First published 2012 Published in Australia and New Zealand by ACER Press, an imprint of Australian Council for Educational Research Ltd 19 Prospect Hill Road, Camberwell Victoria, 3124, Australia www.acerpress.com.au [email protected] Published in Asia by ACER Press and Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group Published in the rest of the world by Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group Text copyright © Lynne Hunt and Denise Chalmers 2012 Design and typography copyright © ACER Press 2012 This book is copyright. All rights reserved. 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Edited by Rebecca Leech Indexed by Russell Brooks Cover design, text design and typesetting by ACER Project Publishing Cover image © Pokaz, used under license from Shutterstock.com Printed in Australia by BPA Print Group National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication entry: Title: University teaching in focus : a learning-centred approach / edited by Lynne Hunt and Denise Chalmers. ISBN: 9781742860312 (pbk.) Notes: Includes bibliographical references and index. Subjects: College teaching. Effective teaching. Classroom management. Educational leadership. Other Authors/Contributors: Hunt, Lynne. Chalmers, Denise. Dewey 378.125 Number: FOREWORD Mantz Yorke University Teaching in Focus draws on a number of theoretical propositions about teaching and learning as well as evidence for the effectiveness of teaching practices. What we have here is a ‘thinking person’s guide’ – useful, because teaching is not a simple matter that can be expressed in a set of rules applicable to all circumstances. Rather, it has to be approached in terms of a set of principles to be applied in a manner appropriate to circumstances. Some approaches are more likely to meet with success than others, but none guarantees universal success. As Hunt, Chalmers and Macdonald indicate in Chapter 2, ‘Effective teaching is the outcome of decision-making based on evidence arising from research, experience of teaching students in different contexts and responses to students’ feedback. Good … teaching takes place when teachers create positive and effective learning experiences for their students.’ Hence this book is much more than a set of prescriptions, as is evident from the invitations throughout its chapters to consider your own responses to the evidence. Academics must have the double capability of discipline and teaching expertise. Whilst they possess the former as a matter of course, many will need to develop the latter and this book will help them. Of course, all academics who made their way through the educational system to get to their current positions have gained an appreciation of good and bad aspects of teaching. This can, however, lead to experience being mistaken for expertise. This book bridges the gap in ways that will help students to benefit from their programs of study. New teachers are not the only potential beneficiaries of the knowledge and expertise within the pages of this book – those who have been teaching for some time are also likely to find ideas for the development of their pedagogic practice. I can truthfully say that I have. Higher education has broadened the demands on students in that the possession of a first degree is not the passport to a career that it once was. Looking at a list of expectations produced by the Confederation of British Industry (2011), I reflected that I left university having obtained a degree but with little of the ‘extra’ that employers currently demand from today’s graduates. My time at university coincided with a participation rate of less than 10 per cent of the cohort of school-leavers, and the demand for graduates exceeded the supply. It was generally sufficient to pass the exams in order to gain graduate-level employment, and there was no pressure on teachers in respect of retention and completion – indeed, a high failure rate was often taken as evidence of an insistence on high academic standards. If students failed their assessments, then it must have been a reflection of their personal failings and nothing to do with the teaching that they had received. Things are very different today, and governments around the world are concerned to assure the standards of teaching in higher education. This book addresses such matters of quality assurance by focusing on the knowledge and skills that higher education teachers need to facilitate student learning. I once used the phrase ‘quality as moral purpose’ (Yorke 2000, p. 21) in an unavailing attempt to turn the discourse relating to ‘quality’ away from procedures and technicalities associated with assurance and towards a focus on student development. After all, if student development is ‘got right’, then the assurance activities ought to pick up the achievement. Or, put another way, the key is for the institution and its organisational units to insist on a culture of learning, and to create and sustain the conditions for this to take place. The pressure on students, teachers and institutions to achieve rapid results (for example, as represented respectively in terms of grades, progression or completion and position in ranking tables) makes sustaining a commitment to ‘learning goals’ in preference to ‘performance goals’ (Dweck 1999) a considerable challenge. The challenges for today’s teachers in higher education are multidimensional. In addition to teaching their academic subjects, they are expected to facilitate the development in students of a broad slew of graduate attributes (or ‘employability’). They also have to engage with a student body that is diverse in demographic background (for example, age, gender, ethnicity and disability) and mode of engagement (full-time, part-time or at a distance). The pressures are readily apparent. Resources, such as this book, that support teachers in their teaching roles have an important part to play in mitigating the pressures as well as contributing to the development of a satisfying level of expertise as a teacher. However, teachers of today have an advantage over their predecessors, in that there is an ever-growing accumulation of evidence – well represented in the chapters of this book – regarding approaches that are likely to lead to success in their students. The style of this book emulates the student-centred approach espoused by providing theoretical, practical and memorable discussion to facilitate teaching and curriculum development. Angelo, for example, exhorts you to apply the parrot test: ‘is there any way that a student could pass your subject simply through rote memorisation – or by plagiarising or cheating – and without demonstrating deep learning? If the answer is yes, then the subject fails the parrot test’. The chapters in this book accord with the best of contemporary thinking about higher education, such as, for example, the conclusions reached by Pascarella and Terenzini (2005) regarding the value of active learning: With striking consistency, studies show that innovative, active, collaborative, and constructivist instructional approaches shape learning more powerfully, in some forms by substantial margins, than do conventional lecture- discussion and text-based approaches. (Pascarella & Terenzini 2005, p. 646) Converting a conclusion of this sort back into teaching sessions suited to the specific educational context is the challenge addressed in University Teaching in Focus. It involves consideration of how to maximise student engagement in learning and the extent to which the proposed approach fits with other components of the curriculum, including assessment. Tales, not entirely apocryphal, of multiple demands across a program for student presentations and assessments based solely on the writing of essays illustrate a need to focus on a diverse range of assessment to enhance students’ skill development. Students often take time to ‘get it’ as regards the demands that higher education makes of them. The first year is particularly important in constructing a shared appreciation of expectations which include independence (and at times collaboration) in studying; a preparedness to engage actively with the subject matter; a willingness to go beyond mere regurgitation of received materials; the avoidance of plagiarism; and a commitment to learn from formative assessments. In a diverse student cohort none of these can be taken for granted. Newly enrolled students may have to unlearn some of their existing assumptions and practices. All this adds to the intriguing challenges for teachers in higher education which they will be able to face in an informed and considered manner after reading the overview of key issues provided in the chapters of this book. Whilst teaching may, for some teachers, be an individual activity, the curriculum as a whole involves a collection of teachers. If that collection is a cohesive group, or perhaps a set of coherent sub-groups, then pedagogic advantages can accrue. Gibbs (2010) points to the benefit to teaching and learning that can arise from group discussion: Studies at Oxford Brookes University concerning why some subjects regularly produced better student performance than others found no differences in any quantitative measure of presage variables [i.e., funding, staff to student ratios, the quality of teaching staff and the quality of students]. However, a qualitative follow-up study found that the high performing subjects were characterised by healthy ‘communities of practice’ involving much discussion of how to solve teaching problems so as to make the entire programme work well for students. In contrast, subjects with consistently low average marks were characterised by a corresponding lack of talking about teaching, and a fragmented focus on individual courses ... (Gibbs 2010a, pp. 47–48) The considerate institution, via its academic organisational units, does not leave its teachers to wrestle alone with the challenges of teaching and assessing. Indeed, most now offer foundation courses in teaching, for which this book has been written. Whilst writing this foreword, I recalled the first single-handed transatlantic race that took place in 1960. The rules were simple – to cross the starting and finishing lines, but with an open choice of route. The sailors had to judge how to make best use of weather and wave, given the rig of their yacht and their own physical capabilities. What would be best for one would not necessarily be best for another. Of course, some actions would necessarily be determined by general principles of sailing. In regard to teaching, this story illustrates the importance of doing things in a way that combines the teacher’s individuality with principles of teaching for charting a path to quality student learning. So, too, does an anecdote involving the celebrated psychologist Robert Sternberg: Once, while listening to a lecture ... Sternberg marveled at how well the teacher was able to establish rapport and communicate with the audience. He commented to the person sitting next to him that he wished that he could deliver a lecture so effectively. She looked at him for a moment and then commented, ‘He does it his way; you do it your way.’ Her point was right on target. Each person has to find his or her own path. There is no one path that works for everyone. (Sternberg & Grigorenko 2000, p. 9) May all who read this book find a personal path that gives a sense of achievement through the successes of their students, together with the satisfaction of a job well done. CONTENTS Foreword Mantz Yorke List of figures List of tables List of cases About the editors About the contributors Introduction Lynne Hunt and Denise Chalmers PART 1 Focus on teaching Chapter 1 Understanding learning: theories and critique Martyn Stewart Chapter 2 Effective classroom teaching Lynne Hunt, Denise Chalmers and Ranald Macdonald Chapter 3 Discipline-based teaching Ray Land Chapter 4 Teaching graduate attributes and academic skills Denise Chalmers and Lee Partridge Chapter 5 Using effective assessment to promote learning Sally Brown and Phil Race PART 2 Focus on curriculum Chapter 6 Designing subjects for learning: practical research based principles and guidelines Tom Angelo Chapter 7 Designing online and blended learning Thomas C Reeves and Patricia M Reeves Chapter 8 Research-led or research-based undergraduate curricula Alan Jenkins and Mick Healey Chapter 9 Problem-based learning Lyn Brodie Chapter 10 Authentic work-integrated learning Jonathan Garnett PART 3 Focus on students Chapter 11 Inclusive teaching Christine Broughan and Lynne Hunt Chapter 12 Teaching international students Michelle Barker Chapter 13 Indigenous knowers and knowledge in university teaching Michael Christie and Christine Asmar PART 4 Focus on quality and leadership Chapter 14 A quality approach to university teaching Kerri-Lee Krause Chapter 15 Scholarship of teaching and learning Keith Trigwell Chapter 16 Leadership in teaching Paul Blackmore Bibliography Index FIGURES Behaviourist teaching methods could be authoritarian, transmissive and downplay Figure 1.1 the role of the learner Figure 1.2 Vygotsky’s zone of proximal development Examples of how a specific learning outcome or more general teaching and learning Figure 1.3 aims can draw from theoretical principles to inform teaching designs Figure 4.1 Graduate Attribute Map Figure 8.1 The nature of undergraduate research and inquiry Figure 9.1 Flowchart to help determine a PBL outline Figure 9.2 A model for online teaching and learning Figure 9.3 The problem-solving cycle scaffold Figure 11.1Flexible learning options of core resource packages Figure 14.1University of Western Sydney Learning and Teaching Standards Framework Figure 15.1Presage-Process-Product (3P) model of student learning TABLES Table 4.1 Example of ways to describe graduate attributes in disciplinary terms Example of graduate attributes of information literacy and interpersonal skills Table 4.2 described at increasing levels of complexity Examples of teaching and learning activities to enhance the development of Table 4.3 graduate attributes Appendix 4.1 Graduate attribute subject alignment matrix for a marketing strategy subject Table 5.1 Diverse assessment methods and approaches Table 9.1 An example of turning topics into problems Table 9.2 A sample assessment scheme to include adequate reflection Table 9.3 Sample assessment rubric of team meeting strategy Table 9.4 Framework for supporting the problem-solving cycle scaffold Table 11.1 An Open University example to explain academic discourse Table 14.1 Student survey types, purposes and typical levels of application Checklist to develop strategies for quality assurance and enhancement of Table 14.2 teaching practice Table 15.1 Items from a Scholarship of Teaching and Learning questionnaire Table 15.2 The Carnegie Foundation’s six standards of scholarship Levels of teaching/learning investigations showing relations between the Table 15.3 purpose, process and outcomes Table 15.4 Example investigation questions and relevant data sources