日韩精品

Skip to Main Content Skip to Footer Toggle Navigation Menu

Professors Look Beyond the Lecture

Macalester faculty members find creative ways to help students learn even the most challenging concepts.

By Erin Peterson / Photos by David J. Turner

Kelsey Grinde knows how important it is to think broadly and creatively about teaching.

It wasn鈥檛 just that the assistant professor of mathematics, statistics, and computer science had trained to be a high school mathematics teacher, and that she鈥檇 learned plenty of techniques to help students find their footing. It was also that she herself had benefited from teaching that went beyond lectures and included plenty of personalized attention. 鈥淚 was fairly shy in class as a college student, and sometimes I was one of the only women in the room,鈥 she says. 鈥淭he kinds of active learning techniques that I use now are the ones that really worked for me as a student. They helped me get a lot further in math and statistics than I ever thought I would have.鈥

Grinde isn鈥檛 alone. Creative teaching can crack open even the toughest subjects. It can spark a student鈥檚 passion and fuel work for a lifetime.

And at Macalester, this kind of effort and experimentation around teaching is commonplace, says Joan Ostrove, director of the Jan Serie Center for Scholarship and Teaching. 鈥淔aculty are drawn to Macalester because they want to be outstanding teachers,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey want to be part of a community that thinks about teaching and values it.鈥 To support that effort, the center offers regular programming and resources related to pedagogy and advising.

To learn more about the imaginative work happening inside the classroom (and sometimes, beyond it), we asked a few faculty members to share the foundational ideas and creative approaches that propel their teaching.

Flip the classroom

Assistant professor of mathematics, statistics, and computer science Kelsey Grinde had been using a traditional lecture format in the first statistics classes she taught before arriving at Macalester in 2019. But when the pandemic hit partway through her first year at Macalester and classes moved to Zoom, she realized that she needed to rethink her approach. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 really want to be on Zoom talking at students for a long time, for everybody鈥檚 sanity,鈥 she says.

So she teamed up with department colleagues Brianna Heggeseth and Leslie Myint to create a series of five- to fifteen-minute videos that teach concepts like linear regression models, or show how to interpret data sets linked to smoking and lung function. Students watch them in their own time, study the text, then ask questions and work through problems during class. This approach, known as a flipped classroom, offers Grinde a chance to more clearly understand when students have mastered an idea and when they need a bit more help.

Now that students are back in person, she鈥檚 kept this flipped classroom in place. Students watch the videos on their own, then work in groups to solve problems in class. Grinde walks around the room, dropping in on groups to check on their progress. Oftentimes, she uses a Google doc to monitor how the class is doing overall with group discussion prompts.

The new approach has added significantly to Grinde鈥檚 workload. Creating the videos is extraordinarily labor intensive鈥攕he and her collaborators spent most of their summer working on the videos, rather than other research and projects. But she鈥檚 also been particularly happy with the way that it has transformed the classroom. She loves it when she can see students talking animatedly with each other about concepts or helping one another with specific knotty problems.

She knows that being able to watch videos again and again can be helpful for students who simply need a little more time and repetition to cement their learning.

Grinde is also delighted to have more time to get to know her students on a personal level. During class, 鈥淚鈥檓 not an authority figure standing up at the front, I鈥檓 sitting down next to them and helping them work on something,鈥 she says. 鈥淭his allows me to have conversations with students who鈥攊f they just came to class and didn鈥檛 come to my office hours鈥擨 might otherwise never have really met.鈥

She鈥檚 hopeful that the approach will open up statistics to more people who might otherwise have stopped after a single course. 鈥淔or many people, there鈥檚 a lot of internal dialogue about how they鈥檙e terrible at math, or they鈥檙e not good with computers. But I hope that this is one way to get more people to realize how cool statistics is鈥攁nd that they can do it,鈥 she says.

Embrace the forgetting of learning

Dennis Cao

Associate professor of chemistry Dennis Cao teaches what is often considered one of the toughest courses at Mac: organic chemistry. The class, essential for pre-med hopefuls, includes lessons on molecular geometry and electron flow that can scramble the brains of otherwise accomplished students.

Cao has one message he wants all of his students to hear before they give up: The work is supposed to be difficult. 鈥淚 tell students all the time that yes, I鈥檓 throwing them into the deep end鈥攁nd that鈥檚 how it should feel. I don鈥檛 want to go shallow,鈥 he says.

That might seem like cold comfort, since Cao himself long ago mastered the material. But as a novice in other areas of his life, he intentionally throws himself into the deep end all the time, too, trying a new hobby every six months. He鈥檚 picked up woodworking, fishing, and even 3D printing鈥攃heerfully acknowledging that he鈥檚 not an expert in any of them, despite his efforts. He knows, viscerally, the feeling of being overwhelmed by a new subject.

鈥淚 think languages are a fun thing to learn, but I used to get so annoyed when I couldn鈥檛 even remember three words鈥攚hat鈥檚 the point?鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut that is the point. You can鈥檛 remember three words, so you have to just keep doing it, and doing it, and doing it.鈥

Instead of getting frustrated about the time and repetitions required to understand a concept and establish it firmly into long-term memory, students can instead acknowledge it, plan for it, and embrace it. Learn, forget. Learn it a new way, forget again. Eventually, students do remember. And when they do, they don鈥檛 just remember the information for a test, they understand it.

When students internalize this approach to learning difficult subjects, it pays dividends: Cao reminds pre-med students in his class that this is the warmup: In medical school, they may be taking five classes that are all as tough as organic chemistry in different ways, and once they know what it takes to succeed in a very difficult class, they will be ready for the new challenges of medical school.

Cao says that students who learn to embrace the challenges of organic chemistry often find that the approach benefits them broadly. 鈥淢ost of my students don鈥檛 go on to be organic chemists, but I have had students come back and tell me that doing the work in my class helped them in another totally unrelated class,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 find a lot of gratification in knowing that, in the long term, this approach helped.鈥

Get outside the classroom

Erika BusseBy the time that students enter assistant professor of sociology Erika Busse鈥檚 upper-level course, 鈥淨ualitative Methods,鈥 they鈥檝e spent plenty of time learning from research that uses qualitative research methods such as observations and interviews. In Busse鈥檚 classroom, they finally have the chance to employ those qualitative methods in their own original research.

Busse has her students design a project to understand an aspect of race and ethnicity more deeply by choosing a single intersection near campus and studying social dynamics in it over the course of a semester. Students have chosen to study everything from ways to create community to the ways advertising differs for drivers, pedestrians, and public transit users.

Busse says that preparing to do ethnographic research can provoke anxiety in students who are used to burrowing into books and acing tests. Instead, they have to adjust to a more fluid and uncertain process of observation, interviews, and study: 鈥淭hey want to know: What am I going to say? What should I do? Should I take out a notebook or take notes on my cell phone?鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e used to being challenged intellectually in the classroom or with their friends, but they鈥檝e never gone out themselves to observe and collect data. That can be disorienting.鈥

Busse encourages students to be open to the messiness of the process, and she has them regroup in class to share their experiences, troubleshoot, and even provide advice to others. One of her great joys is seeing the growth that they experience as they move from idea to research to finished paper.

And although not all students end up loving the process, they do gain a greater appreciation for the challenges of research that aren鈥檛 fully visible in a published journal article. 鈥淚f you want to actually learn social dynamics, you have to be open to the idea that you won鈥檛 always have control. You鈥檒l always depend on other people,鈥 she says. 鈥淟earning that? It鈥檚 priceless.鈥

Create standout social media posts to highlight important academic ideas

See students鈥 Instagram projects at

In the summer of 2020, assistant professor of psychology Morgan Jerald was contemplating changes to her upper-level seminar, 鈥淭he Psychology of Black Women,鈥 against the backdrop of the uncertainty of the pandemic and the grief and rage erupting in the Twin Cities over the murder of George Floyd.

That summer, she鈥檇 begun noticing a trend dubbed 鈥淧ower Point activism鈥濃攕lideshows on Instagram that paired distilled insights with compelling graphics to make a persuasive point. She realized that they could also be a launching point for her students who wanted to bridge the divide between academic research and wider impact, so she developed a short, powerful Instagram project.

She asked each student to write an op-ed about any issue related to the psychology of Black women. Then, students created an Instagram slideshow, complete with images, based on the content of the op-ed.

Even students well-versed in the social media platform鈥檚 nuances found the project one part thrilling, one part hair-raising. It鈥檚 anything but easy to convey complicated concepts in an engaging and visual way. 鈥淗aving to distill something into a really short format is sometimes even harder than having no word limit at all,鈥 Jerald says. 鈥淚t requires you to communicate really clearly.鈥

Students created slideshows on topics ranging from health care disparities to segregated neighborhoods to education. They carefully sequenced the slideshows to start strong, build arguments, and provide resources for viewers to learn more. Jerald says that the projects gave students essential practice in communicating effectively to non-academic audiences about important issues.

The work has already earned significant external praise. Last year, the project received an Action Teaching Award from the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues, a group of three thousand scientists who seek to apply theory and practice to today鈥檚 critical problems.

Jerald says she wanted the project to remind students that they can have a voice in issues that are important to them. 鈥淚 hope that my classroom and assignments can be used as a space for students to process what鈥檚 happening and feel more empowered to act on it,鈥 she says.

Channel passion to create art

Ruthann Godollei

Wallace Professor of Art Ruthann Godollei knows that Mac students are driven and passionate about a variety of issues. In her 鈥淒issent鈥 course, she requires students to channel that energy into creating meaningful art that goes beyond the craftsmanship in order to say something larger about a social or political cause.

In the course, she teaches students about art linked to dissent and protest throughout history and around the world. Then, she has students create their own works based on the ideas that are important to them. Over the years, students have made stickers about immigration, linocuts to propel fundraising efforts, and specialty cards for Bike to Work week. 鈥淚 want them to do their ideas, not my ideas,鈥 she says.

Art offers a particularly kinesthetic learning experience, says Godollei: 鈥淪o many of us are stuck in virtual realities. Art helps people get back into their bodies, back into the material of their hands.鈥 It鈥檚 also a way for students to find another way to take action on something they care about.

Godollei says that when students transform their ideas into tangible artwork, they see their own abilities, and the world they inhabit, in a new way. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a wonderful feeling when you鈥檝e got a whole classroom of students getting their hands inky, exclaiming with each other over what they鈥檙e making,鈥 she says.

And regardless of what they pursue in their lives later, they have a deep understanding of the challenges of creating art designed for impact. 鈥淚t also helps them appreciate the labor of art, the human intelligence behind it, and the real struggles that people have gone through.鈥

Erin Peterson is a Minneapolis-based writer.