As a department chair I frequently look for material I can discuss with my faculty during orientation, annual review, and monthly faculty development meetings. To aid chairs and other administrators in mentoring their junior faculty, this article offers seven reliable rules they can share with their new faculty to help guide them to success in the academy.
Read the full entry for "976. How to Succeed in the Academy: A Chair’s Advice to Junior Faculty"976. How to Succeed in the Academy: A Chair’s Advice to Junior Faculty
October 20th, 2009975. The Best of Both Worlds: Infusing Liberal Learning into a Business Curriculum
October 20th, 2009This notion is echoed by the former chief executive officer of General Motors, Roger Smith (1987), who believes that “the Liberal Arts may ultimately prove to be the most relevant learning model. People trained in the Liberal Arts learn to tolerate ambiguity and to bring order out of apparent confusion. They have the kind of sideways thinking and cross-classifying habit of mind that comes from learning, among other things, the many different ways of looking at literary works, social systems, chemical processes, or languages.”
Read the full entry for "975. The Best of Both Worlds: Infusing Liberal Learning into a Business Curriculum"974. Online Learning: More Than Technical Savvy
October 13th, 2009We posit that readiness for online learning has less to do with students’ knowledge of technology and digital dexterity and more to do with their knowledge of how to learn and their motivation to engage fully in the process. Therefore, we submit that the introduction of online experiences for students should be consciously engineered to best capitalize on their readiness for independent learning, and that the progression into the online learning environment be intentionally built into the undergraduate curriculum rather than simply offering students an open menu of face-to-face, hybrid, or fully online courses.
Read the full entry for "974. Online Learning: More Than Technical Savvy"973. Getting Out of Grading
October 13th, 2009She stressed that she’s not abandoning the role of grading, but having students take ownership of the task in a way that shows that “evaluation, in a serious way, is part of collaborative, interactive creativity. Right now, we have an educational system that encourages ‘teaching to the test.’ That’s appalling as a learning philosophy and a total waste of precious learning time and opportunities in the digital age.”
Read the full entry for "973. Getting Out of Grading"972. Infusing Public Health Education in the Undergraduate Curriculum
October 6th, 2009Entering the world of undergraduate instruction can be daunting, enlivening, and everything in between. In our experience, we needed an intellectual hook (the AAC&U initiative), professional legitimacy (the Association for Prevention Teaching and Research’s leadership), an administrative nudge (the mandate to increase enrollments), and resource support (small grants to facilitate collaboration). What we gained were new colleagues across the campus, new opportunities for collaborative research, greater visibility within our institution, and the energy, talents, and twenty-first-century sensibilities of undergraduate students.
Read the full entry for "972. Infusing Public Health Education in the Undergraduate Curriculum"971. Scoring on Sabbaticals
October 6th, 2009In the first half of 2009, Hendry has published at a rate of about two papers per month-more than twice his normal pace-and in March, he was awarded the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada’s E.W.R. Steacie Fellowship, which will pay Hendry’s salary for the next 2 years. The work he put in during his time on leave has essentially translated into 2 more years of sabbatical, he says.
Read the full entry for "971. Scoring on Sabbaticals"970. Shadowed by the Past: Outmoded Soviet-era practices still hamper teaching and innovation in Eastern Europe
September 29th, 2009Most countries have signed on to the Bologna Accord – which is harmonizing degree programs across Europe – and are changing from the old, five-year undergraduate model to a three-year baccalaureate degree and two-year master’s degree system. There are “teething problems,” admits Agnes Toth, a professor at the Budapest Polytechnic University. For example, B.Sc. students graduate in late January, and most quickly find jobs. As a result, “we’ve seen a definite decline in master’s level studies,” Toth says. But, she reflects, “for industry, this is a good thing.”
Read the full entry for "970. Shadowed by the Past: Outmoded Soviet-era practices still hamper teaching and innovation in Eastern Europe"969. Finding Ways to Help Students Answer Their Own Questions
September 29th, 2009“Because generating their own questions will be new to most students, they will need encouragement. You can help students feel comfortable asking questions if you create an environment in which inquiry is not only accepted but fostered. By modeling the questioning process and scaffolding student discourse you can mold students’ actions, interactions, and thought processes.”
Read the full entry for "969. Finding Ways to Help Students Answer Their Own Questions"968. Presidential Transitions: It’s Not the Position, It’s the Transition – Review
September 22nd, 2009“Presidential Transitions stresses the importance of having someone for the incoming president to talk to-someone who knows him or her, who is a friend, but who is also a realist. Whether the transition is inbound or outgoing-and I have looked at both sides now-nothing is more valuable. Making sense of any novel challenge is always difficult. Dealing with doubt or delusion can be equally debilitating and derailing. Whether we call it a reality check or a heart-to-heart makes no difference: some private and intimate conversation can clear the eyesight and the insight wonderfully well.”
Read the full entry for "968. Presidential Transitions: It’s Not the Position, It’s the Transition – Review"967. Practical Considerations in Online Learning
September 22nd, 2009“Concerns about time relate primarily to the amount of time required for participation on the part of both students and faculty. In this section, we discuss several of the concerns related to time: asynchronous and synchronous environments, time offline versus online, time constraints, and time management.”
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