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Full-Text Articles in Education

Principles Of Good Practice: Supporting Early-Career (Guidance For Deans, Department Chairs, And Other Academic Leaders), Mary Deane Sorcinelli Jan 2000

Principles Of Good Practice: Supporting Early-Career (Guidance For Deans, Department Chairs, And Other Academic Leaders), Mary Deane Sorcinelli

Mary Deane Sorcinelli

No abstract provided.


Preparing A Teaching Portfolio, Mary Deane Sorcinelli, Fran Mues Jan 2000

Preparing A Teaching Portfolio, Mary Deane Sorcinelli, Fran Mues

Mary Deane Sorcinelli

No abstract provided.


Principles Of Good Practice: Supporting Early-Career Faculty. Guidance For Deans, Department Chairs, And Other Academic Leaders, Mary Deane Sorcinelli Jan 2000

Principles Of Good Practice: Supporting Early-Career Faculty. Guidance For Deans, Department Chairs, And Other Academic Leaders, Mary Deane Sorcinelli

Mary Deane Sorcinelli

The "Heeding New Voices" study, a year-long series of structured interviews with new faculty and graduate students aspiring to be faculty members around the country, sought both to give voice to those who are just beginning their academic careers and to provide guidance for the senior faculty, chairs, deans, and others in higher education responsible for shaping the professoriate of the future. This booklet, drawn in part from the study's findings, includes: (1) ten principles of good practice; (2) inventories to prompt department chairs, senior colleagues, and other academic leaders to examine their individual and institutional practices; and (3) examples …


Service-Learning As A Tool For Enhancing Student Outcomes In A College-Level Lecture Course, Amy Strage Jan 2000

Service-Learning As A Tool For Enhancing Student Outcomes In A College-Level Lecture Course, Amy Strage

Amy Strage

This article reports on the effects of infusing a 20-hour per semester service-learning requirement into a large Introductory Child Development course. Analyses of student outcomes on course assignments revealed that the 166 students in the service-learning cohorts (2 classes) out-performed the 309 students who took the course during the three semesters prior to the introduction of the service-learning requirement. The advantage for the service-learning students appeared to stem primarily from stronger performance on narrative assessments (midterm and take-home final essays), and appeared to manifest itself only later in the semester. Analyses of students’ journals confirmed that students reflected thoughtfully about …