|
Committee Reports
College of
Health & Human Sciences
College of Education
College of
Arts & Sciences - Fine Arts/Communication and Humanities
Natural Sciences
J. Mack Robinson
College of Business
Social Sciences
College of Health & Human Sciences
- College of Health & Human Sciences, College of Law,
and School of Policy Studies
- Beatrice Yorker, Professor of Nursing, 404 651-4085
- Definition of "scholarship of teaching" your
college accepted.
- The respondents overwhelmingly approved of the Carnegie
proposed definition of the scholarship of teaching.
- The structures, policies, and practices in your college
that support the scholarship of teaching.
- Structures:
- The College of Health and Human Sciences has been
very receptive by providing opportunities for faculty
to present teaching innovations at a brown bag luncheon
immediately prior to faculty meetings.
- The School of Nursing has had several external experts
in scholarship of teaching conduct workshops for faculty.
- The College of Law has a peer review process for
all faculty. It provides at least two classroom observations
of a faculty member with the opportunity for reflection
on their classroom teaching.
- The School of Policy studies has no formal structures
for scholarship of teaching.
- Policies:
- Most existing policies across the three areas focus
on scholarship in the discipline rather than scholarship
of teaching. In fact, the College of Health and Human
Sciences specifically redirected faculty who engaged
in the scholarship of teaching to change their focus
to disciplinary research. The rationale for this was
based on the GSU strategic plan which guided faculty
toward activities that would move us up in the Carnegie
rankings. Since federal funding for disciplinary research
far exceeds funding in areas of scholarship of teaching,
internal development efforts have primarily focused
on obtaining external research funding.
- Practices:
The implementation of cumulative review of faculty (pre-tenure
and post-tenure review) this has provided an excellent
opportunity for Deans, Directors, and Chairs to direct
faculty with interest in scholarship of teaching to gain
expertise in this area. Examples include sending tenured
faculty who choose a teaching focus to AAHE conferences
and then to enrich the rest of the faculty with innovations
and reflective opportunities such as developing teaching
portfolios.
The most pervasive practice that influences faculty
to not value scholarship of teaching activities prior
to tenure, is the GSU, college, and unit criteria for
promotion and tenure. In applied disciplines that dominate
our three colleges, we all have a rich history of examining,
and measuring learning outcomes. Bar exams, Nursing
Board exams, and a variety of other credentialing benchmarks
are applied to students in the areas we teach. The reality
of GSU’s mission of obtaining external funding has required
that faculty who teach professions that have established
learning outcomes direct major attention to their disciplinary
scholarship. The criteria for promotion and tenure reflect
this mission by requiring evidence of publications and
grants in disciplinary areas that will leverage funding
and are only beginning to look at a variety of ways
to evaluate teaching and learning.
- The structures, policies, and practices in your college
that inhibit the scholarship of teaching.
- As mentioned above, the dominant emphasis on faculty
performance evaluation prior to tenure, is based on
fundable scholarship within the discipline.
- The issue your college proposes to study and act on during
Part Two of the Campus Conversations process, and your plan
for that study.
- Analyze and distribute the results of a survey sent
to all faculty in the three units regarding
- Responses to the Carnegie definition
- the disciplinary vehicles for publishing/scholarship
in teaching
- the archive of articles published by faculty members
in our three colleges on scholarship of teaching to
date
- Engage in discussions regarding faculty responses to
the questions regarding perceptions of the value of
scholarship of teaching.
- The survey responses tended to show that faculty believe
that they value scholarship of teaching more than their
unit, their college, their discipline, and the university.
- Organize monthly scholarship of teaching pizza lunches
for Law, Health and Human Sciences and Policy Studies
to meet together and feature faculty exemplars of scholarship
of teaching.
- Develop unit award(s) that recognize teaching.
- Key words that point toward your supports, inhibitors,
or Part Two work (such as faculty rewards, faculty development,
assessment of student learning, team-teaching, problem-based
learning, student portfolios, service-learning, etc.).
- Supports:
- Faculty rewards, both internal funding and annual evaluation
merit pay raises
- Inviting (some units requiring) teaching portfolios
- Valuing and modeling service learning
- Inhibitors:
- Promotion and tenure criteria and focus
- Federal funding
| 7. Senior college administrator(s)
supporting the stocktaking work |
| Dr. Susan Kelley, Dean,
College of Health and Human Sciences |
|
8th floor, Urban Life Building |
|
Georgia State University |
|
404 651-3031 skelley@gsu.edu |
| Dr. Janice Griffith, Dean,
College of Law |
|
4th floor, Urban Life Building |
|
Georgia State University |
|
404 651-2096 jgriffith@gsu.edu |
| Dr. Paula Stephan, Associate
Dean, School of Policy Studies |
|
612 COBA |
|
Georgia State University |
|
404 651-3500 pstephan@gsu.edu |
| Dr. Judith Wold, Director,
School of Nursing |
|
9th floor, Urban Life Building |
|
Georgia State University |
|
404 651-3040 jwold@gsu.edu |
College of Education
Report on Carnegie discussion of the Scholarship of Teaching
from
The College of Education
Contact Person: Stephen Harmon
Definition of The Scholarship of Teaching:
The scholarship of teaching is a cyclical process that involves
examining in a formal manner the variables which are associated
with effective teaching, personal reflection on the results
of this examination, application of this reflection to one’s
teaching, evaluation of this application, and dissemination
of the overall results to the larger community of scholars.
The end result of the scholarship of teaching should be increased
effectiveness in one’s teaching, defined as demonstrable and
lasting increases in student learning.
What are the hindrances to the scholarship of teaching? One
primary hindrance to the scholarship of teaching emerged in
every discussion; GSU has not operationalized the concept
of the scholarship of teaching, and how this concept relates
directly to promotion, tenure, and general teaching duties.
The traditional perspective on the tripartite university mission
is prohibitive to the activities inherent in the definition
of the scholarship of teaching. Professors are encouraged
to take the time to be effective teachers, but at the same
time the reward system sends different messages about what
is valued for promotion, tenure, and merit adjustments. Quite
simply, if GSU wants professors to be reflective, creative,
and experimenting teacher-scholars, the university must be
more explicit and consistent in promoting and rewarding those
activities that lead to a scholarship of teaching on campus.
The systematic attitude about teaching is that it is a part
of the job, but is not as important as other parts are. This
is manifested in university policy. For example, an associate
professor may be promoted to full professor with only "adequate"
teaching. . Presently, it appears that exceptionally bad teaching
may draw unfavorable attention from administration, but all
other degrees of expertness in teaching are blurred in regard
to professional evaluation. The graduate faculty policy also
devalues teaching by implying that if one doesn't make graduate
faculty status then one is "punished" by being given
more teaching responsibilities
Other hindrances that emerged less universally were:
- that the usage of innovative approaches to teaching such
as on-line courses, etc. has not received the attention
needed to equip the 21st century scholar with
the tools to be a true scholar of teaching.
- at the University level, the teaching facilities are poor.
(Anyone who has ever taught in 4th floor of Sparks
can attest to this. Old uncomfortable desks, broken overheads,
no chalk, blazingly hot or arctic ally cold.)
- scheduling is problematic. 7:15 pm classes are not especially
conducive to teaching or learning.
- some participants felt that there was an overemphasis
on technology in funding programs on improving teaching.
What are the supports to the scholarship of teaching? The
single most important support for the scholarship of teaching
is the university’s serious approach to this topic, and the
design of the current forum to discuss it. However, the university
is at a beginning stage of this process and currently support
for the scholarship of teaching is much stronger at the departmental
level than at the college or university level. Departments
offer a range of supports including brown bag lunch discussions,
annual evaluations, developmental course releases, faculty
support systems, and hiring practices that include excellence
in teaching as a major factor of employment. Other supports
are funding for collaborative teaching from the Provost’s
Office, Mentoring Grants, the promotion of interdisciplinary
teaching, and the Center for Teaching and Learning. Overall
though, supports for the scholarship of teaching do not appear
to be intrinsic to the university system and vary widely by
department.
College of Arts & Sciences - Fine
Arts/Communication and Humanities
From: John M. Murphy
To: Harry L. Dangel
Date: Mon, Nov 22, 1999 1:29 PM
Subject: Committee Report on GSU Teaching
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Campus Conversations about Teaching at GSU
Reporting Outcomes of Part 1
Associates of the Center for Teaching and Learning from
Fine Arts/Communications & Humanities departments
| Nancy Floyd |
(Art and Design) |
| Jonathan Herman |
(Philosophy) |
| James Hirsh |
(English) |
| Ray Miller |
(Communication) |
| Elaine Miller |
(Modern and Classical Languages) |
| John Murphy |
(Applied Linguistics & ESL), Convener
& Committee Secretary |
| Lee Orr |
(Music) |
As associates of GSU's Center for Teaching and Learning (CTL),
over the past three months the seven members of our committee
have been engaged in a dialogue about teaching and learning
at Georgia State. We participated in a weekend workshop with
dozens of other associates of the Center, examined a range
of source materials, met four times as a whole committee,
and consulted with colleagues in our respective academic departments.
The following provides a summary of what we have learned about
teaching and learning at GSU through our dialogues and discussions
in these forums. We present the summary as material the co-directors
of the CTL will be working with as they continue to prepare
a proposal to be submitted to the Carnegie Teaching Academy
during the spring 2000 semester. Our understanding is that
our summary is one of six such documents being submitted to
the Center's co-directors this week.
Synopsis of Major Points
The term "Scholarship of Teaching" (SOT) is problematic.
Its definition is too narrow as presented by the Carnegie Teaching
Academy. Faculty resist the term. A danger is that it may serve
as a barrier to more fruitful stages in the processes aimed
for.
The illustrations of SOT provided seem limited. We would
like them to be more inclusive, to include many other options.
Documentation and the forms it might take concern us. In
particular, the purposes of teaching documentation concern
faculty.
Faculty may lose interest in participating in such efforts
without the perception that something of practical value will
come out of it.
The Term "Scholarship of Teaching"
We applaud the efforts of the Carnegie Foundation to improve
the quality of postsecondary instruction and we agree that the
best method for accomplishing this is through a more systematic
sharing of information about teaching. We believe, however,
that the term "scholarship of teaching" (SOT) is counter-productive
and misleading on our campus. The word Ascholarship@ implies
publication of an article in a scholarly journal, a book, or
through a scholarly press. Applied to the kinds of activities
targeted by the Carnegie, the phrase SOT seems to dilute the
term "scholarship." Arguments about the term will
unnecessarily divert time and energy away from what should be
a more important task, enhancing the quality of teaching at
GSU. Though we provide no alternative term here, we trust the
Center for Teaching and Learning will be exploring ways to resolve
this issue.
Whatever term eventually is decided upon, SOT encompasses
all of the ways in which individual faculty share what they
have learned about teaching with colleagues. We believe an
environment in which faculty are able to share insights about
teaching with one another leads to personal investment in
acts of teaching and contributes to continuing improvements
in teaching. As a general comment, our goal should not be
how to evaluate teachers but to explore ways to help each
other become even more effective educators. Sharing of information
seems to be the most appropriate and beneficial way of doing
this--not through evaluation.
Illustrations of Faculty Efforts in This Area: Alternatives
and Options
We see all of the following as potentially useful; no one
way should receive exclusive emphasis. In our division of the
university, examples of SOT efforts might include the following:
Teaching Portfolios
The College of A&S already requires faculty to submit a
teaching portfolio on a yearly basis as part of documentation
for annual review. This requirement provides opportunities to
enhance (a) the quality of teaching at GSU and (b) the quality
of documentation through dialogue and sharing of illustrations.
Supports to assist faculty in the development and refinement
of teaching portfolios should continue to be explored.
Reciprocal Observation
One way of sharing insights about teaching is "reciprocal
observation." In this option, two instructors make arrangements
to visit and observe one (or a series) of each other's classes.
Following each classroom visit, they participate in a collaborative
discussion of their instructional goals, methods, teaching strategies,
and other related concerns. Reciprocal observation differs in
fundamental ways from options such as peer review (e.g., in
which one instructor observes another and produces a written
critique so a third party may make personnel decisions about
the observed instructor). In most cases the goal of peer review
is evaluation. In contrast, the goal of reciprocal observation
as we envision it is the enhancement of teaching skills on the
parts of both instructors. Through the exploratory process of
reciprocal observation, each instructor has opportunities to
strengthen collegial ties with another member of the faculty,
to learn something new about teaching at GSU, to develop a clearer
understanding of her or his own teaching practices, and to engage
in substantive discussions about teaching with a peer. Reciprocal
observation provides opportunities for each instructor to re-examine
instructional goals and methods, to reflect on one's current
teaching practices, and to articulate one's teaching philosophy.
Mentoring
More experienced teachers mentor beginning teachers, providing
individual guidance, assistance, and advice as appropriate.
Departmental Workshops
Experienced teachers conduct departmental workshops on specific
teaching strategies. Workshops can be developed based on specific
course levels (1st, 2nd, 3rd year courses) with both new and
experienced instructors.
Multiple Section Discussions
: In courses with multiple sections, all teachers assigned to
a course meet to discuss course objectives, syllabi, requirements,
and so on. The purpose of such discussions is not to enforce
uniformity but to give each instructor a sense of the breadth
of available options within an academic department.
Teaching Committees
A departments might set up a teaching committee, much like research
committees that are currently in place. This forum allows a
mechanism through which funding for teaching innovations can
be monitored, supported, guided, etc.
Non-Traditional Means
: Our committee would like to emphasize that sometimes it is
important for teachers to find non-traditional and "creative"
means to discuss and present their work as teachers. Such documentation
of engagement in acts of teaching might include: poetry, dramatic
performance, choreography, documentary or experimental film-making,
interactive web sites, musical composition and performance,
writing a short story, autobiographical or biographical writing,
etc. Particularly since our college includes departments such
as Communication, Fine Arts and Music, our concern is that instructors
who are members of creative disciplines should be encouraged
to find nontraditional as well as traditional ways by which
to convey their insights into instructional practices.
GTA Training
: In some departments, graduate faculty meet regularly to assess
and guide the department's procedures for the training of graduate
and undergraduate teaching assistants (GTAs & TAs). A faculty
member might train new GTAs and supervise them on a weekly basis
(as, for example, in the English department).
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Closing Remarks:
As requested of our committee, we would like to respond to
definitions of the term Scholarship of Teaching. Below are listed
two definitions provided to our committee by GSU's Center for
Teaching and Learning. The first definition was proposed by
the Carnegie Teaching Academy and the second is excerpted from
the work of Lee S. Shulman: Each definition is followed by a
synopsis of our committee's discussions.
Definition #1:
". . . The scholarship of teaching is problem posing
about an issue of teaching or learning, study of the problem
through methods appropriate to disciplinary /epistemologies,
application of results to practice, communication of results,
self-reflection, and peer review. . . "
-- the Carnegie Teaching Academy's working
definition
"The scholarship of teaching is problem posing .
. ."
Use of the phrase "problem posing" suggests
something along the lines of the initial stages of an action
research study (e.g., a classroom-centered research investigation)
of teaching and teaching effectiveness. While that is one
alternative, we would like to expand the options available
to include many other ways of engaging in exploration of teaching.
We suggest leaving plenty of room for diversity in approaches
(see some of the options listed above).
". . . about an issue of teaching or learning .
. ., "
An "issue" could be nothing more than something
about teaching that puzzles a teacher (e.g., Why are students
in this course section less responsive to my whole-class discussion
prompts? How can I use the blackboard, or WebCT, more efficiently?).
All faculty encounter puzzling events at times. As such "issues"
are identified, they might serve as logical starting points
for developing constructive discussions about teaching between
colleagues. .
". . . study of the problem through methods appropriate
to disciplinary epistemologies, application of results to
practice, communication of results, self-reflection, and peer
review. . . "
These stages seem to be framing the discussion in terms
of classroom-centered research. We include such efforts as
examples of the kinds of things a teacher might do, but the
broader picture is finding many different ways for teachers
to engage in explorations of teaching. Some, but not all,
of these ways might culminate in written documentation. Other
ways might involve more personal, one-on-one connections between
teachers who are engaged in reciprocal, and reciprocally supportive,
activities.
Definition #2:
". . . A scholarship of teaching will entail a public
account of some or all of the full act of teaching --- vision,
design, enactment, outcomes, and analysis --- in a manner susceptible
to critical review by the teacher's professional peers, and
amenable to productive employment in future work by members
of that same community."
--Lee S. Shulman, The Course Portfolio
(1999, AAHE)
". . . A scholarship of teaching . . ."
Same issues as already discussed above.
". . . will entail a public account . . ."
However, such efforts may not begin with a public account
in mind. In some viable options, two or more teachers collaborate
in reciprocally supportive ways to learn more about each other's
ways of teaching. We do not think that all efforts will necessarily
culminate in a public account.
". . . of some or all of the full act of teaching
--- vision, design, enactment, outcomes, and analysis ---"
These can be examined through reciprocal observation,
and some of the other options we have discussed, as well.
". . . in a manner susceptible to critical review
by the teacher's professional peers, . . ."
The phrase "critical review" concerns us. It
suggests that such efforts are pointed in the direction of
evaluation and assessment above other concerns. We are more
interested in setting up mechanisms for lower key, mutually
supportive, reciprocal and collegial explorations of teaching.
On the other hand, some faculty may be ready to pursue projects
culminating in written documentation that would be available
for critical review. That is an ambitious level of engagement
in explorations of teaching. We would like to include it as
an option worth pursuing but caution against setting it a
standard all faculty are expected to live up to.
". . . and amenable to productive employment in
future work by members of that same community. . . ."
Again, this phrasing seems to suggest that the products
of SOT need to culminate in written accounts. We believe there
are many other options, as well.
Natural Sciences
Draft Commentary from the Natural Sciences
The process of engaging the faculty
This draft has been constructed from the comments of faculty
in the Department of Physics and Astronomy, Biology, Chemistry,
and Computer Science. The departments of Geology and Mathematics
had no reports. Issues related to the Scholarship of Teaching
were raised in a number of forums: Departmental faculty meetings,
at a brown-bag lunch, and individual meetings with selected
faculty. Written faculty input was solicited but only a small
number responded across departments. Individual discussions
were held with the chairperson in two of the departments.
One department engages new instructors in discussions of teaching
and shares courses materials and instructional notes, the
best methods and talks about what appear most effective.
Defining the Scholarship of Teaching
There is little enthusiasm across the participating departments
for the term Scholarship of Teaching. Some viewed the
term "Scholarship" as troublesome, and there is
a perception among some in the scientific community that scholarship
related to science education is less intellectually demanding
than research in the discipline itself.
Several faculty expressed concern that they really don’t
know how to weight published papers on scholarship of teaching
in terms of tenure and promotion and they felt that those
making decisions on tenure and promotion would not give them
much weight.
Factors that Support the Scholarship of Teaching
The administration, especially at the upper levels, is
supportive of an increased role and a higher status for the
scholarship of teaching. The Center for Teaching and Learning
is active. Nationwide the science community has established
a growing resource network of innovative teaching ideas and
tools for their evaluation. Grant support for the Scholarship
of Teaching is increasingly available.
At least one department encourages the scholarship of teaching
as a component of a professional effort with junior and senior
faculty members who are actively engaged in some aspect
of the improvement of instruction. An active program to develop
the teaching skills of our graduate students is in place.
This department would consider filling a new tenure-track
position with a candidate whose research was in the "teaching
and learning" of the subject. This research is seen as
making the elite academic community more sensitive and responsive
to its student customers.
In contrast, in another department no one has published anything
about teaching pedagogy or assessment of learning or even
suggested anything that helps scholarship of teaching. In
a third department faculty express the opinion that the University
has a commitment to strive for better quality in our teaching
and that this work could get passed on through discussions
with other faculty, teaching workshops, or published in the
discipline specific teaching journals.
Factors that Inhibit the Scholarship of Teaching
Local resources don’t match the verbal support. In particular,
funding for tenure-track positions dedicated to the Scholarship
of Teaching are not generally available within the science
departments. Likewise, the view taken by promotion and tenure
committees toward the scholarship of teaching is in a state
of flux. A junior faculty member may be better advised to
maximize more traditional research publications. Small departments
with graduate programs need to fill faculty positions with
an eye toward a candidate’s potential as a research mentor.
Competition for tenure-track positions is fierce, and a candidate
with more "education" publications and fewer "scientific"
publications is at a disadvantage.
Traditional research is often rewarded by "released"
time from teaching duties. Interest in teaching and learning
issues, in contrast, is often rewarded by more teaching and
a diminished potential for scholarship in teaching. In one
department, faculty all agreed that because tenure and promotion
is based on accomplishing research goals, the emphasis on
traditional research and the money that supports it is the
main thing hindering scholarship of teaching. A departmental
associate chair noted that the faculty are hired for their
research skills and not for teaching and that someone hired
in science education should be expected to publish scholarship
of teaching and that type of publication would be given much
weight for them.
J. Mack Robinson College of Business
CENTER FOR TEACHING AND LEARNING (CTL)
GEORGIA STATE UNIVERSITY
THE CARNEGIE TEACHING ACADEMY CAMPUS PROGRAM
CAMPUS CONVERSATION PROGRAM – PART I
for the
J. MACK ROBINSON COLLEGE OF BUSINESS (RCB)
The RCB Associates to the CTL completed the actions identified
in its plan for Part I of the Campus Conversation Program.
This preliminary plan for Part I is by reference made an attachment
to this report.
Preliminary Report on the Data from the Survey of the
RCB Faculty
The response by the faculty with regard to the definition
of the scholarship of teaching ranged far and wide. At one extreme
it involves everything faculty do to ensure that the "light
goes on" for every student. At the other extreme, it focuses
narrowly on the statistical analysis of various teaching techniques.
We will explore these views and the more central ideas in detail
in phase II of the study.
In general, the faculty believes that the RCB requires
and supports high quality instruction. The principal factors
are the need to show good student evaluations for consideration
in all personnel evaluations, and the work of the Faculty
Development Committee in providing workshops and seminars
on teaching oriented topics.
The major inhibitors for the scholarship
of teaching movement as identified by the faculty are:
- an over emphasis on traditional research (scholarship
of discovery) by the faculty in general and various promotion
and tenure committees;
- lack of explicitly expressed support by administration
from the Department Chairs through the Deans to the Provost
and the President; and
- lack of resources to support faculty interested in this
area (to be explored in phase II).
Preliminary Report on the Opinions of the Deans of the
RCB
In general, the Deans of the RCB support efforts to develop
a learner-centered environment and to increase student’s learning
because of our faculty’s teaching. They encourage the faculty
to share what appear to be best practices and to assess teaching
effectiveness through a variety of means. They do not wish to
get into the discussion of what is meant by the "scholarship
of teaching" choosing to leave that to others. But, they
support the use of more precise descriptors such as "applied
research" or "assessing teaching effectiveness."
Preliminary Report on the Personal Interviews with the
Faculty Development
Committee (FDC) of the RCB
The FDC’s working definition of the scholarship of teaching
includes activities aimed at the improvement of teaching effectiveness
and the dissemination of findings. This definition embraces
research into delivery methods, teaching methodology, and instructional
materials, as well as dissemination through publications, workshops,
and forums.
Members of the FDC believe that the college supports high
quality teaching and teaching effectiveness as evidenced by
its mission statement. This view is further supported by the
role teaching performance plays in faculty evaluation, and
by the existence and activities of the FDC, including its
workshops and its ongoing instructional innovation grant program.
The primary inhibitor to the scholarship of teaching is a
reward structure favoring discipline specific research accomplishment
over teaching accomplishment. The appropriateness of such
favoritism is the focus of some disagreement.
Plan for Part II of the Campus Conversation Program
In Part II of the Campus Conversation Program the following
activities will be undertaken:
- The data obtained from the open ended questions in the
survey in Part I will be assembled and analyzed in detail
to discover dominant themes and strong relationships.
- The personal interviews with influential groups will continue
with interviews of the:
- Chairs and Directors of the Departments, Institutes
and Schools in the RCB ( Executive Committee of the RCB)
- Influential faculty members representing each department,
institute and school on an advisory committee to the Dean
(Faculty Affairs Committee of the RCB.
- Promotion and Tenure Committee of the RCB.
- Recipients of the RCB Teaching Award for approximately
the last ten years.
- Refinement of a definition of the scholarship of teaching
and learning for use in the RCB based on the results of
all previous data.
- Construction of a Lickert scale based survey instrument
about the scholarship of teaching and learning, the teaching
vs. learning paradigm, the support structure for scholarship
of teaching and learning, the inhibitors of the scholarship
of teaching and learning, and other major issues identified
in the open-ended questions. This survey should lead to
the discovery of statistically significant relationships.
- Completion of all aspects of the data gathering and analysis.
Construction of a report on the results of Part II of the
Campus Conversation Program.
Social Sciences
The Carnegie Teaching Academy Campus Program
Fall 1999
Reporting Outcomes of Part 1
An introduction with some methodological commentary:
The data collected for this report reflects the work of the
associates to the Center for Teaching and Learning for the
departments of Anthropology and Geography, History, Political
Science, Psychology and Sociology. All associates interviewed
their department chairs and held interviews with faculty in
their departments, four held faculty meetings and the fifth
will do so later. Three associates utilized the Carnegie Foundation
film. All considered the work productive and their departments
cooperative although to varying degrees. An example of participation
is the Political Science department that had 100 % participation
in a conversation that can be characterized as the most involved
discussion about teaching in the 29 years I have been at Georgia
State. In addition, eleven of the nineteen faculty members
in the department sent detailed email responses delineating
their thoughts on the subject.
It is clear that in the Social and Behavioral Sciences the
Campus Conversations on "the scholarship of teaching"
are in progress.
The general consensus of these conversations is that all
faculty are extremely interested in teaching effectiveness
and excellence in teaching. However, no junior faculty member
has the time to commit to a "scholarship of teaching."
Some senior faculty were more predisposed toward the endeavor.
One viewpoint expressed repeatedly is that this should be
a "scholarship of teaching and learning," not just
a scholarship of teaching.
- College and Contact Person:
College of Arts and Sciences; William R. Thomas, Associate
Professor, Department of Political Science; Associate to the
Center for Teaching and Learning
- The definition of scholarship of teaching your college
accepts:
The suggested definition of "scholarship of
teaching" was questioned by two of the five departments.
Their general critique was that the definition was too broad
and general in its inclusion of both research and non-research
activities under scholarship on teaching. The following alternative
definitions were put forward:
- A more formal process of experimenting and evaluating
specific teaching styles and methods and disseminating the
results to other scholars/teachers for evaluation and review;
peer exploration and evaluation of pedagogical methods;
emphasis is on research and publication to be distinguished
from excellent teaching; and
- Problem posing about an issue of teaching or learning,
study of the problem through scientific methods, presentation
of results for peer review, and integration and communication
of those results.
A majority of the behavioral and social sciences accepts
the default definition that "the scholarship of teaching
is problem posing about an issue of teaching or learning,
study of the problem through methods appropriate to disciplinary
epistemologies, application of results to practice, communications
of results, self-reflection and peer review."
- The structures, policies, and practices in the College
of Arts and Sciences that support the scholarship of teaching:
The recent change in the College Promotion and Tenure Manual
that states that "...a recommendation for tenure and
promotion to associate requires that the candidate be judged
at least excellent in either instruction or professional
development..." Thus, teaching is now ranked as important
as professional development.
Beginning this year, Arts and Sciences requires a teaching
portfolio through which faculty may symbolize the quality
of their teaching.
Arts and Sciences also has a teaching track which senior
faculty with strong teaching records can choose to follow
for merit pay purposes.
The college of Arts and Sciences also participate in faculty
development awards and instructional improvement grants.
- The structures, policies, and practices in the College
of Arts and Sciences that inhibit the scholarship of teaching:
New faculty to the university have research agendas in particular
areas of specialization as these relate to their discipline.
Active, professional research on teaching has never been a
desirable criterion for faculty recruited by the College of
Arts and Sciences.
There is more of an emphasis on and reward for a productive
research agenda on a highly specialized area of inquiry and
not on broad research and development agenda. There is more
support and reward of specialists then of generalists (a great
teacher must be both a generalist and be grounded in the so-called
"real world"). Likewise there is preference and
reward for basic research in the Arts and Sciences rather
than on applied research, the category in which scholarship
of teaching probably best fits.
Currently there are no real rewards for junior faculty to
pursue "the scholarship of teaching." In fact, because
of the time pressures of the professional development necessary
to obtain promotion and tenure, junior faculty cannot think
of this as an alternative.
- What issue does the department propose that the College
of Arts and Sciences study and act on during part two of the
campus conversations process and what does the department
propose as the plan for that study?
This elicited many excellent responses. The more frequently
mentioned are rank ordered below. A consensus advocated that
a first step is to provide professors with research and other
resources and information about how they might do things differently
in the classroom. The following topics of interest were mentioned
the most frequently:
- how can available technologies be incorporated into the
learning process;
- how can portfolios lead to more effective teaching;
- how to facilitate students becoming less passive and more
active as learners;
- how to construct effective and fair examinations;
- how to facilitate classroom discussions;
- how to utilize effective group work in large classes;
- what types of projects are conducive to service learning;
- how can group projects reinforce class concepts; and
- what types of innovations are other social science teachers
trying.
A beginning example from the Political Science Department
is to have a faculty member research PS, the journal
for teaching Political Science, for articles especially relevant
for the classroom that would serve as a focal point for faculty
conversation about teaching. This could be supplemented by
other resources and eventually lead to a resource bank on
teaching. This would help create a community of scholars conversing
over teaching within the discipline.
- Key words:
- equitable teaching loads;
- service learning;
- teaching effectiveness, teaching evaluations and assessment
of teaching;
- teaching excellence;
- teaching standards;
- portfolio;
- technological innovation;
- new pedagogical approaches;
- peer review;
- strategies for improving teaching;
- strategies for symbolizing teaching; and
- faculty professional development in pedagogy.
- Supportive administrators:
Lauren Adamson, Associate Dean, College of Arts and Sciences
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