Blog » Teaching and Learning


Putting it on the Line

Posted Tuesday, May 26th, 2009 by

Ron Berk has a nice “Tribute to Teaching” in the most recent issue of College Teaching. He uses the term “professosaurus” to describe senior faculty—I think he qualifies having recently retired after 37 years of teaching, most of it at Johns Hopkins University.
He wants to find a metaphor that captures what makes teaching more a [...]


Write This Summer

Posted Thursday, May 21st, 2009 by

It’s been a while since I’ve gently prodded you about pedagogical scholarship. It’s the beginning of the summer and although I know that some of you do teach for all or part of the summer, there are others who don’t teach during the summer or teach a lighter load. Many of us use the summer [...]


Faculty Learning Communities: Benefiting from Collective Wisdom

Posted Tuesday, May 19th, 2009 by

An article in the January-February issue of the Journal of College Science Teaching reports on the experiences of a group of life sciences faculty who participated in a faculty learning community. “We wanted to bring together life sciences faculty members who would discuss and support each others’ teaching and learning goals, breaking down the communication barrier that characterizes most teaching activities in the sciences.” (p. 39)


Striking a Balance between Who You are and Realizing Your Teaching Potential

Posted Thursday, May 14th, 2009 by

Here’s what I’ve been trying to figure out this weekend—how teachers balance between accepting who they are at the same time they push to realize as much of their teaching potential as possible.


Reflecting on Graduation

Posted Tuesday, May 12th, 2009 by

I hope that graduation is one of those ceremonies that never goes out of style. It’s such a big deal for students and their families, and I think it’s a big event for faculty, as well. It just doesn’t feel as though the school year has properly ended without participation in graduation.


Team Teaching and Dialogic Pedagogy

Posted Thursday, May 7th, 2009 by

The past couple of days I’ve been wading through a fairly dense article on “dialogic pedagogy” as applied to team teaching. The authors, who have been collaborators since the early 1990s, team teach a 400-student introductory sociology course. They don’t team teach like most faculty do—they do what they describe as “joint” rather than “sequential” lectures. I’ll probably end up writing about their approach in the newsletter.


Taking Professional Development Seriously

Posted Tuesday, May 5th, 2009 by

I have been struggling all morning to rewrite a chapter in my new book that has organizational problems. I was hoping the reviewers wouldn’t notice, but they did. I’m okay with the ideas. I think they make sense and put the right kind of frame around the rest of the book, but they don’t hang together like a frame. The chapter seems more like a mobile of free hanging ideas that loosely associate and occasionally bang into each other.


Lectures Can be Effective

Posted Tuesday, April 28th, 2009 by

“The lecture when done well, goes far beyond covering the material. It is a carefully planned performance with student learning as its focus.” That quote by Harold B. White appears in a commentary column that is regularly included in Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education.


RateMyProfessors.com: More Honest than ‘Official’ Ratings?

Posted Thursday, April 23rd, 2009 by

It doesn’t look as though the RateMyProfessors.com website is going away anytime soon. I was somewhat surprised to learn that it was actually launched in 1999.


Peer-Led Team Learning

Posted Tuesday, April 21st, 2009 by

One of the points made regularly here on the blog and in the Teaching Professor newsletter is that students can learn from each other. It’s one of basic tenets of my educational philosophy, and support for it keeps growing across fields and research methodologies. I also believe that faculty regularly underestimate just has much students can learn from other students.