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[Event Report] “The 12th Mini-lecture Program at the Library” (Jun 24, 2019)

“The 12th Mini-lecture Program at the Library (Mini-lecture Program by UTokyo Graduate Students)” took place on June 24th, 2019.

We are now getting used to the new venue, the Library Plaza (General Library Annex).

Two students out of those who completed the 12th UTokyo FFP gave presentations to a large audience consisting of various people from undergraduate/graduate students and faculty/staff members at the University to faculty/staff members at other universities despite the rain. (Click here for the event report released by the University of Tokyo Library System in Japanese.) The audience experienced a variety of activities designed based on what the speakers learned in UTokyo FFP.

We are planning to hold the next 13th Mini-lecture Program in late November. We look forward to your participation.

Lastly, we would like to express our sincere gratitude to all the University of Tokyo Library System staff members for organizing the event together.

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*Click the following link for the filmed Mini-lectures: → The 12th Mini-lecture Program by UTokyo Graduate Students | UTokyo TV (todai.tv)

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“Interactive Teaching” Joins the FY2019 Book Selection of Japan Association for College and University Education

Kurita, K. & Japan Center for Educational Research and Innovation (2017). Interactive teaching [Interactive teaching]. Tokyo: Kawai Publishing.

The book was chosen to join the FY2019 JACUE SELECTION of the Japan Association for College and University Education. (http://daigakukyoiku-gakkai.org/site/jacue-selection/selections/)

We would like to express our sincere gratitude to all the readers and the participants of the online course, on which the book was based.

Encouraged by the selection, we are eager to make the face-to-face program using this book, “Interactive Teaching Academy” (Applications now open for AY2019) a more fulfilling event.


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[Call for Applications] Project Researcher

Center for Research and Development of Higher Education, The University of Tokyo invites applications for a Project Researcher on the administration of the UTokyo FFP’s online course “Interactive Teaching.” The new Project Researcher is scheduled to be appointed in August 2019. The application deadline is June 17th, 2019.

We look forward to the applications from those who are eager to plan/conduct the online course “Interactive Teaching,” blended workshops utilizing the course, and other learning programs. We also appreciate your cooperation to share this information with anyone who might be interested.

Application guideline is as follows:
https://www.u-tokyo.ac.jp/content/400117093.pdf

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Co-organized Event: “Condensed to 10 minutes! The Forefront of UTokyo Research” at May Festival

Thanks to your continuous support in the annual May Festival and Komaba Festival, “Condensed to 10 minutes! The Forefront of UTokyo Research” will appear again in this year’s May Festival to be held on May 18th and 19th.

The UTokyo FFP has supported the event “Condensed to 10 minutes! The Forefront of UTokyo Research” as a co-organizer. This year, 23 promising young graduate students including those who completed the UTokyo FFP will make 10-min presentations on the “forefront” of diverse academic fields.

Stay tuned!

 

Speaker list: https://ut-10min.github.io/mf92/talks.html

Timetable: https://ut-10min.github.io/mf92/timetable.html

Official website of “May Festival”: https://www.gogatsusai.jp/kikaku/348

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[Report] “How to Make Your Life Comfortable When Studying Abroad: A Seminar on Human Relations in Japan” (Special Seminar for International Students)

We co-organized a special seminar for international students entitled “How to Make Your Life Comfortable When Studying Abroad: A Seminar on Human Relations in Japan” with the Japanese Classroom, Graduate School of Humanities and Sociology on March 29th, 2019. We welcomed 20 participants, coming from the Graduate School of Humanities and Sociology and various other graduate schools. Also, the 7th–12th UTokyo FFP alumni joined the seminar as facilitators.

The seminar was divided into two sessions: the first half with group activities and the second half with sharing ideas among the whole participants. During the group activities in the first session, they shared their experiences on “what you found difficult when you are studying abroad,” and based on that, organized “the problems regarding human relations that you want to solve” in groups.

In the second session, the respective groups first made a poster on the issue they discussed previously consisting of the following four elements: 1) The problems regarding human relations that you want to solve, 2) Ways of thinking in your own country, 3) Assumption of Japanese ways of thinking and behaviors, and 4) Examination of potential solutions. Then, they used a strategy called “Poster Tour” and shared their thoughts with other groups.

Here are some of the feedback we received in the post-seminar questionnaires.

  • ・I enjoyed the seminar because it made me realize a variety of things. Thank you.
  • ・I realized how difficult it is to understand things about myself. It is easy to feel something strange with others, but not with myself.

Meanwhile, we also hear other participants complaining that they need more specific solutions. We would like to meet their demands by improving the seminar.

We have accumulated the know-how through co-organizing special seminars for international students annually with the Japanese Classroom, Graduate School of Humanities and Sociology. We hope the event will further develop through cooperation with international and domestic students in Japan!

 

(Photos provided by Prof. Rumiko Mukai, Graduate School of Humanities and Sociology)

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“Interactive Teaching” Video Materials Now Available on Fisdom

Center for Research and Development of Higher Education, The University of Tokyo, and the Japan Center for Educational Research and Innovation (JCERI) published the online course “Interactive Teaching” on Fisdom.

Fisdom, run by Fujitsu Limited, is a platform officially endorsed by JMOOC, where anyone can take lectures online via PCs and smartphones.
“Interactive Teaching” now joins the lectures on this platform.

Please check our video materials on Fisdom.
For more details, please click the following link: “Interactive Teaching” (Fisdom)

We hope the platform will enable more people to reach “Interactive Teaching.”

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[Report] “Interactive Teaching” Academy: Part 7 “Microteaching Clinic”

Here is a brief report of our latest event and a preview of our next event.

“Interactive Teaching” Academy: Part 7 “Microteaching Clinic”

Date/Time: March 2nd (Sat), 2018, 13:00–18:00; March 3rd (Sun), 2018, 10:00–17:00
Venue: 93B, 92B, Faculty of Engineering Building 2, Hongo Campus
Participants: 32 people (Five of them conducted microteaching sessions.)

Instructors: Kayoko Kurita (Center for Research and Development of Higher Education, The University of Tokyo)
Lui Yoshida (College of Arts and Sciences, The University of Tokyo)
Masaru Sekido (National Institute of Technology, Sendai College / Center for Research and Development of Higher Education, The University of Tokyo)
Nagafumi Nakamura (Center for Research and Development of Higher Education, The University of Tokyo)

1. Topic and Goal
This time, the topic was “Microteaching.” Based on the goal, “Be able to conduct classes that promote student learning,” we set specific learning objectives as follows:
① Understand and be able to utilize “Learning Sciences” (e.g., motivation) in class design. (Preparation)
② Be able to explain the perspectives that you should be careful of when conducting classes through refining others’ microteaching sessions. (Sessions)
③ Be able to utilize the refinement of your microteaching session in your future practice. (Sessions)  *③ was an objective for those who conducted microteaching sessions.

2. Summary
This program was conducted in a flipped-classroom manner, and participants worked on pre-class assignments beforehand. They conducted and examined microteaching sessions based on their preparation.
(1) Preparation
All participants were asked to learn about “Learning Sciences” by watching the videos for WEEK 3 of “Interactive Teaching” and reading Chapter 3 of the book “Interactive Teaching” (Kawai Publishing, 2017). This was because it is important to understand theories related to enhancing motivation when you conduct classes that promote learning. Also, those who were in charge of conducting microteaching sessions were asked to submit class design sheets and handouts beforehand.

(2) Sessions
<DAY 1>
[1] Introduction (13:00–13:15)
Participants listened to the explanation of the goals, structure, and rules of the program before introducing themselves to others. They consisted of five lecturers of microteaching sessions and 26 observers who took their lectures.

[2] Microteaching Session & Examination 1 (13:15–16:15)
Participants first reviewed the significance of conducting and examining microteaching sessions. Then the first lecturer gave a mini-lecture. Then, they were divided into two groups and moved to separate classrooms. The second lecturers conducted lectures in their respective rooms. Following their 10-minute lectures, the participants exchanged their ideas on what was good about the lectures, what points needed improvement, and how they could be improved in groups and the whole classroom in 40 minutes.

Microteaching sessions

[3] Refining Microteaching Sessions (Lecturers) / What You Can Learn from Microteaching Sessions (Observers) (16:35–17:45)
Participants worked on activities in two separate classrooms.
Those who conducted microteaching sessions worked on improving their lectures based on the feedback they had received from observers in the first trial.
Meanwhile, observers shared in groups what they had learned from the first trial of microteaching sessions from the following two perspectives: “design contents” and “delivery.” Then, they shared their ideas with the whole participants through a poster tour. This activity was to help them generalize what they had learned from the microteaching sessions so that they can utilize it to improve their own classes.

<DAY 2>
[4] Microteaching Session and Examination 2 (10:00–15:10)
All five lecturers conducted their second-time lectures, which were improved based on the feedback they had received on the first trial, in the same classroom this time. Each 10-min lecture was followed by a 20-min discussion, where they exchanged their ideas on what was excellent about the lecture, what points were improved, what points still needed improvement, and how they could be improved. The observers were able to examine the lecture from various perspectives since they consisted of both who took the lecture for the first time and the second time.

[5] Microteaching as a Faculty Development Program (15:10–16:20)
Participants examined in groups what organizers, lecturers of microteaching sessions, and observers should prepare themselves and try to do to make microteaching significant as an FD program. This activity helped them examine what they should be careful of when conducting microteaching in their own learning environment and propose what we should do to improve microteaching in this event.

[6] Wrap-up (16:30–17:00)
Lastly, participants organized what they learned, what kind of questions they had, and what they wanted to bring back to their own work through group activities and Q&A sessions.

Participants learning from each other ([5] Microteaching as an FD Program)

3. Participants’ Reactions
The affiliation of 32 participants was as follows: 12 faculty or staff members of the university or technical college, 12 graduate students or postdocs, four teachers or staff members of junior/senior high school, one teacher or staff member of elementary school, two teachers or staff members of vocational school, and one company employee. According to the five-point scale question asking the degree of satisfaction (Extremely satisfied; Very satisfied; Satisfied; Not so satisfied; Dissatisfied), 44 percent of the respondents were “extremely satisfied,” 52 percent were “very satisfied,” and 4 percent were “satisfied.”
According to another five-point scale question asking whether participation in the program would affect your future practice (Yes (very much); Yes; No (not so much); No (not at all); Unsure), 25 percent of the respondents answered “Yes (very much),” 67 percent answered “Yes,” and 8 percent answered, “No (not so much).”

Here are some of the feedback we received in the comment section:

  • “I was able to deepen my understanding through the structure of the program that proceeded in the order of the first microteaching session, improvement of lectures, and the second microteaching session.” (Lecturer of the microteaching sessions)
  • “There was a lecturer who made a remarkable improvement in his/her lecture on the second day, which offered me a specific example of improving the class design.” (Observer of the microteaching sessions)
  • “The program gave me a lot of practical tips on how to improve my classes. I will revise my class design materials for the next academic year as soon as I get home today.” (Observer of the microteaching sessions)

 

4. Preview of the Next Program
We are planning to organize a more systematic program for the next academic year. Details are to be announced. We look forward to your participation.

References
Videos “Interactive Teaching” JREC-IN website UTokyo FD website
Book “Interactive Teaching” (Kawai Publishing, 2017)
https://www.kawai-publishing.jp/book/?isbn=978-4-7772-1794-6 (Kawai Publishing website)

Nagafumi Nakamura (Project Researcher in charge of “Interactive Teaching” / Main Moderator of this event)

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[12th UTokyo FFP] Certificate Award Ceremony Conducted

The 12th Certificate Award Ceremony of “The University of Tokyo Future Faculty Program (UTokyo FFP)” was held in the Seminar Room, Ito International Research Center on Wednesday, February 27th, 2019.
Forty-two participants completed the 12th program, and each of them received a certificate. Followed by the address given by Prof. Osamu Sudo, Director of the Center for Research and Development of Higher Education, The University of Tokyo, they received a congratulatory address from Prof. Yojiro Ishii, Executive Vice President, The University of Tokyo.
Alumni also appeared as guest speakers and explained their various activities after completion of the program and their alumni network.

UTokyo FFP has produced a total of 561 people who completed the program coming from every graduate school at The University of Tokyo.
The next program (the 13th UTokyo FFP) is scheduled to start in April 2019. The application form will be available on the following URL in mid-March.

→ https://dev2.utokyofd.com/en/ffp/apply/

Also, we accept “Pre-application” preceding the application. If you are interested, please register from the “Pre-application form” on the above URL.

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[Call for Applications] Project Researcher (UTokyo FFP: Interactive Teaching)

Center for Research and Development of Higher Education, The University of Tokyo invites applications for a Project Researcher on the administration of the UTokyo FFP’s online course “Interactive Teaching.” The new Project Researcher is scheduled to be appointed in April 2019. We are sorry for the short notice, but the application deadline is February 1st, 2019.

We look forward to the applications from those who are eager to plan/conduct the online course “Interactive Teaching,” blended workshops utilizing the course, and other learning programs. We also appreciate your cooperation to share this information with anyone who might be interested.

Click here for the application guideline.