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Evidence-Based Education in the Classroom Jennifer Friberg

Evidence-Based Education in the Classroom By Jennifer Friberg

Evidence-Based Education in the Classroom by Jennifer Friberg


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Summary

Shows educators how to use evidence to inform teaching practices and improve educational outcomes for students in clinically based fields of study. Contributors share examples of how they have used evidence to inform their course design and delivery. Each chapter is set up as a case study.

Evidence-Based Education in the Classroom Summary

Evidence-Based Education in the Classroom: Examples From Clinical Disciplines by Jennifer Friberg

Evidence-Based Education in the Classroom: Examples From Clinical Disciplines shows educators how to use evidence to inform teaching practices and improve educational outcomes for students in clinically based fields of study.

Editors and speech-language pathologists Drs. Jennifer C. Friberg, Colleen F. Visconti, and Sarah M. Ginsberg collaborated with a team of more than 65 expert contributors to share examples of how they have used evidence to inform their course design and delivery. Each chapter is set up as a case study that includes:
  • A description of the teaching/learning context focused on in the chapter
  • A brief review of original data or extant literature being applied
  • A description of how evidence was applied in the teaching/learning context
  • Additional ideas for how evidence could be applied in other teaching/learning contexts across clinical disciplines
  • Additional resources related to the pedagogy described in the case study (e.g., journal articles, books, blogs, websites)
Educators in the fields of speech-language pathology, audiology, nursing, social work, sports medicine, medicine, dietetics, dental assisting, physician assisting, radiology technology, psychology, and kinesiology-already familiar with evidence-based practice-will find this resource helpful in implementing evidence-informed approaches to their teaching.

While the content in clinical programs is quite different, there are many similarities in how to teach students across such programs. Evidence-Based Education in the Classroom: Examples From Clinical Disciplines highlights these similarities and represents a masterclass in how to practice evidence-based education.

About Jennifer Friberg

Jennifer C. Friberg, EdD, CCC-SLP, F-ASHA is the Cross Endowed Chair in the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning and a Professor of Communication Sciences and Disorders at Illinois State University in Normal, Illinois. A speech-language pathologist by discipline, Friberg primarily serves as an educational developer at her institution, with a focus on the scholarship of teaching and learning (SoTL). She maintains an active research agenda, with current projects focused on the application of SoTL, mentoring in SoTL, and the sharing of SoTL beyond individual classroom settings. Along with her coeditors for this project, Friberg is a coauthor of Scholarship of Teaching and Learning in Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology: Evidence-Based Education. Additionally, she is the coeditor of the recently published text Applying the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning Beyond the Individual Classroom and is the founding associate editor for the journal Teaching and Learning in Communication Sciences & Disorders.

Colleen F. Visconti, PhD, CCC-SLP is a Professor and Program Director of the Speech-Language Pathology program in the Communication Sciences and Disorders Department at Baldwin Wallace University in Berea, Ohio. She led the undergraduate program in Communication Sciences and Disorders prior to recently developing an innovative graduate program in speech-language pathology. Her SoTL research has focused on developing culturally responsive practitioners through a service-oriented study abroad program, clinical decision making, and the use of problem-based learning within the classroom. Her work has been shared through webinars, presentations, and various publications. She is a coauthor of Scholarship of Teaching and Learning in Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology: Evidence-Based Education and is a founding editorial board member of Teaching and Learning in Communication Sciences & Disorders.

Sarah M. Ginsberg, EdD, CCC-SLP, F-ASHA is a Professor of Communication Sciences and Disorders at Eastern Michigan University in Ypsilanti, Michigan. Her SoTL work has appeared in To Improve the Academy, the Journal of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, and Contemporary Issues in Communication Science and Disorders. She is a coauthor of Scholarship of Teaching and Learning in Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology: Evidence-Based Education and is the founding editor of Teaching and Learning in Communication Sciences & Disorders.

Table of Contents

  • Dedication
  • Acknowledgments
  • About the Editors
  • Contributing Authors
  • Introduction
  • Part I: Planning for Evidence-Based Teaching and Learning
  • Chapter 1: Universal Design for Learning and Technology: Using Data to Inform Pedagogy
  • Dana Battaglia, PhD, CCC-SLP
  • Chapter 2: Breaking Out of the Silos: A Case Study in Co-Teaching in Speech-Language Pathology
  • Julie L. Cox, PhD, CCC-SLP/L; Amanda B. Silberer, PhD, CCC-A; and Haleigh M. Ruebush, MS, CCC-SLP/L
  • Chapter 3: Print Versus Digital Text: Considerations for Classroom and Clinical Teaching
  • Karen A. Fallon, PhD, CCC-SLP
  • Chapter 4: Establishing Successful Co-Teaching Relationships
  • Jennifer C. Friberg, EdD, CCC-SLP, F-ASHA and Lisa A. Vinney, PhD, CCC-SLP
  • Chapter 5: Collaborative Course (Re)Design
  • Sarah M. Ginsberg, EdD, CCC-SLP, F-ASHA and Lauren H. Mead, MA, CCC-SLP
  • Chapter 6: Using Flipped-Course Pedagogy to Promote Competence in Professional Education
  • Ken Saldanha, PhD, MSW, BEd and D. Mark Ragg, PhD, LMSW, BSW
  • Chapter 7: The Flipped Classroom Model: Empowering Future Clinicians
  • Eric J. Sanders, PhD, CCC-SLP; Mary Culshaw, PhD, OTR/L; and Louise C. Keegan, PhD, CCC-SLP, BC-ANCDS
  • Chapter 8: Intensive Course Delivery Design in a Graduate Speech-Language Pathology Curriculum
  • Kaitlyn P. Wilson, PhD, CCC-SLP and Christina Y. Pelatti, PhD, CCC-SLP
  • Part II: Teaching and Learning Together
  • Chapter 9: Assigned Groups as Learning Communities in and Beyond the Classroom
  • Cassandra Barragan, PhD, MSW and Stephanie P. Wladkowski, PhD, LMSW, APHSW-C
  • Chapter 10: Training Future Health Professionals Using an Interdisciplinary Approach
  • Judi Brooks, PhD, RD; Diane Fenske, LMSW; Lydia McBurrows, DNP, RN, CPNP-PC; and Andrea Gossett Zakrajsek, OTD, OTRL, FNAP
  • Chapter 11: Communities of Practice: Addressing Faculty Frustrations as Teachers
  • Susan L. Caulfield, PhD and Lisa R. Singleterry, PhD, RN, CNE
  • Chapter 12: Improving Dental Assisting and Radiologic Technology Education Through Interprofessional Experiences
  • Amy Egli, MHA, LDH, CDA, EFDA; Heather Schmuck, MS, RT(R); and Amanda Reddington, LDH, MHA, CDA, EFDA
  • Chapter 13: Transdisciplinary Collaboration for Speech-Language Pathology, Special Education, and Psychology Students
  • Katrina Fulcher-Rood, PhD, CCC-SLP; Pamela Schuetze, PhD; and Kathy Doody, PhD
  • Chapter 14: Shared Mission: Unite, Support, Achieve: Interprofessional Education for Traumatic Brain Injury
  • Casey Keck, PhD, CCC-SLP; April Garrity, PhD, CCC-SLP; and Keiko Ishikawa, PhD, CCC-SLP
  • Chapter 15: Improving Clinical Reasoning in Health Professions Students Through Team-Based Learning
  • Andi Beth Mincer, PT, EdD
  • Chapter 16: Lessons Learned: Embedding Undergraduate Research Into Educational Practice
  • Joy Myers, PhD; Amanda G. Sawyer, PhD; Maryam S. Sharifian, PhD; and Chelsey M. Bahlmann Bollinger, PhD
  • Chapter 17: Mapping Teaming Concepts: Organizing Student Knowledge Through Active Learning
  • Allison Sauerwein, PhD, CCC-SLP
  • Chapter 18: Engaging Students to Write Through Conferences and Peer Review
  • Jean Sawyer, PhD, CCC-SLP
  • Chapter 19: Curricular Integration in Clinically Based Fields: A Case Study From Speech-Language Pathology
  • Lisa A. Vinney, PhD, CCC-SLP and Jennine M. Harvey-Northrop, PhD, CCC-SLP
  • Part III: Learning From Models, Cases, and Simulations
  • Chapter 20: Unfolding Case Studies: A New Active Learning Pedagogy
  • Hilary Applequist, DNP, APRN-NP, ACHPN; Marla Kniewel, EdD, MSN, RN; Krystina Eymann, MSN, RN; and Eric Kyle, PhD
  • Chapter 21: A Little Bit of Sugar: Creating Powerful Learning Experiences by Integrating Unfolding Cases and Zull's Neuroscience
  • Carole Bennett, PhD, PMHCS-BC
  • Chapter 22: Case-Based Perspective Taking: A New Active Learning Pedagogy
  • Jennifer C. Friberg, EdD, CCC-SLP, F-ASHA and Lisa A. Vinney, PhD, CCC-SLP
  • Chapter 23: A Competency-Based Clinical Simulation to Facilitate Fieldwork Readiness
  • Andrea Coppola, OTD, OTR/L; Carey Leckie, OT, OTD, OTR, CHT; and Jean McCaffery, OT, EdD, OTR
  • Chapter 24: Simulation-Based Education in Health Care
  • Amber Herrick, MS, PA-C and Sarah Bolander, DMSc, PA-C, DFAAPA
  • Part IV: Learning to Think Critically and Reflectively
  • Chapter 25: Preparing Communication Sciences and Disorders Students for the Graduate Application Process
  • Ann R. Beck, PhD; Heidi Verticchio, MS; and Scott Seeman, PhD
  • Chapter 26: A Framework for Enhancing Critical Thinking Within Health Science Courses
  • Tim Brackenbury, PhD, CCC-SLP and Mary-Jon Ludy, PhD, RDN, FAND
  • Chapter 27: Linking Art and Visual Thinking Strategies to Teach Clinical Observation Skills
  • Jennifer C. Friberg, EdD, CCC-SLP, F-ASHA
  • Chapter 28: Effective and Efficient Assessment of Reflective Journals
  • April Garrity, PhD, CCC-SLP; Casey Keck, PhD, CCC-SLP; and Keiko Ishikawa, PhD, CCC-SLP
  • Chapter 29: Enhancing Self-Directed Learning and Metacognition With Guided Reflection
  • Leslie A. Hoffman, PhD and Audra F. Schaefer, PhD
  • Chapter 30: Helping Students Help Themselves: Fostering Undergraduate Metacognition
  • Polly R. Husmann, PhD and Audra F. Schaefer, PhD
  • Chapter 31: Learning to Look: Employing Reflexive Photography in Developing Critical Practice
  • Brent Oliver, PhD, RSW and Darlene Chalmers, PhD, RSW
  • Part V: Learning to Apply Beyond the Classroom
  • Chapter 32: Engaging Stakeholders to Improve Pedagogy in Allied Health Placement Preparation
  • Elizabeth Bourne, PhD, BAppSc(SpPath), CPSP; Gillian Nisbet, PhD, MMEd, DipNutr, BSc(Hons); Margaret Nicholson, MEd, BSc, Dip Nut Diet, Dip Ed (Health), AdvAPD; and Irene Mok, MRC, BA
  • Chapter 33: Oral Assessments for Cadaveric Anatomy in Physical Therapy Education
  • Melissa A. Carroll, PhD, MS
  • Chapter 34: Objective Structured Clinical Examinations for Development of Professional Competency
  • Nancy E. Krusen, PhD, OTR/L and M. Nicole Martino, MS, OTR/L
  • Chapter 35: Developing Culturally Responsive Practitioners Through an International Education Experience
  • Colleen F. Visconti, PhD, CCC-SLP and K. Chisomo Selemani, MA, CCC-SLP
  • Financial Disclosures
  • Index

Additional information

NLS9781630917142
9781630917142
1630917141
Evidence-Based Education in the Classroom: Examples From Clinical Disciplines by Jennifer Friberg
New
Paperback
SLACK Incorporated
2021-07-30
356
N/A
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