Nine Beliefs of Highly Ineffective Teachers

Credit: iStock.com/MAXIM ZHURAVLEV
Credit: iStock.com/MAXIM ZHURAVLEV
No faculty member sets out to be a bad teacher—at least I hope not—but there are bad (or ineffective) teachers. I’m sure some of these faculty see teaching as an obligatory chore or are indifferent to whether students learn. Then there are those who want students to learn but have not yet figured out how to teach effectively. One root cause of ineffective teaching for all these groups may be faulty beliefs about teaching and learning. Normally, we focus on what the most effective teachers think and do, but it is equally important to identify and avoid harmful beliefs that undermine teaching success.

To continue reading, you must be a Teaching Professor Subscriber. Please log in or sign up for full access.

3 Responses

  1. I find many of these beliefs in myself and fellow teachers. Thank you for outlining why the beliefs are wrong and what to do instead. The next generation of students deserves faculty who can stay up-to-date on effective pedagogy.

  2. Excellent list of faulty beliefs, but those holding them are likely not reading this article (or The Teaching Professor at all). My experience is similar to yours- these faculty don’t see a need to improve their craft in the same way as their research. And until institutions (particularly R1and R2s) place a higher value on teaching in the RTP process, nothing will change- and students will continue to pay extremely high tuition for poor learning experiences. I would have liked to here what institutions should do about this problem.

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Related Articles

I have two loves: teaching and learning. Although I love them for different reasons, I’ve been passionate about...
Summer flexibility presents a pedagogical paradox of sorts. On the one hand, summer is the perfect time to...
Early in my career, I interpreted most classroom problems at face value. A disengaged student seemed unmotivated. Missing...
A business major must tell a teammate their work is jeopardizing a project. A nursing student listens as...
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow once wrote, “Great is the art of beginning, but greater the art is of ending.”...
Curricula evolve. Disciplines shift. Programs respond to changing professional expectations and emerging competencies. In higher education, we give...
We have all been there: sitting alone with a microphone, narrating slide after slide, wondering whether our students...

Create a free account, or log in.

Gain access to limited free articles, news alerts, and select newsletters

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Login here

Get unlimited access to The Teaching Professor

Stay informed. Subscribe Now.

WELCOME OFFER

$19.00 $14.00/month

for your first 6 months. Use coupon code TP6MO.

$19.00 thereafter. Cancel anytime.

Enjoy unlimited access to all of The Teaching Professor

You only have  free article views remaining.

WELCOME OFFER

$19.00 $14.00/month

for your first 6 months. Use coupon code TP6MO.

$19.00 a month thereafter. Cancel anytime.