Playful & Serious Is the Perfect Combo for A&P | TAPP Radio 13
The A&P Professor - A podcast by Kevin Patton

Categories:
Kevin explains why the term meatus is weird (hint: it's the plural form). The topic of storytelling in teaching continues with an emphasis on playfulness and the use of analogies (especially playful analogies). Why the term meatus is weird. (3 min) Convenient ways to subscribe to TAPP Radio. (2 min) Playfulness and analogies have a role in storytelling. (14 min) If you cannot see or activate the audio player click here. Follow The A&P Professor on Twitter, Facebook, Blogger, Nuzzel, Tumblr, or Instagram! (0:46) The term meatus is properly pluralized as meatus or meatuses (not meati) Meatus | Weird Word (post explaining meatus from o-log-y the terminology blog) Meatus as a fourth-declension noun (page from a terminology text) (3:31) There are a lot of options for convenient listening to this podcast! Subscribe page (links and directions on how to subscribe to this podcast) Alexa skill (shows you how to listen to this podcast on your Alexa device) (5:19) The previous episode (TAPP 12) explained Kevin's view that effective A&P teachers are good storytellers. This episode "continues the story" by discussing analogies. Analogies can be stories that help students understand complex concepts. Sometimes, they are most effective when they are playful, which helps engage students and makes the stories easy to remember. Kevin relates his use of "phosphorylation frogs" in a story that can be referred to every time ATP generation comes up in the course. What are the pros and cons of using analogies? Storytelling is the Heart of Teaching A&P | TAPP Radio 12 (where the story of storytelling in A&P begins) Frog pop-ups (toys similar to those described by Kevin in this episode) Books by John Dewey (book sales help pay for podcast expenses) Metaphors & Analogies: Power Tools for Teaching Any Subject (book that addresses many issues, including English-language learners) If the hyperlinks here are not active, go to TAPPradio.org to find the episode page. More details at the episode page. Transcript available at the script page. Listen to any episode on your Alexa device. Join The A&P Professor social network: Blog Twitter @theAPprofessor Facebook theAPprofessor Instagram theAPprofessor YouTube