Our panel of faculty will share their experiences using the iClicker classroom response system. Find out first hand how clickers are being used on campus, what works and doesn't work, and what it takes to get started.
Panelists:
Ronald Lee, Demography & Economics: A course in transition... Ron came to ETS looking for ways technology could be used to help increase student attendance, participation, and satisfaction with his course. After one term using clickers, Ron shares his impressions and future ideas.
Lynn Huntsinger, Environmental Science, Policy & Management: New to clickers this term... Lynn shares her start-up experience, what types of questions she uses, and a student survey about clickers.
Daniela Kaufer, Integrative Biology: More than a sage on the stage... Daniela was eager to engage her students in class, but was finding it hard to get students to open up. Hear how she used clickers to get students more involved in lecture and what she learned NOT to do.
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Integrative Biology 131: General Human Anatomy. Fall 2005. Professor Marian Diamond. The functional anatomy of the human body as revealed by gross and microscopic examination.
The Department of Integrative Biology offers a program of instruction that focuses on the integration of structure and function in the evolution of diverse biological systems. It investigates integration at all levels of organization from molecules to the biosphere, and in all taxa of organisms from viruses to higher plants and animals.
The department uses many traditional fields and levels of complexity in forging new research directions, asking new questions, and answering traditional questions in new ways.
At Berkeley, we're looking ahead and asking ourselves a simple question: what can we change in a single generation? We’re imagining a future where the projects we’re working on today have become real, changed lives and changed the world.
From health to water, food systems to climate, energy to economic equality – our researchers are working to radically improve life for everyone. Explore our journey at http://www.berkeley.edu/InThisGen.
Computer Science 61A, 001 - Spring 2015
The Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs - John S. Denero
Creative Commons 3.0: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs
Take a tour of MyFinAid, UC Berkeley's online financial aid system, in this student-made tutorial. MyFinAid is a helpful online tool that lets you see the most up-to-date view of your UC Berkeley financial aid package. MyFinAid also helps you save time by completing a variety of processes online.
Every student receiving financial aid at UC Berkeley can view his or her awards on MyFinAid. You will need your CalNet ID to access MyFinAid. For the latest updates on your financial aid awards, log on to MyFinAid!
http://myfinaid.berkeley.edu
http://financialaid.berkeley.edu