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Site Contents:
email
Leslie
About Leslie
Consulting and presentations
Leslie's
vita with presentation listings
Copyright Notifications
Lots and Lots of Links
Check out Edutopia's Schools that work
Clips on teaching and learning
General
Links to Many Areas of Professional Interest
A little inspiration - poems
and stories
ASCD's
The Lexicon of Learning - Makes understanding the
jargon or education easy
APA Citations
Citation machines - Great site that tells you how to create all
kinds of citations
Graduate Exam Questions
Education
701: Philosophical Foundations
Education 721: Fundamentals of Curriculum
Education 703: Theories of Learning
Education 783: The
Reflective Teacher
Education 784: The Creative Teacher
ED 726: Models of teaching
and learning
ED
790 - Brain-based Learning
Journal Articles On Line
New
Horizons for Learning Electronic Journal -
Vol. III, #5, March/April 1998
The
eighth intelligence
Why
teachers are drawn to using Multiple Intelligence Theory in the classroom
Return to
School of Education Faculty and Staff Pages
Youtube video clips
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Leslie Owen
Wilson 1997, 2005, 2007
restrictions
on usage
Introduction
& Topical
Index
The
second principle of
magic. . . things
which have once
been in contact with each other continue
to act on
each other at a distance after the physical contact has been severed.
Sir James Frazer
Offered through Continuing Education-CPS (College of Professional
Studies) I will not be teaching beyond 12/2012 -- this coming year
is the last time I will offer these courses for UWSP.
Internet Course
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ED 701 -
Philosophical Foundations of Education -
Sp 2012
Internet Course
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ED 790
Brain-based education Fall 2012
Internet Course -
Models of Teaching and Learning - Sp 2012
General
Introduction
Greetings and welcome to the homepage of Leslie Owen Wilson,
Ed. D. This site was
initiated with a start-up grant from the University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point and
was established for the explicit purpose of increasing the uses of technology resources
as these relate to teaching and learning. This particular site includes a wide
variety of materials dealing with education and educational reform. Also, it
includes materials that pertain
to areas of curriculum development, creativity, theories of learning, and
educational psychology. While this site was designed specifically to
support courses I teach or taught, materials can be used readily by others' students,
practicing educators, academics, parents, and general browsers interested in educational
topics. The site includes a number of strands, plus there are numerous
links to related materials
within the site, and to other Internet sites with similar or extended materials.
Original materials appear as those copyrighted to Leslie Owen Wilson.
If you would like to use original material, I will be happy to grant you access under
these conditions.
As of
January 25th 2009, I retired with emeritus status. Materials herein are related to
my
current and former courses. I will continue to teach those starred
internet courses through my department offerings. Others in
my department will continue to use materials on this website
for their courses.
Special topic courses, ones offered periodically
Leslie's
Course Offerings for 2012
Links
to Areas of Concentration
Information in this site specifically pertains to the following areas:
PowerPoint explaining the many levels of integrated curriculum
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Creativity - Topical materials in the following areas:
Definitions; books; creative problem solving techniques; teaching and working
creatively; inspirational material; information on fostering creativity, and much more.
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Models of
teaching and learning - A graduate level e-course on teaching models
and their uses in the instructional process -- a course stressing the
development of an online learning community. While much of the course
content is open to outside browsers, certain segments, forms, and
details are closed and secured for enrolled students use only and to
UWSP browsers. The course uses D2L for online management.
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Newer views of learning
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Many diverse topics related to: How students learn and think; effective teaching
strategies; learning and its relationship to personality theory; brain-based learning and
metacognition; plus information on newer views of intelligence.
especially Multiple Intelligence Theory.
Faculty
Development Program:
ICOP (Intercampus Communities of Practice)
The Intercampus Community
of Practice (ICoP) grant targets support for the uses of
newer technologies, especially as these technologies
have the potential to increase the quality of
interpersonal communications and understandings between,
but not limited to, faculty-to-student, and/or
student-to-student interactions.
This initiative was
conceived as a pilot program running for one year and is
funded by the Learning Technology Development Council (LTDC)
of University of Wisconsin Systems. The grant activities
bring together faculty members and campus LTDC personnel
from six UW campuses Eau Claire, Green Bay, La Crosse,
Stevens Point, Superior, and Whitewater. Activities
focus on understanding and learning more about the
intersections between the learning differences and needs
of Millennial students, Backward Course Design, and new
forms of communication technology like blogs, wikis,
D2L, podcasting, and virtual office hours. Twenty seven
faculty members have devised proposals whereby they will
develop, or revise courses to add newer forms of
communication through technology.
FACETS
(Faculty Alliance for Creating and Expanding Teaching Strategies)
This was a multi-year
program which concluded in June of 2006. It was faculty development initiative supported by a Congressional
Award from Congressman Dave Obey which concentrated on teaching
excellence at the university level. It is a partnership with faculty
from UW-Marathon Center. The FACETS team was multidisciplinary and
included myself and partners Susan Gingrasso, Marty Loy, and Craig
Wendorf. The program affected faculty from UW-Marathon Center, and
UW-Stevens Point. There is a journal online,
Views from the bridge, in which participants discuss
changes they made in their teaching.
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