Tag: Ken

  • Ken LaOrden, Quallege – The PIE News

    Ken LaOrden, Quallege – The PIE News

    Describe yourself in three words or phrases.

    Visionary, charismatic & innovative 

    What do you like most about your job?

    The people and the potential. I love the opportunity to build genuine relationships on a daily basis – with my team, our partners, and the students – that are all grounded in trust and integrity. Let’s have some fun while we create win-win solutions that drive positive change in global education.

    Describe a project or initiative you’re currently working on that excites you.

    At Quallege, beyond recruiting students to the US, we’re now assisting several top US universities in exploring transnational expansion opportunities. Helping them navigate the complex options for launching a branch campus abroad is an exciting way to think about extending a university’s brand and impact globally.

    What’s a piece of work you’re proud of – and what did it teach you?

    I’m incredibly proud that we launched Quallege, a company focused on connecting high-quality international students with top US universities, last February. And, even in the midst of a highly fluid geopolitical environment, we’ve already secured great university partners like Syracuse University, Pepperdine University, Bentley University and The Catholic University of America. While it somewhat felt like starting a bank during the Great Depression, I am a firm believer that quality always resonates. When universities are struggling with declining enrolment and rising discount rates and continue to seek ways to diversify their student bodies, our focus on connecting high-quality students with top universities is exactly the solution the market needs.

    What’s a small daily habit that helps you in your work?

    Biking. I ride almost every day, usually around 135 miles a week. I prefer gravel biking because the trails clear my head and give me the quiet space I need to formulate my best strategic ideas.

    What’s one change you’d like to see in your sector over the next few years?

    I’d like to see us finally figure out how to leverage the best of online education, both to create more affordable pathways and significantly reduce the overall program costs for international students.

    What idea, book, podcast or conversation has stayed with you recently?

    Don’t be afraid to get out into the field – whether that’s with university partners, channel partners, or students – because there is no better place to learn. And always remember: ask a lot of questions.

    Source link

  • Ken Bain Changed College Teaching Forever

    Ken Bain Changed College Teaching Forever

    Is it possible for someone you’ve never met to be a mentor?

    I don’t know how else to describe Ken Bain, author of What the Best College Teachers Do, a book that transformed not just my teaching, but my entire life.

    Ken Bain passed away on Oct. 10. I first learned this news on LinkedIn from Jim Lang, who did know and was directly mentored by Ken Bain and, like the several dozen folks who offered comments on his passing—and also me—whose life and work were profoundly affected by Ken Bain’s work.

    (I also recommend checking out this episode of Bonni Stachowiak’s Teaching in Higher Ed podcast, which remembers Ken Bain and provides links to his multiple appearances on the show.)

    I read an advance copy of What The Best College Teachers Do sometime in early 2004 in a period where I was starting to question the folklore of teaching I had absorbed as a student and graduate assistant, and it immediately changed how I thought about my own work, kicking off a process of consideration and experimentation around teaching writing that continues to this day.

    What the Best College Teachers Do reflects more than a decade of study and is entirely based in observations of teaching, teaching materials, student responses and reflections, interviews and other sources, filtered through various lenses (history, literary analysis, sociology, ethnography, investigative journalism) to draw both big conclusions about not just what teachers do, but how they think, how they relate to students, how they view their work and how they evolve their approaches.

    The method is relentlessly qualitative rather than quantitative, and it can be straightforwardly adapted to one’s own work.

    At least that’s how I used the book. Looking through some of the text for the first time in years, I can see significant strands of What the Best College Teachers Do DNA in my writing about the writer’s practice. The lens of “doing” as the central feature of any work has been part of my personal framework for so long that I almost lost its origin, but there it is.

    One of my very first posts at Inside Higher Ed, back before I even had my own section and was merely guesting at Oronte Churm’s joint, was on What the Best College Teachers Do.

    The book is more than 20 years old, but its framing questions are evergreen and even more relevant in this AI age. The book asks and answers the following questions:

    1. What do the best teachers know and understand?
    2. How do they prepare to teach?
    3. What do they expect of their students?
    4. What do they do when they teach?
    5. How do they treat students?
    6. How do they check their progress and evaluate their efforts?

    The book helpfully encapsulates the study’s findings under these categories, and as bullet points of good teaching practice they are spot-on. But I am also here to testify that they are not a substitute for the full experience of reading What the Best College Teachers Do, because the act of reading the specific illustrations and examples that gave rise to these findings allows for the individual to reflect on their own practices relative to others.

    The first thing I did after reading and absorbing What the Best College Teachers Do was change my attendance policy to no longer punish students based on a maximum number of absences. I’d engaged in this practice because it had been handed down as conventional wisdom: If you don’t police student attendance, they won’t show up. Bain’s best teachers challenged this conventional wisdom.

    The positive effects were immediate. I stepped up my game in terms of making sure class was viewed by students as productive and necessary. My mood improved, as I no longer stewed over students who were pushing their luck in terms of absences, daring me to dock their overall semester grade.

    Attendance went up! I asked students about this, and they said that when a class says you “get four absences” they were treating that as a kind of permission (or even encouragement) to go ahead and miss four classes. Student agency and self-responsibility increased. If they missed a class, they knew what they had to do, and it didn’t involve me.

    The experiments continued, leading ultimately to the writer’s practice and my embrace of alternative assessment, developments that made me a much more effective instructor and now, improbably, someone invited to colleges and universities to share his expertise on these subjects.

    It would not have happened without the work and mentorship of Ken Bain, mentorship I experienced entirely through reading his book.

    I worry that mentorship is going to be further eroded by AI, particularly if entry-level jobs with their apprenticeship tasks are now completed through automation, rather than by working with other, more experienced humans. The enthusiasm for letting large language models compress texts into summaries rather than reading the full work of another unique intelligence is also a threat.

    My conviction that our way forward through the challenge of AI is rooted in deeply examining the experiences of learning and fostering those experiences for students only grows stronger by the day. What the Best College Teachers Do is experiences all the way down, a book of observations conveyed in such a way that allows us to make use of them, literally, in what we do.

    A great man. A great mentor. Ken Bain’s work will live on through the many pedagogues he’s inspired.

    Source link