- Viewing people as rational economic agents – analyzing motivations behind people’s actions in all settings focusing on economic drivers of behavior
- Agents strive to maximize their utility – acting from the assumption that everyone makes decisions for their own good / pleasure / utility, expecting people’s actions to line up with improvements in their personal utility
- To prove something, one needs to provide tangible quantitative evidence – looking to reliable data to verify assumptions and arguments, being sceptical of judgements based on anecdotal evidence and/or biased samples Continue reading
Category Archives: Thoughts on Teaching
Ideal & Real: Learning Objectives & Outcomes
Real-life teaching
Note to self: the personal goal of an instructor would then be to minimize the ‘yellow’ zone and ensure that if there are unplanned outcomes (the ‘blue’ zone), which are always going to occur, those are positively affecting the students’ learning.
TPI: Teaching Perspectives Inventory
Teaching Perspective Inventory
Date of survey: 09/07/2016
Name of respondent: Idaliya Grigoryeva
Subject of teaching: First-year intro to human geography
Source: My scores based on the TPI test available at http://www.teachingperspectives.com/tpi/.
In my teaching I try to combine the two teaching perspectives that I find most important: transmitting knowledge and nurturing students. Transmission perspective emphasizes the importance of the subject content in teaching and learning, and the nurturing perspective assumes that effective teaching needs to engage not just the heads, but the hearts of students to achieve long-term persistent effort and commitment to learning.
Contradictory at the first glance, these two perspectives make up a perfect combination for teaching as presenting the course content goes along with employing engagement strategies to make the learning process more interesting for the students and having more long-term goals of developing and encouraging the students’ critical thinking and further learning beyond the classroom. What this translates into in practice for me is having an instructional as well as a personal development component in every discussion session I lead. This is meant to enhance the students’ understanding of the course materials and core concepts while engaging in critically thinking about the issues we discuss, sharing their personal perspectives and being able to provide arguments in support of their opinions.
Hello world!
Welcome to UBC Blogs. This is your first post. Edit or delete it, then start blogging!