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Welcome to a Tutorial on the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning SOTL

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Welcome to a Tutorial on the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning SOTL

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    1. Welcome to a Tutorial on the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (SOTL)

    2. Using the Tutorial

    3. Acknowledgements

    4. Task A

    5. Continuum of Experience with SOTL A Metaperspective

    6. Alpha to Omega Continuum:Contents

    7. Unit 1A The What and Why of SOTL

    8. A Conceptualization of Teaching Related Activities

    9. Relationship to Excellence

    10. SOTL as Academic Activity vs. Campus Initiative

    11. Why SOTL?

    12. Why SOTL? (Cont.) Power of Ideas Faculty Role Students Public Self Multiple and Competing Commitments Need to Step Out Marginality Courage

    13. Task B: Reasons to Engage in SOTL

    14. Unit 1B Origins and Evolution of SOTL

    15. Origin and Evolution of SOTL (In Progress)

    16. Not a New Idea

    17. “Scholarship of Teaching” Coined

    18. Reform Concepts: Classroom Assessment/ Classroom Research

    19. Reform Concepts: New Epistemology

    20. Reform Concepts: The New American Scholar

    21. Reform Concepts: Conception of Teaching & Scholarship Assessed

    22. Implementing Entities: AAHE

    23. Implementing Entities: Carnegie

    24. Implementing Entities: Carnegie (cont.) CASTL

    25. Implementing Entities: Pew Peer Review of Teaching Course Portfolios

    26. Implementing Entities: Lilly Conferences on College Teaching

    27. Recent Articulations: Scholarship of Teaching Scholarly Teaching

    28. Recent Articulations: Exploring Scholarship of Teaching The Model of Kreber & Cranton

    29. Recent Articulations: Conceptualizing Scholarly Teaching and Scholarship of Teaching

    30. Task C

    31. Unit 2A Initiating SOTL Programs

    32. A Campus Example in Detail: Using SOTL to Make Change Happen

    33. Three Stages of Campus Program Goals

    34. What are the Key Resources?

    35. Massive Administrative Support (Cont.)

    36. A Dedicated Director

    37. The Faculty Advisory Council

    38. A Core of Faculty Members Willing To Engage in This Work and Share It With Others

    39. Getting People Involved

    40. Getting People Involved: An Example

    41. Getting People Involved (continued)

    42. Changing the Institutional Culture . .

    43. Changing Institutional Culture: One Example

    44. Changing Institutional Culture: One Example (cont.)

    45. Changing Institutional Culture: Another Example

    46. Changing Institutional Culture Further Examples Input from the Faculty Advisory Council and interested faculty researchers influenced the human subjects process to facilitate SOTL activities. Input from the Faculty Advisory Council and interested faculty researchers facilitated access to institutional data (registrar, etc.) for SOTL researchers.

    47. Assessing SOTL Program Impact: Participation Statistics 1999-2001

    48. Selected Faculty Comments about the Campus SOTL Initiative

    49. Assessing SOTL Program Impact: Scaffolding

    50. TASK D: Refining Your Own Campus SOTL Program or Plan

    51. Other Campus Examples Elon College The Citadel Rockhurst University Abilene Christian University Notre Dame University Middlesex Community College Task E – Applicable Features

    52. Elon College Multidisciplinary, Multiyear, $72,000 Investment $6000 projects in each of 3 years Projects directed by faculty-student research teams Learning for BOTH student and teacher Eight projects selected in years 1 and 2 Create intellectual engagement New thinking in diverse fields Application of learning to life Opening spaces for reflective integration

    53. The Citadel Mission Increased campus awareness of and participation in SOTL Focus Communication, Resources and Continuing Education Self-selected research projects Highlights Biweekly, participatory meetings with assignments Effectiveness 15% of full-time, tenure-track faculty at bi-weekly meetings 12% of full-time, tenure track faculty in classroom research Administrative Support Attendance at functions Financial support

    54. Rockhurst University Beginnings (Fall 1998) All University Symposium (Spring 1999) Follow-up Symposium Year-long Carnegie faculty seminar (2000-2001) Carnegie faculty seminar continued The Rockhurst “Carnegie Seminar” Central Questions Seminar Members Discussions Methods Products Formal Letter on SOTL Faculty SOTL Projects Selected Key Issues and Observations Obstacles to Discussion Interdisciplinary/Collaborative Approaches “Where's the beef?” “Scholarly Teaching” as best first path To be a good consumer of the SOTL

    55. Abilene Christian University 19 Faculty Engaged in SOTL Projects Strong Institutional Support Stipends for Materials & Resources Travel to Teaching-Related Conferences -Ongoing Peer Meetings,Videoconferences

    56. University of Notre Dame Initial campus conversations with 90 campus leaders SOTL needed support RFP resulted in 9 funded SOTL projects Sample research question: Do new teaching methods in introductory engineering affect students’ learning? Support for SOTL teams includes these elements: $5,000 per team for student time, equipment, supplies, faculty time Consulting with methodology experts Group meetings 2x/semester for mutual support Help in dissemination of results

    57. Middlesex Community College

    58. Task E: Campus Examples of SOTL Initiatives List features of the examples you have just seen that might be most applicable to your campus. ..

    59. Unit 2B Faculty SOTL Projects

    60. Expectations and Effects of Graded Writing Assignments

    61. Fostering Interactive Learning in a Large Science Course and Methodically Measuring the Effects

    62. What do I want my Students to be Able to Do?

    63. What Does the Quantitative Research Literature Really Show about Teaching Methods?

    64. A Departmental Level SOTL Project

    65. A Departmental Level SOTL Project Issue # 2: Peer Evaluation

    66. A Departmental Level SOTL Project: Ongoing Concerns with Peer Evaluation

    67. A Departmental Level SOTL Project: The Campus and National Ties

    68. An Exemplary Course Portfolio And A Superb Model of SOTL

    69. An Alternative Approach to General Chemistry Assessing the Needs of At-Risk Students with Cooperative Learning Strategies Dennis Jacobs (University of Notre Dame)

    70. An Alternative Approach to General Chemistry Assessing the Needs of At-Risk Students with Cooperative Learning Strategies Dennis Jacobs (University of Notre Dame)

    71. An Alternative Approach to General Chemistry Assessing the Needs of At-Risk Students with Cooperative Learning Strategies Dennis Jacobs (University of Notre Dame)

    72. An Alternative Approach to General Chemistry Assessing the Needs of At-Risk Students with Cooperative Learning Strategies Dennis Jacobs (University of Notre Dame)

    73. An Alternative Approach to General Chemistry Assessing the Needs of At-Risk Students with Cooperative Learning Strategies Dennis Jacobs (University of Notre Dame)

    74. An Alternative Approach to General Chemistry Assessing the Needs of At-Risk Students with Cooperative Learning Strategies Dennis Jacobs (University of Notre Dame)

    75. An Alternative Approach to General Chemistry Assessing the Needs of At-Risk Students with Cooperative Learning Strategies Dennis Jacobs (University of Notre Dame)

    76. Investigating Pet Theories and Naďve Misconceptions

    77. Scholarly Projects of Faculty (Continued)

    78. Task F: Looking Back Over Travel Along the Continuum Thus Far

    79. Unit 3A Bridges to Productivity

    80. Still Another Look at What We Mean by the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning

    81. Still Another Look at What We Mean by the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (Cont.)

    82. How Could I do Scholarship of Teaching and Learning?

    83. Reports on Particular Classes

    84. Reflections on Years of Teaching

    85. Larger Contexts: Comparisons Across Courses and Student Change Over Time

    86. Formal Research

    87. Meta-Analyses

    88. Task G: Reflecting on Genres

    89. Approaches to Scholarship Via Classroom Research

    90. Classroom Research

    91. “Traditional” and “Classroom” Research

    92. Improving Teaching and Learning via Classroom Research

    93. Classroom Assessment Classroom assessment is systematic and formative Class is the unit of measurement rather than the individual Conditions of learning may be assessed rather than student performance. Correct and incorrect are not the emphasis. Unexpected rather than expected responses are often most useful. Review Unit I material about classroom assessment/research

    94. Effective Grading Primary Trait Analysis (PTA)… building scales that make performance criteria explicit in order to: -Categorize/classify student work. -Benchmark student learning and document changes. -Improve validity of grading.

    95. The Course Portfolio

    96. Where to Publish and Present

    97. Potential Sources of External Funding

    98. Task H: Reflecting on Classroom Research

    99. Unit 3B Questions, Designs, and Methods

    100. Framing the Question

    101. Framing Questions (Goal Approach)

    102. Framing Questions (Issue Approach) Criteria for selection of issues Investigable (not necessarily empirical) Bounded and well-defined Significant (not necessarily statistically) Considerations for investigation of issues Length of time needed Complexity of procedures Availability of subjects Availability of support (resources, personnel, funds)

    103. Making Vague Questions Answerable – Using Operational Definitions

    104. Task J: Examining Valerie’s Questions

    105. Task J (Answers)

    106. Framing Questions as Hypotheses

    107. Task K: Framing Your Question Write a tentative question to be addressed in one of the courses you teach. Discuss your question with one or two colleagues for the purpose of framing it in the clearest and most answerable way. Encourage your colleagues to challenge your framing. Write your well-framed question at the end of this process.

    108. What is a Design for a Study? A plan or protocol for carrying out the study An underlying scheme that governs functioning, developing, or unfolding

    109. A Qualitative or a Quantitative Study? Danger: This may not be the best question to ask!

    110. Quantitative and Qualitative Methods as “Points of Possibility” Quantitative empirical, statistical, comparative hypothesis testing, confirmatory predetermined, fixed large, representative scores, percentages, counts, rates outsider, non-perturbing deductive summative, precise, reliable Qualitative naturalistic, fieldwork, constructivist descriptive, generative, finding meaning flexible, evolving small, purposeful interviews, observations, writings insider, perturbing inductive formative, rich, expansive

    111. Typical Measures Associated with Quantitative and Qualitative Methods

    112. Assessment Measures “Affective” measures muddiest point, mid-course survey “Process” measures lecture attendance, Web hits/requests on learning activities “Performance” measures (for both the Class and the Instructor) Fall 2000 compared to Fall 99, 98, 97 semesters

    113. Examples of Measures in a Particular SOTL Project: Mid-Semester Evaluation Lecture notes on Web very helpful More learning activities requested Extra lecture review sessions requested Review sheets requested Wanted more exams that cover less material

    114. Examples of Measures in a Particular SOTL Project: Count of Web Hits on Learning Activities

    115. Examples of Measures in a Particular SOTL Project: Pre-course data comparisons

    116. Examples of Measures in a Particular SOTL Project: Common Exam Item

    117. Examples of Measures in a Particular SOTL Project: Mean Exam Performance

    118. Examples of Measures in a Particular SOTL Project: Instructor Evaluations “The format of lectures, notes and learning exercises appealed to my style of learning” “She made learning easier by using different teaching techniques.” “She gave more personal attention in a class of 250+ than many do with much smaller classes. She consistently made us feel that she wanted us to succeed and that she would go the extra distance to make that happen.” “Dr. O’Loughlin is an excellent teacher. I speak as a humanities student who might turn to science if every science instructor were like her.”

    119. Guiding Questions in Choosing Methodology What approach fits your research problem? Qualitative case study Quantitative study enhanced by qualitative data Qualitative study enhanced by quantitative data

    120. Task L: Designing Your SOTL Project

    121. Summary of Standards Clear Goals Does the scholar state the basic purpose of his or her work clearly? Does the scholar define objectives that are realistic and achievable? Does the scholar identify important questions in the field? Adequate Preparation Does the scholar show an understanding of existing scholarship in the field? Does the scholar bring the necessary skills to his or her work? Does the scholar bring together the resources necessary to move the project forward? Appropriate Methods Does the scholar use methods appropriate to the goals? Does the scholar apply effectively the methods selected? Does the scholar modify procedures in response to changing circumstances?

    122. Task M: Closing Evaluation of Tutorial

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