1 / 20

Scholarship of Teaching: An Introduction

Scholarship of Teaching: An Introduction . SoTL Fellows 2008-2009. Margaret Waterman New Fellows Orientation April 21, 2009. Teaching in a Scholarly Fashion vs. Scholarship of Teaching.

adanne
Download Presentation

Scholarship of Teaching: An Introduction

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Scholarship of Teaching: An Introduction SoTL Fellows 2008-2009 Margaret Waterman New Fellows Orientation April 21, 2009

  2. Teaching in a Scholarly Fashionvs.Scholarship of Teaching • Teaching Scholarly:thoughtful deliberation about the teaching / learning process • Scholarly Teaching:using research findings to made pedagogical decisions

  3. The Action Research Cycle? Identify Innovation Design the Study Develop or locate instruments Develop Action Plan Gather Data Interpret Data Analyze Data

  4. Be thinking about the following questions DESIGN • From whom are you gathering data? • Remember, we are looking at evidence of student learning for at least one source of data • When will you gather data? METHODS • How will you gather data? • Where will you gather data?

  5. Linking Study Design and Methods Suppose the DESIGN is on one class (the who), pre and post test (the when) Pretest Do new thing Post test How and where the data will be gathered are METHODS questions.

  6. Action Research Often Uses These Kinds of Methods to Gather Data Observations Surveys Interviews Artifact Analysis

  7. Three Ways to Gather Data • Make observations • Unstructured or structured observations • Ask questions • Surveys • Interviews • Examine and Score Artifacts • Tests, portfolios, treatment plans, student comments • Must design scoring guide

  8. Structured Observations • Examples: • Use a class map to keep track of who asks questions, answers questions, makes comments. • Have a list of behaviors. Make simple hash marks for each type of behavior when it occurs. • Make a list, from a recorded class discussion, of the kinds of questions you asked.

  9. Methods: Unstructured Observations • Examples • A journal that an instructor keeps to record personal impressions of how a class is going. • A written remembrance of interactions with one or a few students that are being tracked over time. • A written set of impressions made while watching a videotape of a class.

  10. Methods: Questioning with Surveys • Examples: • A survey of attitudes toward science • Rankings of importance • Student ratings of instruction • May include open-ended questions, e.g., what element of this course most helped you to learn? • May include some content, but if only content, it’s a test and is an artifact of the course.

  11. Methods: Questioning with Interviews • Advantage over surveys: can ask follow-ups, more personal contact. • Examples: • Sort readings by usefulness, telling why • Solve a genetics problem aloud, explaining thinking • A focus group • Interview of team members in small groups

  12. Method: Examine and Score Artifacts • Examples of artifacts: • Diagrams of cells before and after instruction • Wear on computer keys to see which are hit most • Answers to a test question • Portfolios • Term papers • Case analyses • Management plans • Treatment plans

  13. Methods: Artifact Analysis • Decide what you kinds of materials you want to collect • Justify why the artifact you are choosing is a good choice given your research question • Create a scoring rubric (guide) to assign points • Good for pre-post designs

  14. A KEY TO SUCCESS: Pilot Test Your Instruments • Give a small group of people (not in your class if you can) your survey or interview • Collect sample artifacts to see if your grading scheme works • Try out your observation scheme to see if it needs to be tweaked.

  15. Other Keys to Success • Talk about your design and instruments with Teaching Associates, SoTL Fellows, other colleagues. • Keep your data collection focused. • Try to keep the project reasonable in scope for the time you have available.

  16. To create your own plans answer the questions below: • From whom are you gathering data? More than one class, subgroups? • When will you gather data? First week of classes? After the new thing has been introduced? Fall? Spring? • How will you gather data? Questions, artifacts, observations? • Where will you gather data? Classroom, online forum, dropbox survey?

  17. Human Subjects • Because you are working with humans, you must submit a Human Subjects form to your college. Read policy in Faculty Handbook • Our projects are Category I - what one might do in the normal course of teaching • You need to tell how you will collect data, how you will protect privacy. • It is not necessary to get student permission in most cases.

  18. Human Subjects • Health and Human Services • http://www.semo.edu/hhs/images/humansub_2007.doc • Science and Mathematics • www.semo.edu/cosm/images/COSM_hs_form_2006.doc • Education • http://www.semo.edu/education/images/hscpro1.doc • Business? • Polytech? • Liberal Arts?

  19. More Resources on Methods • Go to http://cstl.semo.edu/sotl/agenda_and_resources.htm • Click on the links for overviews of each of the three main categories of data collection methods.

  20. Questions??

More Related