2023 Finalist Readers Favorite Book Award in Non-Fiction/Education
#1 AMAZON NEW RELEASE in Pedagogy (Jan. 2023)
“Much good advice from a very enthusiastic and imaginative teacher.” —JAY MATHEWS, Washington Post education columnist
Tips & Insights for Professors, Curious Teachers, and Motivated Students
2023 Finalist Readers Favorite Book Award in Non-Fiction/Education
#1 AMAZON NEW RELEASE in Pedagogy (Jan. 2023)
“Much good advice from a very enthusiastic and imaginative teacher.” —JAY MATHEWS, Washington Post education columnist
“Binder’s Reminders” for Classroom Motivation
Recall and write a quick story from your teaching career related to each corresponding letter of the LIGHTBULBS acronym. On days when you feel unmotivated, re-read those notes as a reminder of the value you bring to the classroom while enriching student lives.
Listen to all learners
My Reminder: Open mind to open-note exams
Your Story Reminder:
Inspire students with real world discussions
My Reminder: Chips all in moment
Your Story Reminder:
Give hope to everyone
My Reminder: Graduation speech
Your Story Reminder:
Help students engage through exaggeration and humor
My Reminder: Limping Crazy Man
Your Story Reminder:
Teach to your strengths
My Reminder: Messing up the first class I ever taught
Your Story Reminder:
Be available at all times, whether in person or electronicallyMy Reminder: Student in prison
Your Story Reminder:
Understand that students may lack your life experience or knowledge
My Reminder: Read the car contract
Your Story Reminder:
Let your passion rub off on students (today’s story)
My Reminder: Buffalo Creek miners and Grandpa justice/Marsh Fork Elementary School
Your Story Reminder:
Be willing to walk in your students’ shoes
My Reminder: Student loses driver’s license
Your Story Reminder:
Stay within yourself?
My Reminder: Grandpa justice/Marsh Fork Elementary School, Part II
Your Story Reminder:
Book excerpt: Classroom LIGHTBULBS for College Professors (2023)
Perry Binder, J.D. is an award-winning author and professor at Georgia State University. He is a member of the Scientific Committee for the annual Future of Education conference in Florence, Italy, where he was invited twice as the closing keynote speaker. Each year from 2016-2022, Perry’s book, 99 Motivators for College Success (2012), was sent to hundreds of rising high school seniors nationwide, as part of the Book Award Program at Randolph College in Virginia.
How the Internet Changed Professions
Understatement: The internet has changed how we do business, whether in the United States or worldwide.
Section A. Use a free AI tool (I use the free version of ChatGPT 3.5) – figure out what prompt to use. Choose ANY profession. Discuss how the internet has improved, complicated, revolutionized, and/or adversely impacted the profession and the people working in that profession. (500-700-ish words)
Section B. Do not use AI. In your own words, reflect on the information in Section A by agreeing or disagreeing with any of the points. Then, conduct research on the web: Give specific examples of how the profession operated successfully in a pre-internet era versus a post-internet era. In addition, identify how the legal knowledge learned in this course will benefit you if working in that profession. (3 full pages)
Section C. Do not use AI. Find one case in the news where some aspect of the profession relating to the internet is currently being litigated (or from the past that was litigated) in court. (whether at the pre-trial, trial, or appellate stage). Give the facts of the case, the main issue/s involved, which party or parties you believe will prevail (and why) and how you believe this case will impact the future of the profession and/or the people working in the profession. (2 full pages)
In Fall 2023, I am teaching Consumer Law & Advocacy again. Instead of having students write a demand letter from scratch using a template, I will have them generate one with ChatGPT 3.5. Then, instead of filling out a small claims court complaint form, they will use AI to write a professional complaint. Finally, I will generate Mediation scenarios using AI, with separate facts for each side in our simulations.
After getting the cash from grandma, I went to the county jail where the guard took me to a dim and dank holding cell. I was looking all lawyerly with my blue pinstripe suit and sharp leather shoes and briefcase. Another guard escorted Betty into the cell. Her hair was disheveled, a stiletto was missing from one shoe, and she looked frazzled.
I said: “Betty, we have two options, I could get you out of here now, or” – as I reached into my briefcase – “right now, you can take the Midterm Exam that you missed last week.”
Betty’s reaction? “Get me the frick out of here!”
Ninety minutes after the exam commenced, Betty was set free. I’ll let you judge for yourself how true the prior sentence is.
Always remember: It’s good to be the prof.
Excerpt (pages 83-84) Classroom LIGHTBULBS
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