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dc.contributor.authorMroz, Michael D.en_US
dc.contributor.authorScarborough, Vernon L.en_US
dc.contributor.authorScheunemann, Annen_US
dc.contributor.authorSmith, C. Mikeen_US
dc.contributor.authorTulloch, Scotten_US
dc.contributor.authorWeiner, Cherylen_US
dc.date.accessioned2023-07-18T16:59:49Z
dc.date.available2023-07-18T16:59:49Z
dc.date.issued2023
dc.identifier.citationIMPACT 12(1), Summer 2023. Boston University College of General Studies
dc.identifier.isbn10-0615582478
dc.identifier.isbn13-978-0-615-58247-4
dc.identifier.issn2325-0232
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/2144/46460
dc.description.abstractThe essays in this issue explore how to enhance teaching and student learning in the classroom. Our first contributor argues that providing students the opportunity to write questions about course material is a fruitful way to address students’ reticence about asking questions during class and also may result in students performing better on testable material. Moreover, instructors benefit from having students’ questions because the written questions can also be used by the instructor to know better what students are and are not understanding about course material and alerts instructors to where they can further explain or clarify course material. Finally, our first contributor also suggests that students in interdisciplinary classrooms might especially benefit from writing their questions, while instructors of interdisciplinary courses may find the flexibility with using technology to address the written questions in “real time” via the use of technology especially beneficial. In our second contribution, the author argues that pre-service teachers’ educational curriculum should address the academic literature that links poor musical-rhythmic tendencies with reading struggles for reading learners. The author also argues that the rhythm-reading connection is applicable to interdisciplinary educators because it asks those educators to reflect on possible connections between the body and the acquisition of skills that are usually considered purely intellectual. Our Impact book reviewers cover a varied set of interesting and important topics in this issue. One reviewer informs readers about a handbook on community psychology that prioritizes applied and interdisciplinary work; another reviewer details an author’s synthesis of what contemporary archaeology has now come to understand about Maya civilization’s resilient and complex society through time and within their varied mosaic of managed environments; a different reviewer delves into an author’s exploration of how digital media platforms generate novel opportunities for sufferers of trauma to make sense of their experience, and our final reviewer details an author’s accounting of the history, origins, and evolution of the Camp Fire Girls, one of America’s longest-serving girls’ youth movements, its impact on girls’ lives, and how the organization adapted to and resisted dominant ideologies about girls, culture, and race across time.en_US
dc.language.isoen_US
dc.publisherBoston University College of General Studiesen_US
dc.relation.ispartofseriesIMPACT;v. 12 n. 1
dc.rightsCopyright © 2023 by the College of General Studies, Boston University. Impact provides free and open access to all of its research publications. There is no charge to authors for publication, and the journal abides by a CC-BY license. Authors published in Impact retain copyright on their articles, except for any third-party images and other materials added by Impact, which are subject to copyright of their respective owners. Authors are therefore free to disseminate and re-publish their articles, subject to any requirements of third-party copyright owners and subject to the original publication being fully cited. Visitors may download and forward articles subject to the citation requirements; all copyright notices must be displayed.en_US
dc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
dc.subjectEnhance teaching and student learning in the classroomen_US
dc.subjectTeachers educational curriculumen_US
dc.subjectInterdisciplinary worken_US
dc.subjectPsychologyen_US
dc.titleIMPACT: The Journal of the Center for Interdisciplinary Teaching and Learning. Volume 12, Issue 1, Summer 2023en_US
dc.typeOtheren_US


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Copyright © 2023 by the College of General Studies, Boston University. Impact provides free and open access to all of its research publications. There is no charge to authors for publication, and the journal abides by a CC-BY license. Authors published in Impact retain copyright on their articles, except for any third-party images and other materials added by Impact, which are subject to copyright of their respective owners. Authors are therefore free to disseminate and re-publish their articles, subject to any requirements of third-party copyright owners and subject to the original publication being fully cited. Visitors may download and forward articles subject to the citation requirements; all copyright notices must be displayed.
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as Copyright © 2023 by the College of General Studies, Boston University. Impact provides free and open access to all of its research publications. There is no charge to authors for publication, and the journal abides by a CC-BY license. Authors published in Impact retain copyright on their articles, except for any third-party images and other materials added by Impact, which are subject to copyright of their respective owners. Authors are therefore free to disseminate and re-publish their articles, subject to any requirements of third-party copyright owners and subject to the original publication being fully cited. Visitors may download and forward articles subject to the citation requirements; all copyright notices must be displayed.