SoTL

  • General,  Instructional Strategies,  SoTL

    Seeing the Beauty

    [social_share/] [social-bio]   By Carolyn Hoessler There is something exciting, captivating and intriguing when working through an analysis and seeing the ideas crystalize or flip through the writings of colleague and see the connections to other papers, and to other ideas. The experience of excitement, in my case over a well-selected and implemented statistical analysis or assessment, draws us deeper into our fields of study and expertise. There is something intrinsically motivating (Ryan & Deci, 2000) about such exploration and devotion to learning and discovering more. Sure there are moments that seem like struggles when shopping an article or book for publishing, wrestling for time for deep critical thinking, or…

  • Curriculum Development,  General,  SoTL

    Dean Stoicheff Speaks on the Value of an Arts and Science Degree

    [social_share/] [social-bio] The College of Arts and Science at the University of Saskatchewan is unique in Canada, bringing under a single college governance structure, 21 disciplinary departments ranging from fine arts and humanities to social and natural sciences.  The extreme diversity in disciplinary areas, along with the rich potential for interdisciplinary and multi-disciplinary programs within the College offersunique opportunities for students. At our recent campus-wide Celebration of Teaching and Learning, Peter Stoicheff, Dean of the College of Arts and Science was invited to speak about the curriculum renewal process in the College.  The video clips below include his full 20-minute presentation as well as a shorter 6 minute excerpt.  Peter…

  • Instructional Strategies,  SoTL

    Being Enthusiastic About So-Called Mundane Stuff

    [social_share/] [social-bio]   By Carolyn Hoessler My higher education teaching journey began as an upper-year undergraduate student teaching evening sessions about APA formatting: A seemingly dry topic about commas, alphabetical order of last names, single versus double space etc. As a necessity for undergraduate psychology paper, students’ motivation for signing up seemed to be extrinsically connected (Ryan & Deci, 2001) to the 10% of marks tied to correct use of APA formatting in most 3rd year papers. I could have started the session off with just those basic facts and the pressure-filled reminder of that 10%, but talking about why APA is useful set a better tone. Did you know…

  • Assessment and Evaluation,  Curriculum Development,  Instructional / Course Design,  Instructional Strategies,  Program Evaluation,  SoTL

    Being More Efficient

    [social_share/] [social-bio]   By Carolyn Hoessler   “efficient |iˈfiSHənt| adjective (esp. of a system or machine) achieving maximum productivity with minimum wasted effort or expense (of a person) working in a well-organized and competent way [ in combination ] preventing the wasteful use of a particular resource”   –(New Oxford American Dictionary”, 3rd Edition, 2010, Oxford University Press) Efficiency focuses on the level of relevant output achieved relative to the amount of effort. Perhaps it is like the phrase “Work better, not harder” or “lift smarter, not harder”. So what does being efficient mean for teaching? What does being efficient mean for curriculum renewal? Set your goals: Focus energy on the…

  • Educational Theory,  SoTL

    Recipe for SoTL

    [social_share/] [social-bio]   By Carolyn Hoessler Many a metaphor is used to make new ideas feel more familiar. I’m an avid baker, so I wanted to share this alternative sweet way of seeing the elements and processes involved in the scholarship of teaching and learning (SoTL).  Let me know if you’ve got something cooking. 1 cup questions, concerns or new possibilities 2 cups curiosity and excitement for your teaching and your students 1/2 cup reading literature inside your discipline about teaching courses and students like yours (see for example the list at http://pod.nku.edu/sotldisc.asp) 1/2 cup reading literature from educators in other disciplines with similar questions or approaches (see the list at…

  • Instructional / Course Design,  SoTL

    Richness of Research on Active Learning: Let’s Stand on the Shoulders of Giants (or at least Other Educators)

    [social-bio]   By Carolyn Hoessler   The National Survey of Student Engagement (NSSE) and scholarship of teaching and learning research promote the benefits of active learning, student engagement, and faculty-student interaction with courses that challenge students, shake them out of the passive listener role, and engage them in collaboration with peers to improve student academic performance. Prior evidence and strategies are summarized for several disciplinary areas including. Cell biology Education by Deborah Allen & Kimberly Tanner Engineering Education by Smith, Sheppard, Johnson and Johnson or by Prince Physiology education by Joel Micheal In addition to research studies in many disciplines including: History and political science Geography and Environment studies For a…

  • Assessment and Evaluation,  Instructional / Course Design,  SoTL

    Student Evaluations of Teaching: What are we really measuring?

    [social-bio] By Carolyn Hoessler with Sheryl Mills On the recent CBC Early Edition podcast, the issue of what standardized testing was really assessing was raised. I find a similar concern arises with student evaluations of teaching. The debate of the validity and meaning is not new, but recent findings further suggest that when asking student about their instructors what we are actually measuring may not be what we expected. We may be looking at the gas gauge to measure speed. We do not appear to be measuring learning, or at least the actively engaged involvement with material that produces increased confidence, higher attendance, greater usefulness of reading textbooks, and better…