Reflective Teaching in Higher Education

Höfundur Paul Ashwin; Jan McArthur; Velda McCune; Monica McLean; Michelle Tooher; David Boud; Susanna Calkins

Útgefandi Bloomsbury UK

Snið Page Fidelity

Print ISBN 9781350084667

Útgáfa 2

Útgáfuár

3.190 kr.

Description

Efnisyfirlit

  • Halftitle page
  • Series page
  • Title page
  • Copyright page
  • Dedication
  • Contents
  • Introduction
  • WHY REFLECTIVE TEACHING IN HIGHER EDUCATION?
  • A PRINCIPLED APPROACH
  • A PRACTICAL APPROACH
  • A COLLECTIVE AND INTERNATIONAL APPROACH
  • Using this book
  • Within each chapter
  • At the end of each chapter
  • Online
  • A summary of the book
  • Part one Becoming reflective
  • Chapter 1 Identities Who we are as teachers and who are our students?
  • INTRODUCTION
  • KNOWING OURSELVES AS TEACHERS
  • What we can do
  • Where we are going
  • Who we are going there with
  • What our values are
  • How our identities inter act with our institutions, academic disciplines and work groups
  • The role of narrative and autobiography
  • How we under stand and engage with our students
  • KNOWING OUR STUDENTS AS LEARNERS
  • Students’ views of them selves as learners
  • Students’ identities and their experiences of university
  • Our assumptions about our students
  • Students’ perceptions of their teachers’ identities
  • Responding to individual students’ identities and their needs
  • THINKING ABOUT IDENTITIES WITH OUR STUDENTS
  • CONCLUSION
  • KEY READ INGS
  • Chapter 2 Learning How do students develop their understanding?
  • INTRODUCTION
  • HOW CAN WE THINK ABOUT HOW STUDENTS LEARN IN HIGHER EDUCATION?
  • Learning as acquisition and participation
  • Learning as acquisition through active construction
  • Learning as legitimate peripheral participation
  • Learning in different subject areas
  • Learning as situated discourse practice and the development of academic literacies
  • HOW CAN WE UNDERSTAND OUR STUDENTS AS LEARNERS IN HIGHER EDUCATION?
  • Presage: Students’ prior experiences of studying
  • Process: Students’ perceptions of the teaching and learning context
  • Product: Student learning outcomes and learning gains
  • CONCLUSION
  • KEY READINGS
  • Chapter 3 Reflection How can we develop the quality of our teaching?
  • INTRODUCTION
  • WHY BOTHER WITH REFLECTION IN HIGHER EDUCATION?
  • WHAT IS THE MEANING OF REFLECTION?
  • A process located in time and context
  • A cyclical process prompted by dissatisfaction
  • A process informed by who we are
  • A process that is shaped by a wide range of contexts
  • A process in which evidence is key
  • A process that requires dialogue
  • A process that depends on our judge ment
  • A process that leads to changes in our teaching practices
  • BARRIERS TO REFLECTIVE TEACHING IN HIGHER EDUCATION
  • Personal barriers to reflection
  • Contextual barriers to reflective teaching
  • CONCLUSION
  • KEY READINGS
  • Chapter 4 Principles What are the foundations of effective teaching and learning?
  • INTRODUCTION
  • EVIDENCE-INFORMED PRINCIPLES
  • Policy frameworks
  • Teacher learning
  • Informal learning
  • Social relationships
  • Student engagement
  • Assessment for learning
  • Teaching as design
  • Prior experience
  • Valued knowledge
  • Education for life
  • CONCLUSION
  • KEY READINGS
  • Part two Creating conditions for learning
  • Chapter 5 Contexts How do they shape us and how do we shape them?
  • INTRODUCTION
  • ASPECTS OF SOCIO-POLITICAL CONTEXTS
  • The global political-economy of higher education
  • National policy contexts
  • Institutional cultures
  • Disciplinary cultures
  • Teaching and learning contexts
  • PEOPLE, AGENCY AND INTERACTIONS
  • Academics
  • Students
  • Interactions between students and academics
  • CONCLUSION
  • KEY READINGS
  • Chapter 6 Relationships How are we getting on together?
  • INTRODUCTION
  • THE ROLE OF THE TEACHER
  • Relationships and the teacher in traditional teaching sessions
  • Relationships in distributed learning environments
  • THE ROLE OF THE STUDENT
  • THE INTERRELATIONSHIP BETWEEN TEACHER AND STUDENT: CREATING DIALOGUE
  • CONCLUSION
  • KEY READINGS
  • Chapter 7 Engagement How does our engagement with teaching influence student learning?
  • INTRODUCTION
  • RELATIONS BETWEEN TEACHING AND RESEARCH
  • Understanding the commonalities between teaching and research
  • Understanding the separation between teaching and research
  • THE ROLE OF KNOWLEDGE IN ENGAGING WITH TEACHING
  • Making know ledge accessible
  • Balancing the complexity and accessibility of knowledge
  • Credibility: why students need to know that knowledge matters
  • Situating students’ experi ences within disciplinary communities
  • Reflecting back: how sharing our disciplinary knowledge helps us to under stand teaching and learnin
  • ENGAGEMENT WITH OUR STUDENTS
  • Students at the educational interface
  • Understanding ourselves and our students
  • CONCLUSION
  • KEY READINGS
  • Chapter 8 Spaces How are we creating environments for learning?
  • INTRODUCTION
  • UNDERSTANDING TEACHING–LEARNING SPACES
  • Working with students in effective learning spaces
  • Engaging large groups in learning activities
  • Flipping the classroom
  • Designing teaching and learning spaces
  • TEACHING AND LEARNING BEYOND THE CLASSROOM
  • Placements, internships and simulation
  • Field-based learning
  • Service learning
  • Digital technologies and virtual spaces
  • CONCLUSION
  • KEY READINGS
  • Part three Teaching for understanding
  • Chapter 9 Curriculum What is to be taught and learned?
  • INTRODUCTION
  • THE TRANSFORMATION OF KNOWLEDGE IN THE PRODUCTION OF CURRICULA
  • Traditionalism
  • Technical-instrumentalism
  • Curriculum for social change
  • Social realism
  • ALIGNMENT AND CONGRUENCE IN CURRICULUM DESIGN
  • Specification of intended learning outcomes
  • Top-down design
  • Potential constraints and barriers to innovative curriculum design
  • CONCLUSION
  • KEY READINGS
  • Chapter 10 Planning How are we implementing curricula?
  • INTRODUCTION
  • SESSION PLANNING
  • Teaching approaches and session planning
  • Planning individual sessions
  • Structuring sessions
  • Encouraging participa tion amongst all students
  • Using student feed back and coping with the unexpected
  • MODULE PLANNING
  • Structuring the module
  • Practical steps in course and module design
  • Assessment within modules
  • Student feed back on modules
  • Working with colleagues
  • PROGRAMME PLANNING
  • Programme planning and review cycle
  • Formal requirements
  • Involving students in programme planning
  • Working with employer-partners
  • Working with external examiners
  • CONCLUSION
  • KEY READINGS
  • Chapter 11 Teaching How can we develop strategies focused on student understanding?
  • INTRODUCTION
  • BASES FOR THINKING ABOUT TEACHING FOR UNDERSTANDING
  • Learning to teach
  • Making use of educational theory and research
  • Good teaching is discipline or field specific
  • Encouraging students to study independently
  • Teaching is a moral endeavour
  • Teaching is a collective enterprise
  • TEACHING IN DIFFERENT MODES
  • Lectures
  • Small group modes
  • Laboratories and fieldwork
  • Supervision
  • Online teaching and learning
  • CONCLUSION
  • KEY READINGS
  • Chapter 12 Communication How can we support learning through dialogue?
  • INTRODUCTION
  • LEARNING RELATIONSHIPS AND APPROACHES TO COMMUNICATION
  • DIALOGUE IN DIFFERENT TEACHING–LEARNING SETTINGS
  • Encouraging a dialogue with one’s own learning
  • Silent dialogues
  • Dialogue in group settings
  • Dialogical spaces beyond the academy: social media and students
  • Dialogue for student engagement: within and beyond the curriculum
  • COMMUNICATION AS EDUCATORS
  • Disciplinary knowledge and communication
  • Communication for professional development
  • Communication for the student experience
  • CONCLUSION
  • KEY READINGS
  • Chapter 13 Assessment How does it make a contribution to learning?
  • INTRODUCTION
  • WHAT IS ASSESSMENT?
  • What is assessment for?
  • KEY ELEMENTS IN THINKING ABOUT ASSESSMENT
  • Assessment tasks
  • Learning outcomes
  • Appropriate standards
  • Criteria for making judgements
  • Assessment methods
  • Assessment roles
  • Assessment-related activities
  • Marks and grades
  • Institutional requirements
  • FEEDBACK: AN INTEGRAL PART OF GOOD ASSESSMENT
  • Successful feed back
  • STUDENT EXPERIENCES OF ASSESSMENT
  • CONCLUSION
  • KEY READINGS
  • Part four Reflecting on consequences
  • Chapter 14 Quality How are we monitoring and enhancing the quality of teaching and learning?
  • INTRODUCTION
  • MONITORING TEACHING QUALITY AND STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES IN HIGHER EDUCATION
  • Monitoring and evaluating the quality of teaching in higher education
  • Documenting teaching achievements
  • Gathering student views of teaching quality
  • Engaging the univer sity community in teaching quality improvement through peer review of teaching
  • MONITORING STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES
  • Tools for gathering student feed back on learning
  • Academic peer review of learning outcomes and standards
  • IMPLICATIONS FOR PROGRAMME DEVELOPMENT
  • Programme review and improvement strategies
  • CONCLUSION
  • KEY READINGS
  • Chapter 15 Inclusion How are we enabling opportunities?
  • INTRODUCTION
  • ACCESS
  • Accessing higher education
  • Accessibility in higher education
  • EQUALITY
  • INCLUSION
  • Dimensions of student difference
  • A rationale for inclusive teaching
  • Implementing inclusive teaching
  • Course design, planning and awareness
  • Inclusive learning and teaching
  • Dealing with sensitive material
  • Assessment
  • CONCLUSION
  • KEY READINGS
  • Part five Deepening understanding
  • Chapter 16 Expertise How do we develop a career-long engagement with teaching?
  • INTRODUCTION
  • WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO BE AN EXPERT TEACHER IN HIGHER EDUCATION?
  • Teaching expertise
  • Content, pedagogical and curricular knowledge
  • Informal learning and the collegial influence
  • REFLECTIVE TEACHING, THE SCHOLARSHIP OF TEACHING AND LEARNING, AND YOUR CAREER PATH
  • The scholarship of teaching and learning and institutional structures
  • Drawing on the teach ing and learning research programme concepts of effective teaching and learning
  • MANAGING YOUR ACADEMIC CAREER: MILESTONES, PLANNING AND DOCUMENTATION
  • CONCLUSION
  • KEY READINGS
  • Chapter 17 Professionalism How does reflective teaching contribute to society?
  • INTRODUCTION
  • HIGHER EDUCATION AND SOCIETY
  • Employability, ‘graduateness’ and the rise of‘competency-based education’
  • Widening participation and access
  • THE CONTRIBUTION OF REFLECTIVE TEACHING TO SOCIETY
  • Examples of critical pedagogy in higher education
  • CONCLUSION
  • KEY READINGS
  • The Reflective Teaching in Higher Education Team
  • ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
  • Bibliography
  • Index
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