2. I am an Assistant Professor of Chemical Education
at California State University – Fullerton (CSUF),
and I started in August of 2010. I earned my
bachelor’s degrees in Brain and Cognitive Science
and also Chemistry from the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology (MIT) in 2005. I then
earned my PhD in Chemistry from the University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (UIUC) in May of
2010 under the tutelage of Prof. Jeffrey Moore.
My research focuses on organic chemical
education, specifically how to use technology to
improve student learning in organic chemistry. I
am researching the effectiveness of online
homework, cognitive load, attention, motivation,
and adaptive learning strategies. I’m currently
teaching first and second semester organic
chemistry at CSUF using a blended approach in a
flipped classroom, and students have welcomed
the extra problem-solving practice they receive
during face-to-face meetings.
3. Reports can be used many times for different
purposes
Office hours
Emails
Informing Lectures (Just-in-Time teaching)
Designing Exams
Others you may discover!
4. At-Risk Student Report:
Identifies Student Engagement
Allows for early intervention
I used it early and often, and it seemed my students listened!
8. LearnSmart
Reports
Instructor - all reports
useful throughout the
semester to:
monitor progress
improve teaching
communicate with
students
Student - personalized
reports available to:
help identify holes in their
knowledge
provide remediation and
additional practice
13. Metacognitive Skills Report
Shows LearnSmart performance broken down by student’s awareness of their knowledge (as
measured by the confidence prompt before every LearnSmart item)
Ideally, students will have high %s in the Correct & aware column;
Moderate %s in the Incorrect & aware column paired with low %s in the unaware columns
means students are at least aware of the holes in their knowledge
Moderate and high %s in either or both of the unaware columns means students are
guessing a lot, and are likely not taking their assignment seriously.
14. Click here to watch this recorded
presentation.
Thank you!