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Programs

Defining the "Scholarship of Teaching"

To begin your conversations about the scholarship of teaching, you might use the draft definition and set of questions below. The object of answering these and your own questions is to test the definition statement. Do you agree sufficiently with the definition to use it as the point of departure for looking at campus practices, policies, and conditions that work for or against the scholarship of teaching? If you do, you may want to proceed to the next step: identification and examination of those practices, policies, and conditions. If you modify the definition after your discussion, be sure to capture your reasons to report out with your revised definition.

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.

Questions:

  1. Is there a difference between excellence in teaching and the scholarship of teaching?
  2. What do different disciplines contribute to the scholarship of teaching? To what extent is the scholarship of teaching discipline-based?
  3. In which contexts and for what purposes do faculty members do scholarly work about teaching? Is the scholarship of teaching the responsibility of all faculty members?
  4. What questions about student learning can be explored through the scholarship of teaching?
  5. What practices, policies, and structures can support the scholarship of teaching?
  6. What practices, policies, and structures can inhibit the scholarship of teaching?

Stocktaking:

When you have achieved consensus on a definition of the "scholarship of teaching" to use for the present, next look at the practices, policies, and structures on your campus that support and that inhibit the scholarship of teaching there. You might want to rank-order the supports and inhibitors to self-assess the state of the scholarship of teaching at your institution.

[This stocktaking -- if it's occurring as part of a Campus Conversations process -- will help you identify a focus area for study and action during Part Two.]

The following is from the Carnegie Teaching Academy Campus Program literature.

The Carnegie Teaching Academy's draft definition of the "scholarship of teaching" is your starting point for a campus conversation of ways that the definition is enacted on your campus, conditions there that support the scholarship of teaching, and conditions that inhibit it. This discussion and environmental scan of your campus are most effective if focused and consequential.

The character of this conversation will depend on local culture and prior work. It will need to engage a broad cross section of campus constituents. You might situate your discussion in the work of an ongoing group, or your college might constitute a cross-functional group specifically for the Campus Conversations process. (To facilitate group discussion, you may want to consider distributing copies of the "Starting the Conversation" handout that follows.) Soliciting ideas from multiple constituencies will enrich the fullness of the discussion and the accuracy of your read of campus conditions. Your campus might take a short, intense look, or use a longer-term process. To further facilitate your conversations, a variety of tools and models is provided via the Teaching Initiatives page.

Your campus will generate its own questions to consider, but questions central to the draft definition and conditions for the scholarship of teaching might include these:

  1. Does our campus have a definition of the "scholarship of teaching" that helps faculty form and characterize their work? How does that definition correspond to or differ from the draft definition?
  2. What lines of work on our campus contribute to the scholarship of teaching?
  3. How many campus constituents do that work? How are the outcomes communicated?
  4. Are faculty members rewarded for doing the scholarship of teaching? Why or why not? How?
  5. Do hiring and orienting practices locate and support faculty members committed to the scholarship of teaching?
  6. What are the most central teaching issues on our campus? How is the campus addressing those issues?
  7. How does our campus culture discourage the scholarship of teaching? What specific steps could the campus take to improve these conditions?
  8. How does our campus culture affirm the scholarship of teaching? What specific steps could the campus take to sustain these conditions?

Reporting Outcomes of Part 1

You should report your outcomes as responses to the seven items below. Please provide your responses by number, in the following order. Limit your report to 750 words total, distributed over the seven items:

  1. Name of your college, and your contact person.
  2. What definition of "scholarship of teaching" your college accepted (not more than one sentence). If you revised the draft definition provided, briefly explain your reasons.
  3. The structures, policies, and practices in your college that support the scholarship of teaching.
  4. The structures, policies, and practices in your college that inhibit the scholarship of teaching.
  5. The issue your college proposes to study and act on during Part Two of the Campus Conversations process, and your plan for that study.
  6. 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.).
  7. Senior college administrator(s) supporting the stocktaking work (name, title, address, phone, email).

 

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