How Social Science Research Can Improve Teaching
Gary King, Maya Sen. 2013.
"How Social Science Research Can Improve Teaching".
Political Science and Politics, 46, 3, Pp. 621–629.

Abstract
We marshal discoveries about human behavior and learning from social science research and show how they can be used to improve teaching and learning. The discoveries are easily stated as three social science generalizations: (1) social connections motivate, (2) teaching teaches the teacher, and (3) instant feedback improves learning. We show how to apply these generalizations via innovations in modern information technology inside, outside, and across university classrooms. We also give concrete examples of these ideas from innovations we have experimented with in our own teaching.
See also a video presentation of this talk before the Harvard Board of Overseers
See Also
- [Paper] A Proposed Standard for the Scholarly Citation of Quantitative Data (2007)
- [Software] Booc.Io: An Education System With Hierarchical Concept Maps (2017)
- [Paper] Education and Scholarship by Video (2021)
- [Paper] Ensuring the Data Rich Future of the Social Sciences (2011)
- [Paper] How Human Subjects Research Rules Mislead You and Your University, and What to Do About It (2016)
- [Paper] Publication, Publication (2006)
- [Paper] Restructuring the Social Sciences: Reflections from Harvard's Institute for Quantitative Social Science (2014)
- [Book] The Changing Evidence Base of Social Science Research (2009)