Optimizing Teaching and Learning: Practicing Pedagogical Research - Hardcover

Gurung, Regan A. R.; Schwartz, Beth M.

 
9781405161794: Optimizing Teaching and Learning: Practicing Pedagogical Research

Inhaltsangabe

Optimizing Teaching and Learning will serve as a practical guide for anyone, anywhere, who is interested in improving their teaching, the learning of their students, and correspondingly, contribute to the scholarship of teaching and learning.

  • Bridges the gap between the research and practice of SoTL
  • Provides explicit instructions on how to design, conduct, analyze, and write-up SoTL work
  • Includes samples of actual questionnaires and other materials (e.g., focus group questions) that will jumpstart investigations into teaching and learning
  • Explores the advantages and disadvantages of various pedagogical practices and present applications of SoTL using case studies from a variety of disciplines

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Über die Autorin bzw. den Autor

Regan A. R. Gurung is Chair of Human Development at the University of Wisconsin, Green Bay. He has served for many years on the campus Faculty Development Committee and has also been Chair of the same. He is currently campus representative for a CASTL Leadership Site, and is a member of a national taskforce for the scholarship of teaching and learning. He is author of Health Psychology: A Cultural Approach (2006).

Beth M. Schwartz is Professor of Psychology at Randolph College. She is founding director of the Faculty Development Center on her campus. In February 2006, she received the APLS (American Psychology and Law Society) Outstanding Teaching and Mentoring Award.

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The scholarship of teaching and learning (SoTL) is one of the most dynamic areas of research in the field of higher education today in which faculty continuously evaluate the quality of their teaching and its affect on student learning. Faculty are being held accountable for the effectiveness of their teaching and in turn they are starting to engage in SoTL-related intellectual exchanges not only in their research agendas but also in the ways in which they teach their students in the classroom. At the heart of this new movement, there is a simple idea: take a close look at how you teach and how your students learn, use the same methodology that you would use for formal investigations (be it in the humanities or sciences), and hold your research to the same standards most notably peer review.

Optimizing Teaching and Learning will serve as a guide for anyone who is interested in improving their teaching, the learning of their students, and at the same time contribute to the scholarship of teaching and learning. It bridges the gap between the research and practice of SoTL, with explicit instructions on how to design, conduct, analyze, and write-up pedagogical research, including samples of actual questionnaires and other materials (e.g., focus group questions) that will jumpstart investigations into teaching and learning. It also explores the advantages and disadvantages of various pedagogical practices and present applications of SoTL using case studies from a variety of disciplines. This book will serve as an invaluable resource for both seasoned faculty and new faculty who are just beginning to assess their teaching methods and learn how to think beyond the content.

Aus dem Klappentext

The scholarship of teaching and learning (SoTL) is one of the most dynamic areas of research in the field of higher education today in which faculty continuously evaluate the quality of their teaching and its affect on student learning. Faculty are being held accountable for the effectiveness of their teaching and in turn they are starting to engage in SoTL-related intellectual exchanges not only in their research agendas but also in the ways in which they teach their students in the classroom. At the heart of this new movement, there is a simple idea: take a close look at how you teach and how your students learn, use the same methodology that you would use for formal investigations (be it in the humanities or sciences), and hold your research to the same standards most notably peer review.

Optimizing Teaching and Learning will serve as a guide for anyone who is interested in improving their teaching, the learning of their students, and at the same time contribute to the scholarship of teaching and learning. It bridges the gap between the research and practice of SoTL, with explicit instructions on how to design, conduct, analyze, and write-up pedagogical research, including samples of actual questionnaires and other materials (e.g., focus group questions) that will jumpstart investigations into teaching and learning. It also explores the advantages and disadvantages of various pedagogical practices and present applications of SoTL using case studies from a variety of disciplines. This book will serve as an invaluable resource for both seasoned faculty and new faculty who are just beginning to assess their teaching methods and learn how to think beyond the content.

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Optimizing Teaching and Learning

Practicing Pedagogical ResearchBy Regan A. R. Gurung Beth M. Schwartz

John Wiley & Sons

Copyright © 2009 Regan A. R. Gurung
All right reserved.

ISBN: 978-1-4051-6179-4

Chapter One

What Is Pedagogical Research?

How do we know if our students are learning? How do we know if we are teaching well? Do research methods really exist that allow us to answer these questions? We all realize the importance of understanding if our students are learning and whether we are teaching well. However, the process by which to answer these important questions is often outside the area of expertise of many academics, though if given the tools we could all head into the classroom with a greater understanding of how our methods of teaching influence students' learning.

In addition to learning the tools and methods available to conduct pedagogical research, we also need to gain an understanding of the existing literature in which many scholars have emerged as pioneers in the field of scholarship of teaching and learning. We must identify those pioneers and use the knowledge gained from their research and use that to develop our own pedagogical investigations. When examining student learning and optimal teaching, the disciplines of education and educational psychology provide a good starting point for our look at how to examine teaching and learning. Although we will draw strongly from these areas, we will also be tapping into many other disciplines that focus on how teaching and learning can be improved. As much as the field of education and educational psychology seem to have cornered the pedagogical research market, the big difference is that researchers in those areas treat the classrooms of others as their laboratory. The pedagogical research we will examine puts your own classroom, teaching, and learning under the microscope. But we digress. What is pedagogical research? Why should you care?

Pedagogical research can be easily defined as research on teaching and learning. It can provide the answer to a wide range of questions, such as why a class goes awry, or why students fail to grasp the concepts taught, or why despite our best efforts students exhibit no signs of creative thinking or higher learning. Changes in higher education are also driving up interest in teaching and learning. The composition of our classes is changing, there are different national priorities, greater public accountability, and changing pedagogical techniques (Huber & Morreale, 2002). Clearly, we need to pay attention to pedagogical research. It is the umbrella term that encompasses a number of other terms such as action research, scholarly teaching, and, a term we hear more and more often, SoTL.

By now you have probably heard the acronym SoTL. Some pronounce each letter and call it S-OH-T-L, others So-till, and still others, Su-till (as in "subtle"). Although it may look like yet another of the myriad acronyms that dot the educational landscape, in recent years we have seen a number of publications heralding the worthiness and proliferation of the scholarship of teaching and learning (e.g., Becker & Andrews, 2004; Cambridge, 2004; Hatch, 2006; McKinney, 2007; Savory, Burnett, & Goodburn, 2007), though few publications place SoTL into the greater context of educational research. This introductory chapter traces the development of pedagogical research from before the time Boyer first coined the phrase SoTL in 1990 (there was pedagogical research long before the use of the phrase) to the present day. Along the way we will provide critical reviews of the extant literature on SoTL and also disentangle the many related terms that have been used to describe similar pursuits (i.e., action and teacher research and scholarly teaching).

First a little more on why we use the phrase pedagogical research for describing the systematic investigation of teaching and learning. After reading a variety of sources and being exposed to a number of terms (to be reviewed briefly), we believe pedagogical research is the phrase that best captures the essence of scholarly work that is conducted to optimize teaching and learning. We also believe that this term is less value-laden than SoTL and other variations on the theme. In our view, pedagogical research encompasses SoTL, action and teacher research, scholarly teaching, and essentially any other phrase used in this arena. There is a lot of debate about what constitutes SoTL, and, rather than getting into the detail of that we will focus on what we know about optimal teaching and optimizing learning, and the steps needed to achieve it. This optimization is what teachers care about. Our goal is to show you how to do it in the easiest, most reliable and most valid way possible. Along the way we will also expose you to the results of years of pedagogical research as well as highlight many unanswered questions and issues. We hope to stimulate your intellectual curiosity in elucidating quandaries, which will catalyze both your teaching and your own pedagogical research.

A number of different academic areas explore pedagogical research with an emphasis on research from the fields of education and psychology and the work of a wide array of scholars (e.g., Entwistle, Hestenes-Hake, Huber, Perry, Shulman). Just as a rose by any another name is still a rose, so too research on teaching and learning is still essentially pedagogical research, no matter what discipline the research is based in. In many disciplines, the methodologies formerly used by faculty for research are now recognized as valuable resources to assess methods of teaching. This transformation has only slowly emerged over the last decade but it is spreading and growing exponentially. as general questions of inquiry lead to more and more refined questions.

Multidisciplinary Roots of Pedagogical Research

Research on teaching and learning has a long history in various disciplines and is more widespread than one may have imagined. In a recent review of the history and diversity of pedagogical research, Maryellen Weimer (2006) notes that almost all the major disciplines have pedagogical journals. By giving one of the most comprehensive listings of publication outlets for pedagogical research, Weimer's work clearly shows that, if one wants to learn more about how to optimize teaching and learning, there are many places to look. There are also many outlets to publish your own pedagogical research. There are journals and magazines written for higher-education audiences such as Academic Medicine, Journal of Economic Education, Teaching Philosophy, and Teaching Sociology, and a number of discipline-based pedagogical journals written for educators at various levels. Some examples of this second group include Art Education, History Teacher, Business Education Forum, and Physics Teacher. Weimer also identifies cross-disciplinary publications written by and for faculty in different fields (e.g., Journal of College Science Teaching) and theme-based journals written by and for postsecondary educators (e.g., Active Learning in Higher Education).

As a testament to the (mostly unknown) longevity of pedagogical research, the earliest journal articles on teaching and learning were published back in 1924 with the first edition of the Journal of Chemical Education, a publication still in press today. Many of the journals that began a long time ago started as newsletters (e.g., Teaching of Psychology;,...

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9781118344668: Optimizing Teaching and Learning - Practicing Pedagogical Research

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ISBN 10:  1118344669 ISBN 13:  9781118344668
Verlag: Wiley-Blackwell, 2012
Softcover