
Joy Shechtman Mankoff Center for Teaching & Learning
Peter Frederick's 10 Ideas for Faculty Conversations
Peter Frederick's 16 Reflections from 30 Years in Faculty Development
Transforming Teaching Cultures: The Need for Teaching and
Learning Programs at Liberal Arts Colleges
Thursday, January 27, 2005
An Interactive Session as part of the
AAC&U Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA, January 26-29, 2005
"Liberal Education and the New Academy: Raising Expectations, Keeping
Promises"
“Learning is least useful when it is private and hidden;
it is most powerful when it becomes public and communal. Learning flourishes
when we take what we think we know and offer it as community property
among fellow learners so that it can be tested, examined, challenged,
and improved before we internalize it.” - Lee Shulman (Change
1999)
Workshop Description
This session asks academic officers and faculty at small liberal arts
colleges to engage in collaborative group work while considering the following
strategic issues for their home campuses:
- Why pursue faculty development programs on teaching?
- Who are the faculty on my campus and what do they want from these programs?
- Who should lead the effort to create and organize faculty development
efforts?
- Is a center for teaching and learning necessary for creating community
and transformation?
By sharing programming and administrative examples from their experiences
as faculty developers — all three have helped lead successful faculty
development efforts on their campuses —the session facilitators
will also examine the following issues with the participants:
Faculty/administrative models that have launched and sustained successful
faculty development work
The ways in which effective comprehensive faculty development work transforms
teaching culture and benefits faculty
The research on untenured faculty (Sorcinelli & Rice; Boice) and
the impact of such programs on teaching, research, and overall satisfaction
This interactive session will encourage new perspectives about the
roles of teaching and learning programs and centers on small college
campuses and foster deeper understanding about the critical ingredients
necessary for transformational change. We will provide handouts and
additional resources on a variety of faculty development programs. Participants
will leave with a better sense of how to move forward in creating and
sustaining a culture of teaching excellence on their own campuses.
Back to Top
Rationale for Workshop
Faculty members are life-long learners by design: they have to be
if they expect to stay current in their fields. Disciplinary conferences
afford professional outlets to discuss research, allowing faculty to
remain critical practitioners in their fields. But how can we ensure
that our faculty become critical practitioners of their teaching as
they struggle to balance competing demands to publish, advise students,
and serve on committees? How does a college share its expectations about
faculty continuing to develop and expand their classroom pedagogies?
Small liberal arts colleges are known for the quality of their classroom
teaching, and they usually attract faculty who share the tacit
belief that teaching is the sine qua non of their faculty role. Yet,
we have found that at liberal arts colleges it is possible to take good
teaching for granted: Simply valuing good teaching does not lead to
good teaching. Faculty need to be critical practitioners of their craft
and critical practitioners share, discuss, and analyze their classroom
practices. How do we make classroom practice visible — how do
we make teaching (and learning) “community property”?
Back to Top
Workshop Facilitators
Richard Holmgren, Associate Dean & Director of the Learning Commons,
Allegheny College http://learningcommons.allegheny.edu/
Kim Mooney, Director, Center for Teaching and Learning, St. Lawrence
University http://web.stlawu.edu/ctl/
Michael Reder, Director, Center for Teaching & Learning, Connecticut
College
http://CTL.conncoll.edu
Contact Information
For more information about the session e-mail
Michael Reder
For more information about the AAC&U Meeting visit: http://www.aacu.org/meetings/annualmeeting/index.cfm
Back to Top
 |
|