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Title
The Innovative Instructor
Category
general
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cc2b1709ad71400bb977a10d444c4f02
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https://ii.library.jhu.edu/2025/04/29/faculty-sharing-session-best-practices-in-...
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https://ctei.jhu.edu/blog-feed/faculty-sharing-session-best-practices-in-course-...
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2026-03-23T08:00:47+00:00
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The Innovative Instructor

Source: https://ii.library.jhu.edu/2025/04/29/faculty-sharing-session-best-practices-in-course-design/ Parent: https://ctei.jhu.edu/blog-feed/faculty-sharing-session-best-practices-in-course-design/

Four Johns Hopkins faculty recently attended the National Effective Teaching Institute workshop.  At a Center for Teaching Excellence and Innovation discussion this spring, each faculty member shared lessons learned as they presented a quick overview of a main topic in the workshop.

Student Motivation

Liz Walker, a lecturer in the Center for Leadership Education, shared that the workshop began with discussion of student motivation as a spectrum based on the article, Investigating the motivational behavior of pupils during outdoor science teaching within self-determination theory, in Frontiers in Psychology.

The workshop discussion used Self-Determination Theory as a framework to understand motivation from several angles.

The discussion also described how motivation contains three elements: relatedness, autonomy, and competence.

Relatedness happens on multiple levels: making connections to others, learning from and teaching others, and knowing how the work affects others. Consider these questions as you motivate students through relatedness:

Autonomy is both implicit and explicit. You can engender autonomy by helping students feel like they are allowed to do something or feeling like it is OK to make choices. Discussion questions on autonomy included

Competence is having the knowledge, skills, and abilities to succeed. Students must have the confidence that they are competent. As you plan your lessons,

The main takeaway of the NETI section on motivation is that motivation is important for learning. To increase student motivation, instructors should ask themselves

Active Learning

Marina Choy, a lecturer in the Center for Leadership Education, discussed active learning, another theme explored in the workshop.  The workshop facilitators defined active learning as “students doing anything in class to learn material, other than listening to the instructor and taking notes.” Research shows active learning is more effective than lecturing. It helps students learn better through activity and engagement. It falls on a continuum ranging from instructor-focused to student-focused learning.  Instructor-focused means high instructor control and low student autonomy. An example of that is an active lecture, where traditional lecturing is interspersed with engaging activities. Student-focused means high student autonomy and low instructor control. Examples include problem-based and project-based learning, which require critical thinking, collaboration, and problem-solving. Shared responsibility is in the middle of the continuum. Examples include structured discussions, guided problem-solving, etc.

Other examples of active-learning discussed include

The presenters also shared common mistakes in implementing active-learning along with how to avoid them.

Learning Objectives

Ali Madooei, an associate teaching professor in computer science, discussed learning objectives. He developed an AI-based application (OPENAI API Key required to use) to help instructors write learning objectives that are S.M.A.R.T. and motivated by Bloom’s Taxonomy. The purpose of learning objectives is to

Assessment

Sara More, an associate teaching professor in computer science, talked about assessment. Assessment is gathering data about the learning process. It is more than just evaluation, where instructors collect data for the purpose of making evaluative and pass/fail judgments. Assessment helps the faculty member facilitate the learning process for students which includes providing feedback to help them improve.

More discussed three categories used to classify course-based assessments.

If you are interested in learning more about these topics, consider attending the Johns Hopkins Best Practices in University Teaching workshop or the NETI workshop.

Mike Reese\ Associate Dean of the Center for Teaching Excellence and Innovation and Associate Teaching Professor in Sociology, Johns Hopkins University

Image source: JHU Whiting School of Engineering website, Pixabay