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Full-Text Articles in Teacher Education and Professional Development
Inside Unlv, Diane Russell, Gian Galassi, Richard Jensen
Inside Unlv, Diane Russell, Gian Galassi, Richard Jensen
Inside UNLV
No abstract provided.
Inside Unlv, Diane Russell, Mae Worthey-Flennoy, Cate Weeks, Gian Galassi
Inside Unlv, Diane Russell, Mae Worthey-Flennoy, Cate Weeks, Gian Galassi
Inside UNLV
No abstract provided.
Inside Unlv, Diane Russell, Gian Galassi, Cate Weeks
Inside Unlv, Diane Russell, Gian Galassi, Cate Weeks
Inside UNLV
No abstract provided.
Faculty Diversity, Kyle Scafide, Barbara Johnson
Faculty Diversity, Kyle Scafide, Barbara Johnson
Kyle Scafide
This article presents a broad view of issues related to faculty diversity. Headings include Demographics, The Growth of Faculty Diversity as an Ideal, and Barriers in the Academic Workplace. Race, ethnicity, and gender are the most common characteristics that institutions observe in order to measure faculty diversity. An even broader approach to faculty diversity involves age, socioeconomic background, national origin, sexual orientation, and diverse learning styles and opinions. Until the latter part of the twentieth century, the professoriate in the western world was composed almost exclusively of privileged, heterosexual males of Caucasian descent. Higher education institutions are generally concerned with …
Inside Unlv, Diane Russell, Betty Biodgett, Cate Weeks
Inside Unlv, Diane Russell, Betty Biodgett, Cate Weeks
Inside UNLV
No abstract provided.
Inside Unlv, Diane Russell, Betty Blodgett, Kevin Force, Jennifer Vaughan, Cate Weeks, Jonathan Paver
Inside Unlv, Diane Russell, Betty Blodgett, Kevin Force, Jennifer Vaughan, Cate Weeks, Jonathan Paver
Inside UNLV
No abstract provided.
Inside Unlv, Diane Russell, Betty Blodgett, Richard Jensen, Cate Weeks
Inside Unlv, Diane Russell, Betty Blodgett, Richard Jensen, Cate Weeks
Inside UNLV
No abstract provided.
Jaepl, Vol. 8, Winter 2002-2003, Katie S. Fleckenstein, Linda T. Calendrillo
Jaepl, Vol. 8, Winter 2002-2003, Katie S. Fleckenstein, Linda T. Calendrillo
The Journal of the Assembly for Expanded Perspectives on Learning
Essays
Charles Suhor. James Moffett's Lit Crit and Holy Writ. In one of Moffett's final presentations, he traced parallels between literary criticism and the study of scripture from various traditions. He explained the development of his Points of View spectrum as a response to his high school teaching experiences and presented an updated version of the spectrum.
Gina Briefs-Elgin. Something to Have at Heart: Another Look at Memorization. After tracing the history of learning by heart, this essay explores its advantages and suggest that we restore this time-honored practice which can enrich our students' relationships with words and …
Something To Have At Heart: Another Look At Memorization, Gina Briefs-Elgin
Something To Have At Heart: Another Look At Memorization, Gina Briefs-Elgin
The Journal of the Assembly for Expanded Perspectives on Learning
After tracing the history of learning by heart, this essay explores its advantages and suggest that we restore this time-honored practice which can enrich our students' relationships with words and books and empower their personal lives.
Stories Of Re-Reading: Inviting Students To Reflect On Their Emotional Responses To Fiction, Brenda Daly
Stories Of Re-Reading: Inviting Students To Reflect On Their Emotional Responses To Fiction, Brenda Daly
The Journal of the Assembly for Expanded Perspectives on Learning
Although most literature courses teach students to focus on textual analysis, this essay argues that students should be given opportunities for exploring their emotional responses to the text.
Successful Blunders: Reflection, Deflection, Teaching, Devan Cook
Successful Blunders: Reflection, Deflection, Teaching, Devan Cook
The Journal of the Assembly for Expanded Perspectives on Learning
Often we expect students' experience with assignments to reflect our own or those of previous students, but we may blunder when we base our teaching on past successes. By deflecting such assignments and constructing unexpected identities, students and instructors alike learn and teach.
Connecting, Helen Walker, Lisa Ruddick, Kathleen Mccolley Foster, Chauna Craig, Steven Vanderstaay, Meg Peterson, Linda K. Parkyn
Connecting, Helen Walker, Lisa Ruddick, Kathleen Mccolley Foster, Chauna Craig, Steven Vanderstaay, Meg Peterson, Linda K. Parkyn
The Journal of the Assembly for Expanded Perspectives on Learning
No abstract provided.
The Landscape Listens— Hearing The Voice Of The Soul, Robbie Clifton Pinter
The Landscape Listens— Hearing The Voice Of The Soul, Robbie Clifton Pinter
The Journal of the Assembly for Expanded Perspectives on Learning
This essay offers a view of Mary Rose O'Reilley's "radical listening," applying it to the classroom as a way for teachers and students to "learn to their lives."
Reviews, Nathaniel Teich, Hepzibah Roskelly, Emily Nye, Dennis Young
Reviews, Nathaniel Teich, Hepzibah Roskelly, Emily Nye, Dennis Young
The Journal of the Assembly for Expanded Perspectives on Learning
No abstract provided.
Back Matter
The Journal of the Assembly for Expanded Perspectives on Learning
No abstract provided.
The Accidental Curriculum, Terrance Riley
The Accidental Curriculum, Terrance Riley
The Journal of the Assembly for Expanded Perspectives on Learning
True learning—learning which results in some permanent cognitive change—is far too unpredictable to be controlled by format curricular designs. The formal curriculum of English studies is valuable largely as a stage setting for educational accidents.
The Rhetoric Of Recovery: Can Twelve Step Programs Inform The Teaching Of Writing?, Christopher C. Weaver
The Rhetoric Of Recovery: Can Twelve Step Programs Inform The Teaching Of Writing?, Christopher C. Weaver
The Journal of the Assembly for Expanded Perspectives on Learning
The article examines the spiritual dimensions of recovery programs and explores some of the ways the rhetoric of these programs as well as the structure of twelve step meetings may illuminate the nature of composition classes and particularly of peer writing groups.
Front Matter
The Journal of the Assembly for Expanded Perspectives on Learning
Editors' Message
In his essay Two Kinds of Thinking Carl Jung describes direct and indirect thinking. Associated with language, direct thinking’s premier ability is parsing and defining reality so that we might work on that reality and act in the world. Associated with imagery, dreaming, and story telling, indirect thinking taps the realm of mythos where we dwell in fantasies and paradoxes. Indirect thinking is neither a contradiction nor denial of rationality. Rather, it is thinking that operates by a different logic, one capable of offering different insights, different versions of possible realities.
Jung’s two kinds of thinking reflect a …
James Moffett’S Lit Crit And Holy Writ, Charles Suhor
James Moffett’S Lit Crit And Holy Writ, Charles Suhor
The Journal of the Assembly for Expanded Perspectives on Learning
In one of Moffett's final presentations, he traced parallels between literary criticism and the study of scripture from various traditions. He explained the development of his Points of View spectrum as a response to his high school teaching experiences and presented an updated version of the spectrum.
Could It Be That It Does Make Sense? A Program Review Process For Integrating Activities, Terrel Rhodes
Could It Be That It Does Make Sense? A Program Review Process For Integrating Activities, Terrel Rhodes
To Improve the Academy: A Journal of Educational Development
This chapter presents a model for a comprehensive program review process that can be used on any campus. Faculty developers maintain a critical role in a campus-wide program review initiative. This model is based upon the development of institutional priorities that guide the development of goals and objectives far academic units across the campus. The program review process is based on a core of regularly produced institutional data that can be used by all units to inform decision-making. The review process is conducted on an annual or biannual basis with periodic major review coinciding with accreditation visits. The ultimate success …
Harnessing The Potential Of Online Faculty Development: Challenges And Opportunities, Timothy P. Shea, Pamela D. Sherer, Eric V. Kristensen
Harnessing The Potential Of Online Faculty Development: Challenges And Opportunities, Timothy P. Shea, Pamela D. Sherer, Eric V. Kristensen
To Improve the Academy: A Journal of Educational Development
This chapter explores several issues regarding the current state of online faculty development resources. First, it describes the breadth and depth of today’s online teaching and learning resources. Then, it explains the benefits of designing an institutional teaching and learning center portal as a means for organizing and focusing resources. Finally, it discusses the importance of the faculty developer’s role in harnessing these resources for individual and institutional advantage. The online portal provides a powerful tool for institutional change on a scale heretofore impossible for most, and puts faculty development at the center of an institution’s mission.
Getting Started With Faculty Development, Nadia Cordero De Figueroa, Pedro A. Sandín-Fremaint
Getting Started With Faculty Development, Nadia Cordero De Figueroa, Pedro A. Sandín-Fremaint
To Improve the Academy: A Journal of Educational Development
As a result of an academic senate decision to reconceptualize the baccalaureate, the Río Piedras Campus of the University of Puerto Rico began, in late 1994, a major transformational process that has led it to rethink itself as a community of learners. One of the principal instruments of change has been our Center for Academic Excellence, created in early 1998 as a result of the transformational process. This chapter discusses the process that led to the creation of the center, as well as its structure, activities, and vision for the future. We hope that our experience will be useful to …
Mandatory Faculty Development Works, Mona B. Kreaden
Mandatory Faculty Development Works, Mona B. Kreaden
To Improve the Academy: A Journal of Educational Development
This chapter tells the story of a successful, ongoing, mandatory faculty development program. It explains the historical reasons why a business school in a large, urban Research I institution felt the need to make their program mandatory, examines how it was developed, and the university faculty development program’s role in the process. The author makes the case that mandatory programs can be successful in faculty development when they are administered by an outside credible entity, are faculty driven, and guarantee confidentiality.
The Millennial Learner: Challenges And Opportunities, Suandra Y. Mcguire, Dennis A. Williams
The Millennial Learner: Challenges And Opportunities, Suandra Y. Mcguire, Dennis A. Williams
To Improve the Academy: A Journal of Educational Development
Students enrolled in college today are, in many respects, quite different from students enrolled a few decades ago. Learners today seem more focused on being credentialed, and less concerned with obtaining a broad-based, liberal arts education. Today’s faculty may find it challenging to provide engaging learning activities for this generation of students. Millennial educators must instill in students a desire to think critically and provide them with strategies that will make them more efficient learners. Campus learning centers and faculty development centers can work together to foster an academic climate that helps all students to realize their full academic potential.
A Modified Microteaching Model: A Cross–Disciplinary Approach To Faculty Development, John P. Hertel, Barbara J. Millis, Robert K. Noyd
A Modified Microteaching Model: A Cross–Disciplinary Approach To Faculty Development, John P. Hertel, Barbara J. Millis, Robert K. Noyd
To Improve the Academy: A Journal of Educational Development
Three departments at the United States Air Force Academy successfully used a microteaching model to train new faculty. Like other models, its structured approach used videotaping and peer coaching. The model also contained several unique features, including a cross-disciplinary approach to supplement feedback from department members and focused small group feedback with built-in preparation time. Thus, this model results not only in enhanced teaching performance, but also in departmental and institutional collegiality.
Operational Diversity: Saying What We Mean, Doing What We Say, Wayne Jacobson, Jim Borgford-Parnell, Katherine Frank, Michael Peck, Lois Reddick
Operational Diversity: Saying What We Mean, Doing What We Say, Wayne Jacobson, Jim Borgford-Parnell, Katherine Frank, Michael Peck, Lois Reddick
To Improve the Academy: A Journal of Educational Development
Diversity issues, ranging from individual learning styles to institutional equity, are central to teaching and learning, but identifying and addressing these issues is a formidable task. At the Center for Instructional Development and Research (CIDR), our staff is gaining ground on this work through the Inclusive Practices Portfolio, a collaborative forum for documenting, sharing, and supporting our individual and organizational diversity initiatives. The process of developing the center’s portfolio and the portfolio itself are mechanisms for change within the center and a model far change at our institution and beyond.
The Graphic Syllabus: Shedding A Visual Light On Course Organization, Linda B. Nilson
The Graphic Syllabus: Shedding A Visual Light On Course Organization, Linda B. Nilson
To Improve the Academy: A Journal of Educational Development
Students rarely understand how a course is organized from the week-by-week topical listing in traditional syllabi. This chapter explains a teaching tool called a graphic syllabus, which elucidates (and may improve) course design/organization and increases student retention of the material. It may resemble a flow chart or diagram or be designed around a graphic metaphor with another object. Included here are materials, experiences, and graphic syllabi from a workshop conducted several times on how to compose one (involving about 115 faculty and faculty developers). Graphic representations of text-based material appeal to the visual learning preferences of today’s students and complement …
A Brief History Of Educational Development: Implications For Teachers And Developers, Richard G. Tiberius
A Brief History Of Educational Development: Implications For Teachers And Developers, Richard G. Tiberius
To Improve the Academy: A Journal of Educational Development
An historical review of the practice of educational development identified four belief systems about teaching and learning that shape the practice. Each system is characterized by an assumption about the teacher’s role: content expert; performer, who makes learning happen; facilitator, who encourages learning through interaction; and helper, whose relationship with learners is a vehicle for learning. The good news is that even teachers who are limited to only one of these belief systems can be successful. On the other hand, developers must have an appreciation for more than one belief system if they are to be successful at helping teachers.
Linking Change Initiatives: The Carnegie Academy For The Scholarship Of Teaching And Learning In The Company Of Other National Projects, Barbara Cambridge
Linking Change Initiatives: The Carnegie Academy For The Scholarship Of Teaching And Learning In The Company Of Other National Projects, Barbara Cambridge
To Improve the Academy: A Journal of Educational Development
The scholarship of teaching and learning provides an overarching framework for progress on a number of important educational issues today. The Carnegie Academy for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning encourages connections with other national projects that deal with issues such as defining student learning outcomes, building an infrastructure of support, and establishing evidence for purposes of accountability in mutually supportive ways. Connecting such efforts honors faculty time in the midst of multiple demands and raises the likelihood of significant, lasting impact on the quality of teaching and learning.
Evaluating Teaching Workshops: Beyond The Satisfaction Survey, David G. Way, Virleen M. Carlson, Susan C. Piliero
Evaluating Teaching Workshops: Beyond The Satisfaction Survey, David G. Way, Virleen M. Carlson, Susan C. Piliero
To Improve the Academy: A Journal of Educational Development
Workshops are a prevalent approach to fostering instructional development for both teaching assistants (TAs) and faculty. Frequently we evaluate workshops by asking participants to fill out a satisfaction-oriented survey at the end. To what degree do such surveys evaluate adequately the workshop’s long-term effect on participants’ learning? The authors explicate earlier investigative work on transfer of training, and present the results of a follow-up survey to two groups of TA workshop participants designed to assess the degree to which conditions theoretically conducive to the transfer of training exist at their institution.