Teaching Guide for GSIs
Evaluating and Improving Your Teaching
Graduate Student Instructors make an enormous contribution to the teaching mission of UC Berkeley. That contribution is made possible by GSIs’ high degree of motivation as well as their high standards for themselves and their students. This section of the Teaching Guide suggests concrete ways GSIs can translate their motivation and high standards into increasingly expert teaching practices.
You may also want to consult the Professional Development section of the Teaching Guide, which discusses ways GSIs can consolidate their teaching experience into a first-rate professional profile for the professoriate.
In This Section
Teaching Guide for GSIs
- Pre-Semester Preparation
- Inclusive Teaching
- The Role of GSIs in Fostering Inclusion
- Exclusion at the Classroom Level
- Best Practices for Fostering Inclusion at the Classroom Level
- Exclusion at the Individual (Student) Level
- Best Practices for Fostering Inclusion at the Individual (Student) Level
- Inequality in the Broader Social Context
- Best Practices for Addressing Inequality and Crises in the Broader Social Context
- Invitation to a Community of Practice
- Teaching Discussion Sections
- Facilitating Laboratory Sections
- Teaching Reading and Composition
- Evaluating and Improving Your Teaching
- Working with Student Writing
- Creating Writing Assignments
- Guiding Research Papers in the Sciences, Social Sciences, and Humanities
- Drafts, Edits, Revisions
- Grading Essays
- Working with the Writing of Multilingual (“ESL”) Students: Frequently Asked Questions
- Time Management Suggestions for Grading Student Writing
- Working with Student Writing: Additional Resources
- Teaching Critical Reading
- Grading Student Work
- Academic Misconduct: Cheating, Plagiarism, and Other Forms
- Teaching with Technology
- Learning: Theory and Research
- Overview of Learning Theories
- Behaviorism
- Cognitive Constructivism
- Social Constructivism
- Neuroscience and How Students Learn
- Cognitive Science: Memory and Learning
- Anthropology: Situated Learning in Communities of Practice
- Psychology: Motivation and Learning
- Education: Organizing the Learning Process
- Education: Learning to Think in a Discipline
- Fostering Your Professional Development
- Campus Resources for Teaching and Learning