Principles That Make Improvement a Positive Process
- Improvement is not a dirty word—All teachers can improve; most should. Don’t base efforts on
premises of remediation and deficiency. Positive premises work just as well. You can improve your
teaching just as effectively doing more of what works well as you can by seeking to eliminate weaknesses.
- Don’t trivialize what’s involved in the process—Stop thinking quick fixes, techniques, and training.
The “just-do-it” approach toward instructional change doesn’t cut it. Discovering a good technique and
attaching it to whatever’s happening in class tomorrow trivializes the complex interplay of variables
that contribute to success in the classroom. Effective, sustainable change rests on careful planning
and a systematic, thoughtful approach to change.
- Recognize the role of learning in the improvement process—Most faculty aren’t trained to teach,
and norms expecting ongoing growth and development are not strong. As a result, most of what we know
about teaching we have learned by doing—not by study, analysis, and careful reflection. Most faculty
are surprised when they discover how much can be learned by reading, by encountering research and theory,
and by thoughtful analysis. Part of what makes this learning motivating and satisfying is that class
time tomorrow (or sometime soon) offers an opportunity to apply that new knowledge. Most of us love to
learn, and seeing teaching and learning as new material to master can make teaching a source of
intellectual intrigue.
- Personhood is expressed through teaching—We do teach content and we do teach students, but just
as surely we teach who we are. Conduct in and out of the classroom conveys important messages about
values, beliefs, and attitudes. Because students respond to us as people, because teaching reveals
something about us as human beings, it leaves us vulnerable, open, exposed, and thereby able to be
hurt. It’s an occupational hazard for which we don’t get extra pay or protection. But it also affords
opportunity—the chance to be valued and confirmed as a person, to be honored and respected. This means
that better teaching isn’t always about learning the content better. It isn’t always about the
acquisition of new techniques. Sometimes it’s about being a better person.
- Improvement begins and ends with the faculty member—You play the central role in the improvement
process. Others may try to motivate. They may threaten (no merit raise if you don’t improve). They
may cajole (your students deserve it). They may try to persuade (your students will learn more if you
do it this way). But they cannot implement one change in your classroom . . . you alone can do that.
In the same way that you can’t learn anything for your students, nobody can improve your teaching for
you. It’s something done by you, for you (and for your students).
- Formative feedback guarantees the integrity of the improvement process—Teachers need diagnostic,
descriptive details that help them understand the impact of their policies, practices, and behaviors on
student learning. The systems used by most institutions to evaluate instruction fail to provide this kind
of feedback. This failure is a good news/bad news scenario. The bad news is that most institutions could
(and should) be doing better. This is an area in which much useful research has been conducted. The good
news is that you can step in and make the process work for you. You can ask students about the impact of
a particular assignment, activity, practice, exam, or reading on their learning. You can ask questions
about the impact of any aspect of instruction on learning. You should be asking about many of these
aspects if you want to make wise and well-informed decisions about improvement.
- Set realistic expectations for success—Too often we expect perfection. In order to be “good,”
a classroom activity has to thoroughly engage and involve every single student. It has to work every
time we use it, regardless of class level and content. Anything less than complete success means the
activity is flawed or we have failed. Realistically, however, anything we do or try in the class is
going to have mixed results. Although aspirations to perfection are lofty, they aren’t very realistic,
at least for most of us.
- See teaching excellence as a career-long quest—Don’t expect to finally get it right or to
permanently achieve an exemplary level of teaching excellence. Once you think you’ve arrived,
the journey is over. It’s the quest for teaching excellence that motivates, inspires, and satisfies.
Find pleasure in your travels. Once you reach one destination, leave shortly for yet another
interesting place.
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