Celebrate Learning! Spring 2013 (Volume 4, Issue 2) | Page 2

Spotlight: Associate Professor Lynnda Brown answered a call for proposals as a QM (Quality Matters) Model Course with her Business Communications course. Lynnda’s course was chosen as an example of best practice and is representative of meeting the standards for QM. This is a great honor for Professor Brown and TCC!! TCC will receive recognition and compensation for hosting QM students to Blackboard and Prof. Brown’s course. For the next three years, faculty and administrators from across the nation will be logging in to TCC’s Blackboard site to see an example of how Quality Matters standards are applied bringing TCC recognition as an institution that provides quality online education. Congratulations Lynnda! 2 mesters now, I’ve had my students create surveys. Research questions have included how much do people know about plastic pollution? how do people asjects. Growing a research program resess the relationship between IQ and college success? quires an investment of time, energy, and And, this semester, how much water do Oklahomans funds, so it is important for the college to use? As part of the experience, students use the Interremove obstacles that keep faculty from net to research survey designs; they learn language participating in research and to recognize like demographics, aggregate and disaggregate, likert faculty members who innovate in this area. scale, open and closed questions. They implement Collegial and collaborative support among their surveys, using broad demographics. After, they the faculty members involved should be use Excel to aggregate data and look for trends. At the encouraged also. Spr ead the word that end of the process, survey data are included in group “Research IS teaching!” projects and in argumentative essays. This semester, Embrace curiosity-driven learnwe plan to create a blog on water as a global issue. ing…give your students an opportunity to But that’s not the best part of the story. The play…and learn deeply… today! best part of the story is what happened a few weeks ago. When my Honors Composition II class finished their survey, Jackie Swicegood, WC associate professor of mathematics, offered to have her Elementary StatisBy: Lyndel Penn Colglazier tics pilot the survey. Her class had already created their own survey for implementation, but this would I am not a scientist, but I love scibe a new challenge: analyzing the effectiveness of a ence. And I have enough passing survey based on the design parameters they had knowledge to make some sense of research learned in class. and scientific studies—even if it takes me a bit to process charts and graphs. My students accepted the offer of a pilot for their survey, though truthfully, they probably got more For good or ill, our lives are bound than they bargained for. Given the chance, students to the discoveries of science. So it’s been can be the harshest of critics, and Jackie’s students since the Age of Enlightenment. Though relished the task. As a result, my students spent over initially, as these discoveries edged out an hour going over their newly annotated surveys, religion as a way of explaining the natural culling and reviewing feedback, collaborating and world, science enamored the layperson as making judgments, revising questions, reorganizing much as the professional. Everybody items, changing language—getting a serious lesson in wanted a big discovery—much like educadiction and precision. Their survey is better as a result tors today. And for good reason, the paof Jackie’s class and the ensuing revisions; my stutient needs a cure. dents’ commitment and investment in the survey’s Unfortunately, too many Amerioutcome, far more intense. cans have no way to reconcile what they But before my students got their revisions, on hear from science. Butter’s good; then, it’s the other side of the campus, watching her students bad. Margarine’s better. Then, it’s bad. vet my class’s survey, Jackie had one of those marvelCoffee’s good; then it’s not. Drink wine; ous moments: seeing her students apply their learning. don’t you dare. Maybe red. Maybe white. Having completed their course work on surveys and OMG: You drank too much. moved on to other curriculum topics, Jackie’s students I don’t teach science and I’m terri- were called back to the survey curriculum previously ble at math. Still, I see how important it is covered—to cover it again with gusto, working for students to acquire some fluency in the knowledge, and applied skills—for a composition class realm of data and research. A few of my two buildings away. students will become scientists—too few, On Wednesday, I went to Jackie’s office to pick actually, but that’s another topic. Most will up my students’ now heavily annotated documents. not. Nonetheless, students today, and tomorrow, will be consumers of scientific “It was so exciting,” Jackie beamed, green eyes flashing, data—literally and figuratively—data ofher face lit with joy. “I was so proud watching my stuten used for both honorable and horrific dents.” ends. “Me, too,” I told her later, having had my own marvelWhen undergraduate research ous moment. “Me, too.” buzzed by, I snagged the notion—even as a When education experts talk about the need composition instructor. For several se(Continued from page 1) Underground Research