Professional Growth

Using Journaling to Inspire Group Reflection on Teaching

Faculty can learn so much about teaching from each other. The challenge is finding ways to start and sustain conversations between faculty about teaching. This is the story of how journaling became the centerpiece of an unlikely but highly impactful teaching support group involving a

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mid career issues

An Old Dog Can Learn New Tricks

In the fall of 2013, at the age of 56 I successfully defended my dissertation and shortly thereafter accepted a job at a regional public university where I taught three new classes. My experiences teaching confirm that even at my age, change and movement to

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mid-career issues

Stop Drowning in Email

Online instructors frequently cite email as the biggest distraction in managing their online course workload. Those obnoxious pop-ups or auditory dings announcing new email might as well be a siren call, pulling online instructors away from the work at hand and into a stormy sea

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What a Few Faculty with a Shared Interest Can Accomplish

Five faculty, all belonging to the same interdisciplinary sociology department, decided that collectively they could improve student writing skills better than they could individually. “Our approach emphasizes that a collective effort need not be a department-wide, institutionalized one. Indeed, faculty can still collaborate and students

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Better Feedback: More Instructional Change?

A thoroughly referenced article seeks to answer why science faculty members are slow to adopt evidence-based teaching practices, despite what the authors describe as “heroic dissemination” of information on these practices. The folks on the science side of the house have evidence that use of

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mid-career issues

Rejuvenating Experiences

The end of a long academic year is probably the time when we are most open to the idea of a rejuvenating instructional experience. In a recent workshop, I heard two teachers describe just such an experience. They team-taught an introductory English lit course

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Emotions Associated with First-Time Teaching Experiences

Emotions Associated with First-Time Teaching Experiences

Teaching requires more than just a keen mind; it also demands emotional energy, and that is particularly true for new teachers. But what emotions do they experience? Are those feelings more positive than negative? Are certain emotions associated with particular teaching approaches? These are all

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Taking Risks in Your Teaching

Any instructional practice that is new to you, such as group testing, giving students a role in creating a classroom policy, or getting students involved in assessment, is not just a new activity that requires attention to a new set of implementation details; it’s a

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The Emotions That Fuel Our Teaching

I’ve been delving a bit into the emotional aspects of teaching. They continue to be largely ignored in the research literature and in our discussions of teaching. Could that be because emotional things fit uncomfortably in the objective, rational, intellect-driven culture of the

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Clarifying Our Understanding of Constructivism

In an article billed as a “field guide” to constructivism, three authors from the sciences focuses on cognitive constructivism and aims to equip faculty with what they need in order to determine how constructivist a learning activity is. The authors propose that constructivist activities can

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Faculty can learn so much about teaching from each other. The challenge is finding ways to start and sustain conversations between faculty about teaching. This is the story of how journaling became the centerpiece of an unlikely but highly impactful teaching support group involving a math professor, a philosophy professor, and an exercise science professor. The collaboration began when we all attended the 2013 Teaching Professor Conference in New Orleans. Although we all teach at Fort Lewis College, a small, public liberal arts college in Colorado, we did not know each other well before attending the conference. In fact, even at the conference, we went to only a few sessions together. We did enjoy a couple of meals as a group and talked about what we were learning. What we had in common was that we all cared deeply about our teaching, and the conference made us want to continue working on teaching development activities. We stayed in touch during the summer of 2013 and continued to toss around ideas that morphed into a reading group. We met regularly to discuss chapters in Parker Palmer's The Courage to Teach. But it was in December that we came across an article from Faculty Focus (www.facultyfocus.com), “Faculty Respond to the Challenge: Write about Teaching and Learning for Nine Weeks Straight.” A few weeks later, our dean sent an email requesting proposals for college-funded teaching enrichment activities. We put those two ideas together and decided to propose an endeavor similar to the one described in the Faculty Focus article. We met to discuss the logistics and then submitted a proposal, and it was approved. The article in Faculty Focus described a project wherein faculty members wrote reflections about their teaching that they posted on the Web. We liked the idea of deliberate journaling but decided to share the journals only with each other. We felt safe sharing our reflections with each other but didn't feel entirely comfortable sharing them with all of humanity. We had built connections with each other and had also established some ground rules regarding trust and confidentiality during our reading group meetings. We arranged for our Information Technology department to set up a secure drive, to which only we had access. During the semester we wrote reflections weekly and posted them on the drive. In-person meetings were scheduled about every three weeks. For our meetings, there was no set agenda; it was expected that we had read each other's reflections before we met. We all struggled with finding (or making) the time to write our reflections. We agreed that we'd get the most out of the reflection process if we wrote soon after a class, but that didn't always happen. Back at our offices, we were frequently sidetracked by other issues. We all worked on keeping those issues at bay so we would have even five or 10 minutes to write a quick reflection right after a class. The journaling turned out to be an excellent way to deepen our insights into what was working or not working in our classrooms. We were able to identify patterns of challenges as well as record and remember strategies that worked well and were worth repeating. However, this was more than a private journaling exercise. We were writing for an audience: trusted colleagues whom we could count on to read empathetically and offer helpful responses. Had we been posting our thoughts on the Web, we wouldn't have been able to be as candid. Writing for a few trusted colleagues was perfect. It became a mechanism for collective reflection on teaching. Our in-person meetings were another highlight of this project. We did not feel that we had to “do homework” for these meetings. It was important to have read each other's reflections, but that didn't feel like work. Our meetings became special times when we could simply breathe, vent, listen, and offer support. We commented on each other's reflections, sometimes asked for more information or clarification, sometimes offered suggestions, but mostly listened and encouraged each other. The benefits of this project were numerous. It served to strengthen connections between faculty members from quite different disciplines who normally would not have talked about teaching. We grew to respect each other as people and teachers. Especially heartening was the realization that though we were all deeply committed to student success, we all struggled to engage our students and positively impact their learning. We teach in very different areas, even so we still shared many of the same struggles and challenges as teachers. That enabled us to exchange strategies, ideas, and techniques. We learned from each other. The act of deliberately writing reflections was helpful, but receiving acceptance and support from colleagues was invaluable. We highly recommend this activity to other teachers. We felt that writing weekly and meeting every three weeks worked well. We followed this routine for a semester but could certainly imagine doing it for a full academic year. The dynamics of our three-person group happened to be just right, but perhaps a group of four or even five would be better. Whatever the size, it is amazing what a small group of committed faculty can do to support each other's teaching! Contact Pamela Smith at smith_p@fortlewis.edu.