will later be filled with 'real' content. This is required when, for example, the final text is not yet available. Dummy text is also known as 'fill text'. It is said that song composers of the past used dummy texts as lyrics when writing melodies in order to have a 'ready-made' text to sing with the melody.
Beating zoom fatigue
Collecting feedback
Dummy text is text that is used in the publishing industry or by web designers to occupy the space which will later be filled with 'real' content. This is required when, for example, the final text is not yet available. Dummy text is also known as 'fill text'. It is said that song composers of the past used dummy texts as lyrics when writing melodies in order to have a 'ready-made' text to sing with the melody.