Bridges Reflecting the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning at the University of Saskatchewan January 2011 Volume 9, No. 2 Checking the Temperature and Pressure: Faculty Attitudes Toward Teaching By Jim Greer, Director, ULC I n this issue of Bridges, I would like to highlight a report that has just been released on faculty attitudes toward teaching at the University of Saskatchewan. The report is based on a survey conducted early in the current planning period, just as several new initiatives to strengthen the culture of teaching and learning were being rolled out. I’d like to thank Carisa Polischuk from IPA and Brad Wuetherick and Stan Yu from the Gwenna Moss Centre for their work on this survey, data analysis and report. Below, I offer a synopsis of the findings. I invite you to look at the entire 70-page report, available on the UofS Institutional Planning and Assessment website. In fall 2009, the University of Saskatchewan administered an institution-wide survey aimed at gaining a better understanding of faculty members’ and other instructors’ general attitudes toward teaching and learning. Originally developed at the University of British Columbia, the “Faculty Attitudes” survey was administered to all of the 1190 faculty, sessional lecturers, and graduate students who had taught at least one U of S course in the 2009 calendar year. A total of 458 instructors responded, resulting in a 38.5% response rate, with good representation from all colleges and all faculty ranks. U of S instructors tended to hold teaching in high regard, but also felt discouraged by the lack of training, incentives, commitment and rewards given for teaching. Many seemed to lack a strong awareness of the current and ongoing efforts, initiatives and supports for teaching excellence at the University of Saskatchewan. In comparing results against the University of British Columbia, we found that respondents from both Universities held similar views regarding their personal commitment to teaching, both groups felt a perceived lack of support for teaching given by their University, and both groups were not very familiar with ongoing efforts and initiatives to promote teaching and learning. Amongst the instructors at the U of S, 97% rated themselves as effective or very effective educators. Further, the vast majority of respondents agreed Bridges, Vol. 9, No. 1 1 www.usask.ca/gmcte January 2011 Vol. 9 No. 2 The Gwenna Moss Centre for Teaching Effectiveness University of Saskatchewan Room 50 Murray Building 3 Campus Drive Saskatoon, SK S7N 5A4 Phone (306) 966-2231 Fax (306) 966-2242 Web site: www.usask.ca/gmcte Bridges is distributed to every teacher at the University of Saskatchewan and to all the teaching centres in Canada, and some beyond. It is also available on our web site. Your contributions to Bridges will reach a wide local, national, and international audience. Please consider submitting an article or opinion piece to Bridges. Contact any one of the following people; we’d be delighted to hear from you: Jim Greer Director, ULC and GMCTE Phone (306)966-2234 jim.greer@usask.ca Brad Wuetherick Program Director Phone (306)966-1804 brad.wuetherick@usask.ca Christine Anderson Obach Managing Editor (Bridges) Program Manager Phone (306) 966-1950 christine.anderson@usask.ca Corinne Fasthuber Assistant Phone (306) 966-2231 corinne.fasthuber@usask.ca Views expressed in Bridges are those of the individual authors and are not necessarily those of the staff at the GMCTE. ISSN 1703-1222 that it is important, as instructors, to provide students with useful feedback and to engage students in the subject matter. Almost all felt that successful teaching means that students retain the concepts of the class for the long term. To teach effectively, respondents agreed that they must be cognizant of how students learn a subject. A majority of respondents felt that traditional lecturing is not a very effective teaching method and many favoured the use of problem-based and interactive learning. On the other hand, instructors were found to be more conflicted on the notion of exams, with the majority of respondents feeling that we should not decrease emphasis on exams as a means for assessing undergraduate student learning. Despite this, the majority also admitted that exams do not encourage a true understanding or learning of the subject matter and that more effective methods of student assessment could be developed. Generally, respondents agreed that increasing resources, such as expanding the availability of classroom media/computer technologies and smaller class sizes would improve the effectiveness of their teaching. However, they also indicated that they could become more effective even without more resources if they could only devote more time to their teaching. Only 37% of respondents believed they had been adequately trained to be effective teachers, with full professors and graduate students reporting even lower percentages. Further, a majority of respondents continued to feel that they are not being provided with enough training and education on effective teaching methods and tools at the University of Saskatchewan, yet 2 indicated that finding time to avail themselves of such training would be very difficult. A large majority of respondents perceived that both their departments and their colleges place more emphasis on research than on teaching. In contrast, only 24% of respondents placed more personal emphasis on research than teaching, with nearly 40% placing more personal emphasis on teaching than research. Among the assistant and associate professors, much more personal emphasis was placed on research than teaching. This tended to shift a bit with full professors, where more than half of the full professors claimed to place equal or greater emphasis on teaching. Despite their personal commitment to teaching, most respondents felt that they were not being provided with adequate incentives and rewards to be a good teacher nor were they provided with adequate rewards or incentives to promote teaching excellence. Thus, when asked if they would be willing to devote more time to becoming a more effective teacher, given all the demands and constraints placed upon them in their role at the U of S, around half of the respondents stated that they could not find the time. Still, many respondents agreed that they were willing to invest some time into continuing to improve their teaching, and most agreed that any initiatives or training opportunities aimed at improving teaching excellence at the University of Saskatchewan were highly important. However, when asked if they were familiar with current efforts and initiatives in promoting teaching excellence at the University, 47% of respondents stated that they Bridges, Vol. 9, No. 1 were unfamiliar with any such efforts and initiatives. Further, close to onethird of the respondents did not know whether current efforts to improve teaching excellence at the U of S were having any measure of success. Among those respondents who had attended training sessions on effective teaching at the U of S, 45% did agree that it was a valuable use of their time; however, many claimed that the efforts and initiatives failed to help them find teaching more fulfilling. Faculty with fewer than ten years of teaching experience were more likely to favour interactive learning and generally viewed learning as a social activity. Female respondents more highly valued the interactive classroom experience, smaller class sizes, and engaging in training to be an effective teacher. On the other hand, Bridges, Vol. 9, No. 1 male respondents placed a greater importance on gaining teaching experience, conveying enthusiasm for the subject, and preparing for lectures. The combined effect of gender and teaching experience showed a dramatic gap in preferred approaches between women earlier in their teaching careers and men later in their careers. Traditional lectures and traditional examinations are seen as quite negative by earlier-career female faculty but were thought to be a relatively effective means of teaching by later- career males. When comparing the results between the University of Saskatchewan and UBC, we found far more similarities than differences between the opinions of respondents across both Universities. While respondents from both Universities felt that they 3 generally lacked training to be a good and effective teacher, only 19% of the respondents from UBC believed that they were trained to be a good and effective teacher in comparison to 37% of the respondents from the U of S. Since 2009, many new initiatives have been launched to improve the profile of teaching and learning at the U of S, and the rewards and recognition for effective teaching are an area of institutional focus. Of course, the primary mission of the Gwenna Moss Centre is to support and foster effective teaching in any way we can. Probably those of you reading this article through to the end are fully aware of the learning opportunities afforded through our work at the Gwenna Moss Centre, but please, talk to your colleagues who aren’t! www.usask.ca/gmcte Starting a ‘Wave’ By Kim West, Educational Development Specialist, GMCTE As a teacher, you influence the quality of the learning experience for students (Black, Gach, and Kotzian, 1996). You can make a ‘Wave’ of difference. Introduction W Life describes the day on October 15, 1981 when Krazy George Henderson invented ‘the Wave’ in the Oakland Coliseum. He describes the Wave as . . . an extraordinary act. All those people, spread out over a vast stadium, with limited ability to connect or communicate, somehow come together in a giant cooperative act inspired by a common goal: to help the home team win. It defies language and culture, occurring with regularity throughout the world at Tower of Babel events as diverse as the Olympics and international soccer games. . . It transverses gender, income, and societal status. It is a pure expression of collective passion released. hen faculty and instructors are asked, “What do students need to succeed?”, the answer is usually intellectual attributes such as student preparedness, ability and motivation, attendance, and teacher effectiveness (Provitera McGlynn 2001). But ask the same question of students and overwhelmingly, the response is simple: it’s about how students feel and whether they experience a sense of community and belonging within their colleges, departments, and institutions (Provitera McGlynn 2001). Characteristics such as preparedness, ability and motivation, or attendance may be easy to define and measure, but what does ‘belonging’ actually look and Seidman poses the question, “Is there some way to foment that feel like? kind of creative energy focused on our business goals? What does it Dov Seidman, the author of How: take to start a Wave?” I’d like to Why How We Do Anything Means pose a similar question here: Can Everything . . . In Business And In 4 faculty, instructors, and students start a Wave- a pure expression of belonging, community, and collective passion- across the university? And what would this Wave look and feel like? It could look and feel like many things: trust, respect, rapport, responding openly and honestly, building relationships, caring and concern, common visions, and learning that becomes a conversation not a monologue. Seidman argues that ‘soft’ qualities such as trust, respect, transparency, purpose, and reputation are actually the ‘hardest’ qualities of all because they create and drive everything else­­­­­the connectedness, belonging and community that students are looking for. Faculty and instructors can start a Wave of belonging and community in their classrooms by taking the initiative and leadership to build rapport in the classroom. Weimer, Parrett, and Kerns (1988) define rapport as “the quality of interpersonal relations between teacher and students.” Just like the Wave extends beyond a section in a sports arena, rapport exists both within and Bridges, Vol. 9, No. 1 beyond the classroom. Rapport is not expectations and follow through only a dialogue between teacher and on promises made (“I won’t students it also is a polylogic conversatest you on this specific termition that must be fostered amongst nology . . .”). students and students. Rapport is commonly described as a wavelength- a •Offer fair and rational explanafeature of subconscious communications for grading. tion- that involves being ‘on the same wavelength’ with the person with •Provide immediate, construcwhom one is interacting. Rapport intive, and encouraging feedback. volves the subconscious and conscious behaviours, choices, decisions, and in- To build rapport amongst students, terpersonal communication that either faculty and instructors should provide motivates or demotivates students, or opportunities for students to: creates a supportive or non-welcoming classroom environment. •Get to know each other, through active learning, discussion, collaborative learning, and Some Strategies to Build icebreakers. Rapport To build rapport with students, faculty and instructors might •Learn who their students are (learn/use their names and find out background information about them to make course content interesting and relevant to demonstrate that they care). •Be approachable (and available before and after class, and during office hours). •Show students that they ‘care’about the content, teaching, learning, and student success. •Provide students with clear •Learn from each other (through discussion, collaborative learning, etc). •Ask questions of each other in class. sion and energy in your college, school, or university. References Black, B., Gach, M., & Kotzian, N. 1996. Guidebook for teaching labs for University of Michigan graduate student instructors. Ann Arbor, MI: Center for Research on Learning and Teaching, University of Michigan. Retrieved December 2, 2010 from http://www. crlt.umich.edu/gsis/P7_1.php. Brookfield, S.D. 1995. Building trust with students. In The skillful teacher: On technique, trust, and responsiveness in the classroom (pp.168-176). San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. Provitera McGlynn, A. 2001. Creating a welcoming classroom environment. In Successful beginnings for college teaching: Engaging your students from the first day (pp.55-70). Madison, WI: Atwood Publishing. •Form study groups with each other. Seidman, D. 2007. How: Why how we do anything means everything . . . in business and in life. Hoboken, NJ: John •Become part of a learning com- Wiley and Sons, Inc. munity. Weimer, M., Parrett, J. L., and Kerns, Seidman says the Wave is typically M. 1988. How am I teaching? Forms generated by no more than a few and activities for acquiring instructional dozen people. Once started, this initial input. Madison, Wisc.: Magna Publiact of leadership can create collective cations. passion and energy across a stadium filled with thousands of people. Now just imagine creating that much pas- The U of S is hosting the 2011 conference for the Society of Teaching and Learning in Higher Education (STLHE) on June 15-18, 2011. Theme: From Here to the Horizon: Diversity and Inclusive Practice in Higher Education. If you are interested in being part of the conference planning team or a volunteer please send an email to stlhe.2011@usask.ca or call The Gwenna Moss Centre 966-1950 Bridges, Vol. 9, No. 1 5 www.usask.ca/gmcte Forget about process; let’s focus on content! Threshold Concepts in the Disciplines Brad Wuetherick, Program Director, GMCTE V irtually everyone who has ever taught in higher education, regardless of discipline, has struggled with the sometimes overwhelming need to include too much content in their course(s). I know I have. My thought process at the time was essentially: “I need to include everything from a to z, because if I don’t then how can they possibly progress in the discipline. And besides that, what would my colleagues think if they realized that I wasn’t covering it all.” Yet those of you who have been GMCTE workshop participants (or at comparable centres at any university) have likely heard about the pressing need in higher education for faculty, sessionals and graduate students to focus on the process of teaching and to let go of the focus on content. A common mantra has been that we should “cover less to uncover more,” with a reminder that “coverage is a virtue only in house paint.”1 Well, let’s forget about process (at least for the few moments it takes for you to read this article) and instead embrace that desire to focus on content. Every discipline has content that students need to master to progress in that discipline. That content may be more linear and hierarchical in nature or may be highly contextual and contestable (or both) depending on the discipline. For years, academics have written about disciplinary content using the notion of The first quotation is attributed (with some uncertainty) to Bland Tomkinson from the University of Manchester, who has used it regularly in his publications, while that latter quote is attributed to Pat(ricia) Rogers, Dean of Education from the University of Windsor. 1 core (or key) concepts, those concepts that are ‘core’ to one’s discipline, your sub-specialty within a discipline, or one’s individual courses. Core concepts are those that students should learn about, understand, and even master, if they are to graduate with a degree in a discipline (or even if they are to complete a single course in a discipline). In essence, they are critical to how one might begin thinking and practicing in a discipline. The notion of ‘ways of thinking and practicing (WTP)’ in the disciplines emerged out of the Enhancing Teaching-Learning Environments in Undergraduate Courses (ETL) Project in the UK. They used the phrase ‘ways of thinking and practicing’ “to describe the richness, depth and breadth of what students might learn through engagement with a given subject area in a specific context. This might include, for example, coming to terms with particular understandings, forms of discourse, values or ways of acting which are regarded as central to graduate-level mastery of a discipline or subject area. Research findings describing students’ understandings and misunderstandings of academic tasks, and of key concepts, tap into the difficulties that they may experience in coming to terms with the WTP of particular academic communities (Prosser and Webb 1994; Hounsell 1997; Campbell et al. 1998). WTP can potentially encompass anything that students learn which helps them to develop a sense of 6 what it might mean to be part of a particular disciplinary community, whether or not they intend to join a given community in the future, for example, by pursuing a particular profession.” (McCune and Hounsell, 2005: 257) This research on ways of thinking and practicing has led to an understanding that there are core or key concepts in some disciplines that are particularly troublesome and transformational, which serve as conceptual gateways that open up new and previously inaccessible ways of thinking about a subject. These concepts, called ‘threshold concepts’ by Meyer and Land (2003), can be found in all disciplines. They provide a way of distinguishing between core learning outcomes that result in seeing things a new way, and those that do not. What makes a concept a ‘threshold concept’ rather than just a core or key concept? Meyer and Land argue that a core concept “is a conceptual ‘building block’ that progresses understanding of the subject; it has to be understood but it does not necessarily lead to a qualitatively different view of the subject matter” (Meyer and Land, 2006: 6). On the other hand, Meyer and Land (2003) articulate five main characteristics of a threshold concept. A threshold concept must be: 1.Transformative – Once the concept is understood it results in a significant shift in the perception of a subject (or part thereof ). This transformation usually manifests as a shift in students’ Bridges, Vol. 9, No. 1 perspectives, but can also be performative (or skill-based) in nature. reasonable but mistaken expectations (heavier objects fall faster), and the strangeness and complexity of solution to a problem (mathematical formulas in Newton’s laws); alien knowledge – that which comes from a foreign or ‘alien’ perspective that conflicts with our own (Aboriginal ways of knowing vs. Western ways of knowing); and, finally, tacit knowledge, that which remains personal and implicit, yet often unexamined, at the level of practical consciousness (the role of heat in cooking) (Perkins, 1999; Meyer and Land, 2003). Many threshold concepts reside in the conceptually difficult and alien categories of knowledge, but not all conceptually difficult or alien knowledge is a threshold concept. This liminal state can be unsettling for students, with the result that students engage in mimicry of the threshold concept. This may involve both attempts at understanding and troubled misunderstanding or limited understanding. The students’ mimicry, whether compensatory (when students assure themselves that something is understood, but in reality it is not) or conscious (when a student is aware it is beyond their grasp, so they pretend they comprehend), can result in students passing examinations, assignments, or whole courses, but then struggle significantly in future courses in that discipline where the limited understanding or misunderstandings are exposed. Threshold Concepts in the Disciplines 5. Troublesome – These concepts are usually troublesome for students, in that they can appear conceptually difficult, counter-intuitive, foreign (or alien), or incoherent. Another troublesome area for threshold concepts is the use of language in and of itself, particularly arising from disciplinary jargon representing their particular ways of seeing and thinking. “There is no concept that exists outside systems of thought and language; there is no concept which is not involved in the infinite play of word meaning” (Land and Bayne, 1999). The troublesome nature of threshold concepts is something that I would like to focus on in particular. Building on Perkins’ ideas of troublesome knowledge, Meyer and Land argue that there are a number of categories in which course content can fall: ritual knowledge, that has a routine and in some ways meaningless nature that have been learned as part of a social or individual routine (names and dates or basic arithmetic); inert knowledge, that sits in the mind, but is only called upon when specifically called for by an exam or direct prompt and then put away to gather dust (game stats for players on the Roughriders); conceptually difficult knowledge, that which is troublesome and arises from a mix of misimpressions from everyday experience (objects seem to slow down automatically), Another key issue with threshold concepts is that students are often in a liminal or uncertain state as they pass through the ‘threshold’ (Land and Meyer, 2006). Learning a threshold concept in some disciplines may be akin to moving through a rite of passage, with uncertainty arising from the transitional state of space or time experienced during the learning process. The condition of liminality, arising from learning threshold concepts, may play a transformative function in that there is a change of state or status. The individual acquires new knowledge and subsequently a new status and identity within the community. The transformation can also be protracted over time and involve oscillations between states often with a regression into previous states. 2. Irreversible – Once the concept is understood, the resulting change of perspective is unlikely to be forgotten (or would take considerable effort to unlearn). 3. Integrative – Threshold concepts help expose the hidden interrelatedness of ideas and concepts in the discipline. 4. Bounded – Such concepts are usually (though not always) ‘bounded’ in that the conceptual space will have frontiers or boundaries bordering new conceptual areas (which may include the demarcation between theoretical perspectives, between disciplines or sub-disciplines, but could also represent natural progressions through a discipline – particularly one with a more linear and hierarchical knowledge structure). Bridges, Vol. 9, No. 1 7 An increasing volume of research in higher education literature explores the different threshold concepts in the disciplines. Three short examples may help to clarify what some threshold concepts might be, and to demonstrate how large or relatively small these concepts might be. First, from mathematics, a commonly discussed threshold concept found in first year calculus is the concept of a ‘limit.’ This is a foundational piece to any understanding of calculus, and is arguably a threshold that is necessary to cross in order to pass first year calculus, but it is also one that students find troublesome (particularly because of complications arising from the use of the word ‘limit’ in everyday language). Students often mimic understanding of the concept and, in so doing, are unable to progress in their understanding and application of calculus. (Meyer and Land, 2003) Second, from first-year economics an example of a threshold concept is that www.usask.ca/gmcte of an ‘opportunity cost.’ This fundamental concept in economics is essentially an understanding that choices can be compared and that every choice (including not choosing) means rejecting alternatives, each of which have a value that can be determined. The concept of opportunity lost is troublesome in that it forces students to realize that choices are not predetermined or unchangeable, and results in a transformation where students have a more abstract way of thinking. (Meyer and Land, 2003) Finally, a third example of a larger threshold concept in many disciplines in the humanities and social sciences is the concept of ‘postcolonialism.’ This theory, which encompasses many different aspects of a number of disciplines, meets each of the criteria discussed above for threshold concepts (including the fact that many students mimic understanding of it rather than truly progressing through the ‘threshold’). It is a much larger, more complex concept (often explored or learned over multiple courses at multiple levels of study) than the previous two examples, but gives an idea of the fact that the scope of threshold concepts can vary. Several conferences, plus book sand articles, have been dedicated to exploring different threshold concepts in the disciplines. In particular, the recent book by Meyer, Land and Smith (2008) explores numerous threshold concepts across the disciplines. Revisiting the Title Remember when I said (in the title to this article) “forget about process; let’s talk about content”? Well … I lied. One of the strengths of threshold concepts, as a way to think about content explored by students in our respective disciplines, is that it calls on us to think about how best to help students overcome the barriers - to navigate the liminal state - they may face in crossing those thresholds of knowledge. In essence, threshold concepts help us examine the most effective process through which conceptually troublesome content can be taught and learned. There are many ways across and through the threshold, but are there particular ways that are better than others to help students understand? There will be an opportunity in the upcoming winter term to explore threshold concepts further as the GMCTE will have a workshop on this topic. For more information on threshold concepts, or to access to some of the references here, please visit the GMCTE (and in particular, the GMCTE library)! References Land R. and S. Bayne (1999). Computer-mediated learning, synchronicity and the metaphysics of presence. In Collis B. and Oliver R. (eds), EDMEDIA 1999: Proceedings of the 11th Annual World Conference on Educational Multimedia, Hypermedia, and Telecommunications, Charlottesvill, VA: American Association for the Advancement of Computing in Education. McCune V. and D. Hounsell (2005). The development of students’ ways of thinking and practicing in three finalyear biology courses. Higher Education. 49, 255-289. Meyer J. H. F. and R. Land (2003). Threshold concepts and troublesome knowledge: Linkages to ways of thinking and practicing within the disciplines. In C. Rust (ed.). Improving Student Learning Theory and Practice – 10 Years On. Oxford, UK: OCSLD, 412-24. Meyer J. H. F. and R. Land (2005). Threshold Concepts and troublesome 8 knowledge (2): Epistemological considerations and a conceptual framework for teaching and learning. Higher Education. 49, 373-388. Meyer J. H. F. and R. Land (eds.) (2006). Overcoming Barriers to Student Understanding: Threshold Concepts and Troublesome Knowledge. London: Routledge. Meyer J. H. F. and R. Land (2006). Threshold concepts and troublesome knowledge: Issues of Liminality. In Meyer J. H. F. and R. Land (eds), Overcoming Barriers to Student Understanding: Threshold Concepts and Troublesome Knowledge. London: Routledge, 19-32. Meyer J. H. F. and R. Land (2006). Threshold concepts and troublesome knowledge: An introduction. In Meyer J. H. F. and R. Land (eds), Overcoming Barriers to Student Understanding: Threshold Concepts and Troublesome Knowledge. London: Routledge, 3-18. Meyer J. H. F, R. Land and J. Smith (2008). Threshold Concepts within the Disciplines. Rotterdam: Sense Publishers. Perkins D. (1999). The many faces of constructivism. Educational Leadership. 57 (3), 6-11. “Ideal teachers are those who use themselves as bridges over which they invite their students to cross, then having facilitated their crossing, joyfully collapse, encouraging them to create bridges of their own.” Nikos Kazantzak Bridges, Vol. 9, No. 1 How many ways can you say “Hello?”: Intercultural Communication for an Integrated Campus W By Sheryl Mills, GMCTE & Lisa Krol, Language Centre hat does a smile mean to different cultural groups? You might be surprised at the range of interpretations when you watch the recently released 6-minute video, Intercultural Communication for an Integrated Campus, created here at the University of Saskatchewan. It can be difficult for international students—or any new students for that matter— to make “Canadian” friends. Intercultural Communication for an Integrated Campus focuses on intercultural communication and potential barriers to effective relationship-building conversations. Its objective is to help students become more aware of the cultural differences around them—Canadian to Canadian as well as Canadian to International. The objective of this module is to help viewers feel less fearful of engaging in an intercultural exchange the next time the opportunity presents itself. blind ourselves to information that may change our views. This knowledge will encourage people to enter into intercultural interactions with open minds and awareness of miscommunication. used at the beginning of term to help students get to know one another. It can encourage us to recognize, appreciate, and engage in intercultural communication. It is a self-contained, informative and practical resource that Intercultural Communication for an is both subtle and invitational. Ideally, Integrated Campus provides viewers students will watch the video modules an opportunity to experience global as a group. Where the video indicates perspectives and begin important inter- a pause for discussion, there are intercultural conversations. It is the first active activities in an accompanying of three modules promoting internaPDF for discussion. The activities are tionalization on campus. The module designed for small group discussion initiated by special advisor Tom Wisand can be used with groups of varyhart, and conceptualized and develing sizes, including large lecture-style settings. In today’s political climate, we tend to think of people as being the same for issues of equality while in reality we all have different backgrounds, which make for significant differences in how we think and interpret words, events, and actions. Intercultural Communication for an Integrated Campus highlights that we are all different even when we come from the same place. This DVD gives us a place to start the intercultural conversation. oped through the University Learning Centre, was developed by Lisa Krol and Melissa Diehl of the University Learning Centre. Lisa is the Curriculum Coordinator and ESL Advisor at The Language Centre and the recipient of the Spring 2010 Provost’s Award for Excellence in International Teaching. Generally we have a tendency to create stereotypes—positive or negative. Often, to save “psychic energy,” we tend to think we know what a group is like, and without awareness, we may Intercultural Communication for an Integrated Campus is a short, accessible video lesson intended for use at orientation type events (undergraduate, residence, PAL, etc). It can also be Bridges, Vol. 9, No. 1 9 It is estimated that the full package of three modules and support materials will be ready for use in September 2011. Module 2 will focus on breaking down stereotypes. It is natural to categorize people both positively and negatively. By being aware of the tendency to group people, students can examine their personal experiences to dispel stereotypes and build more accurate and malleable representations. Module 3 will focus on moving forward with an open mind. What evidence in an interaction might indicate a misunderstanding? And what strategies can be employed to make the communication successful for both parties? So… check out this new DVD resource if you are looking for something to start a conversation with colleagues, students, or staff about stereotypes, inter-cultural communication, or racism. Contact GMCTE for more information. www.usask.ca/gmcte The Runaway The following narrative is based on a true story. Card. I robotically pushed the green button again, but, now crestfallen, my aspiration to publish seemed insignificant. From the other side of he other day I was in the the bookshelf, I heard profound intakes library in search of resources of breath, followed by hushed sobs. that would contribute to my By some incomprehensible means, latest article. The library was a hive of I felt her frustration and pain. The busyness: computer terminals were full, runaway call echoed in my ears and the students were gathered around tables sound of this parent’s poignant voice, discussing assignments, and there was a which radiated with love, concern, and line-up at the self-service book checkanxiety, consumed my thoughts. out. It felt invigorating to be immersed in this academic environment, Click, schhhh . . . click, schhhh . . . especially with my own collection of The final pages emerged and lay on books and journals securely clamped in the finish tray. I gathered my stack hand. I chewed my gum as I walked of papers, turned around, and started toward the back of the library where to walk I knew three lone photocopiers were past the housed. Eager and ready to claim my bookshelf. personal copies, I placed the inside With a of a book face down on the glass and peripheral pushed the green copy button. To my glimpse, surprise, instead of a soft hum-reply, I I saw the heard a buzzing ring. After an instant stooped of confusion, I realized the sound was body and not from my machine but from a cell instantly phone behind a nearby bookshelf. As recognized I proceeded to claim the next page, her; she was I could not help but overhear the one of my ensuing one-sided conversation: students. Should I “Yes, this is Devon’s mother. Oh no. talk to her? Where is he? Oh, you found him, and Should he’s back. Is he okay? Thank god. Ya, I tell her that I overheard her he does that sometimes, runs away, conversion? Should I stop to console especially when it gets to be too much. this obviously distraught person? Or Do you know what happened? What should I runaway to the sanctuary of made him feel a need to escape? He my office? I reminded myself that I doesn’t do well under pressure. Usually had eavesdropped; it would be both he screams and then leaves. Yes, I can presumptuous and pretentious of me be at school by 3:45 today. I’ll see to make the details of her personal you then.” Click. I heard the person problem my business. Gratefully return the phone into a backpack. unnoticed, I stole past my student and Then I heard a whisper confessing, exited the library. “Sometimes, I want to runaway, too.” T Back in my own world, I glanced at the money remaining on my Copy Although I physically escaped the discomfort of the situation, I did 10 By: Jane P. Preston, College of Education not leave the library emotionally unscathed. I was shaken and uncertain why I felt that way. I walked down the hallway and stopped at the black couches located near the stairwell. I sat there for a while and watched my surroundings. At the other side of the couch, a student was feverishly texting. Rushing past me, a swarm of students were trying to make it to class on time. I nodded to a professor on his way to class. Even with all of these distractions, my mind returned to the phone call. Why was I feeling so sentimental about a conversation of which I was only half privy? Granted, I used to be a middle years teacher, but now I was just a graduate student and sessional lecturer at the university. I was no where near the child who had run away. I had nothing to do with him. Or did I? I thought about my past K-12 students. Usually, nostalgic memories of my teaching brought me delight; however, if the truth be told, not all of my teaching days were positive. There were some days when I felt angry with my students—like Bev and Sulamon— because they created problems in my Bridges, Vol. 9, No. 1 class. Bev was an incessant talker and never paid attention. Sulamon was always making silly noises, constantly moving in and around his desk. When he did attempt to focus, it took him 15 minutes just to get out a pencil, never mind the paper. I thought about the choices I made when dealing with these students and other demanding students. Although I was the professional, at times, my teaching demeanor reflected frustration and impatience, not ideal teacher traits. Then I thought about that parent in the library who was probably still hurting. How did she deal with the constant challenges of parenthood? I felt ashamed of my teaching mistakes and my related arrogance. It felt uncomfortable to be in this selfreflective state. After cogitating a bit more, I asked myself what good could come from this impromptu reflection catalyzed by the ringing of a phone. I realized that the process of reflection has great potential to fuel personal and professional improvement because future challenges can be alleviated through philosophically resolving past events. Once you understand yourself, your strengths, and your weaknesses, you can use this unique knowledge to target personal and professional growth. Furthermore, reflection is a self-auditing process that can be used to decipher core values and beliefs. Related to education, our teaching values and beliefs are often disguised within past student interactions and other educational experiences. By reflecting on such experiences, we give ourselves time to unravel our fundamental beliefs about teaching. In turn, once you know yourself and can articulate your beliefs, you become empowered with recognizing choice and creating confident, informed decisions. While sitting on that couch, I reflected on my teaching and attempted to reveal Bridges, Vol. 9, No. 1 my thoughts pertaining to a number of teacher-related questions. What was my core purpose as a teacher? What did I consider to be a successful teacher? Essentially, how did I view my students? What did I believe was the primary purpose of education? As a result of a runaway phone call and its ensuing self-reflection, I now present some of my teaching beliefs: Through this narrative, I also wanted to share part of my philosophical beliefs pertaining to education and invite you to form/reform your own thoughts on the topic. Finally, I wanted to thank the runaway child not only for going back to school, but for providing me with a reason and opportunity to run away with my thoughts. Jane’s Bio: Jane is currently employed as the College Position Analyst in the College of Education, University of Saskatchewan. She taught school for about 10 years while living in Canada and •Invariably, each learner is internationally. exceptional and comes to Her research every learning situation with spotlights parent overwhelming potential. and community involvement in •Teachers must devote time, school councils, attention, and effort on developing Aboriginal the unique talents and skills issues, and rural education. Please feel possessed by each student. free to email any of your comments to jane.preston@usask.ca •A successful teacher is one who is capable of recognizing and unleashing the celebratory, selfgreatness that abounds each learner. •The act of teaching is a social state of being, and, depending upon the teacher, learner, and/or learning opportunity, teaching is both an effortful or effortless process. •It is the duty of every teacher to bolster the academic, physical, emotion, social, and spiritual development of students within a stimulating and safe environment. •A well-educated society is one that promotes the health, happiness, and longevity of humankind. To actualize this statement, a teacher must first touch the soul of a student. I wrote this narrative for a number of reasons. First of all, I wanted to offer the reader a short vignette to exemplify the power of self-reflection. At times, we all need to stop . . . and decipher our past in an effort to plot out our future. 11 For information about upcoming workshops, events and courses offered by The Gwenna Moss Centre for Teaching Effectiveness please visit our website. Full details and online registration are available. www.usask.ca/gmcte www.usask.ca/gmcte Emotion, Conflict, and Culture in the Classroom: Part One of Two By Tereigh Ewert-Bauer, GMCTE B arbara Vacarr’s essay “Moving Beyond Polite Correctness: Practicing Mindfulness in the Diverse Classroom” (2001) describes a critical incident wherein an African American student described to a White student how it felt to hear her use the word “tolerance”: “’When I hear you talk about tolerance, I hear you telling me that I am something to be put up with. That doesn’t make me feel very good’” (p. 286). Vacarr’s response bears quoting at length: In the silence that followed this moment I had the uncomfortable privilege of confronting myself as I struggled with the decision to address the differences in the room, and with trusting my ability to facilitate a safe and honest dialogue. Remaining present in that struggle led me into a disturbingly vulnerable place where I was forced to confront my ineptitude. It is only in retrospect that I am grateful to the African American woman for taking a risk that brought me face to face with my own isolation, a place from which I could perceive her isolation as well as I stood facing the room of silent White students. In that moment, the silence of the room amplified the noise of my internal distress. Speaking felt risky — my words could leave me out there, exposed in much the same way that the student had exposed herself. Just as her declaration pierced the illusion of group unity and separated her from her classroom peers, my words could separate me from the White students or could further my distance from the African American student. I sensed that several students wanted me to be their ally and to excuse our ignorance and our racism. And, in fact, I wanted to do just that; it would have been so much safer. It was a preciously frightening moment, laden with potential betrayal. Parker Palmer (1998) speaks about this as pathological fear, the kind that leads us to betray our students and ourselves: “It leads me to pander to students, to lose my dignity . . . so worried that the sloucher in the back row doesn’t like me that I fail to teach him and everyone else in the room” (p. 49). In these moments, so much of who we are as human beings is at stake. Our integrity, our honesty, and our fundamental trustworthiness is [sic] jeopardized by our need to belong, our need for validation, and our need to feel in control. (286-287) 12 This article has always been unsettling to me, because of the issues it raises: of conflict, emotion, power and control, and culture in the classroom. It is easy to both identify and feel uncomfortable with Vacarr’s story. I commiserate with Vacarr in her moment of perceived “ineptitude” when faced with conflict and tension in her classroom. I’ve experienced that seemingly endless moment of classroom silence when internally, I frenetically rifled through my content, ethical, and pedagogical knowledge for the “right” way to react. The kneejerk response could be to diffuse the situation as quickly as possible, returning the classroom to a place of thinking and not feeling, wherein the content becomes the focus of the lesson. Indeed, Vacarr admits that to ignore the situation would have been “much safer.” Conflict and emotions are messy, and create the potential to lose control over the environment. Conflict and strong emotion are events that we are trained, in a Euro-centric academy, to avoid in the classroom, in exchange for objectivity and rationality. This “positivist” epistemology hearkens to the empirical and scientific ages ( Jaggar, 1992, p. 116), upon which the traditional Western university is founded. In this tradition, it is believed that emotions prevent the creation of valid knowledge. Alison Jaggar argues, “emotions were not seen as being about anything: instead, they were contrasted with and seen as potential disruptions of other phenomena that are about some thing, phenomena such as rational judgments, thoughts, and observations” (p. 119). Vacarr’s courageous student challenges this thinking by combining her feelings about what was said with logic, taking issue with the use of the word “tolerance.” The student experiences and expresses both emotion and rational thought, but then the class Bridges, Vol. 9, No. 1 and the teacher are also faced with reconciling the student’s emotion and thinking. It is in this moment, I believe, that Vacarr experiences her moment of “ineptitude,” precisely because she has been (and we in the Eurocentric tradition are), trained to separate out thinking from feeling. James Gould, in “Thinking with the Heart,” suggests a “holistic epistemology” arguing that “when feelings are excluded, rational and moral judgment can become distorted” (2002, p. 9). Rather than trying to exclude emotion, Gould’s assertion is that our embracement of emotion completes the thinking process. Vacarr also identifies conflict, both real and potential, as a site for her discomfort. The conflict is manifest in the “differences” that arise among the students, the “pierced illusion of group unity,” and her recognition of the need for “safe and honest” dialogue (thereby acknowledging that conflict would be part of that dialogue). If we fear emotions in our classrooms, surely to a large extent it is because we fear the conflict that may arise out of those emotions. Vacarr feels herself being pulled first toward ignoring the situation, and second, to becoming an ally to the dominant group. Both Bridges, Vol. 9, No. 1 point about the word itself because it is used widely in supposedly wellintentioned ways to describe the need for equal treatment for all people, and yet the student is absolutely right that by definition, to “tolerate” is to put up with something negative or detrimental. An examination of a dictionary definition of the word may have elicited some interesting discussion from the students. Second, because the student generously shared her feelings—and by this, I mean that in making herself vulnerable, she provided her peers with a learning opportunity— the class could have explored the debate around “politically (in)correct” language. Those not actions would possibly result in avoiding affected by such language seldom have immediate conflict, or rather, either insight into just how significant an action would result in avoiding an open impact the use of some words can have, manifestation of conflict. The conflict yet through her emotional and rational would still remain: the student would statement, the young woman provided still feel hurt and/or offended by the such an insight for her peers. use of the word “tolerance,” she would still feel isolated, and the rest of the Vacarr identifies that one of the students would still harbour dismissive feelings she experienced was the need feelings that the African American to “feel in control.” I interpret this student over-reacted. Vacarr reports to mean that she doesn’t want her that when the African American classroom to feel out of control—with student first spoke, the “other students emotion and conflict dominating the rolled their eyes as if to say, ‘Oh come environment in detrimental ways. I on, don’t make a big deal out of this. argue that a treatment of the situation Do we really have to watch our every as described above can be accomplished word?’” (286). In Beyond the Culture by establishing ground rules or Wars, Gerald Graff suggests that guidelines for behavior and discussion “the best solution to today’s conflict before such a circumstance presents over culture is to teach the conflicts itself. In a class wherein sensitive themselves, making them part of our issues are to be broached in the object of study” (1992, pp. 12). curriculum, one can safely anticipate that conflict will emerge. Having the Indeed, Vacarr’s situational conflict students collaboratively devise a set presents two very teachable moments.1 of guidelines may circumvent student First, the student who problematizes behaviours such as eye-rolling (an the word “tolerance” raises an excellent attempt to isolate, embarrass, and silence the student who spoke out), 1 A “teachable moment” is one in which “the student arrives at a position where he or she and to foster skills such as careful and is open to teaching.” This occurs when sturespectful listening and discussion. dents must reconcile their existing models of learning with “incompatible” models that present themselves, causing the student to “evaluate the discrepancies and ‘construct’ a new or revised model” (Elmborg, 2002). 13 I recommend creating this list of guidelines with the students, so that they feel a sense of ownership www.usask.ca/gmcte of the behavioral and discussion expectations. Students who have a say in the guidelines are more likely to take them to heart, and further, are more likely to peer monitor one another for adherence. You may create a list of your own, to supplement the one generated by the students, that includes “non-negotiable” items such as “no using racial slurs or attacks,” and confidentiality. Some possible guidelines might include these, from a psychology of gender class in Dort College: your experience of her or his contribution—the effect that her or his contribution had on you. Use ‘I’ statements that convey your experience of the other person’s efforts” [the student who spoke up in Vacarr’s class perfectly demonstrated a variation of the use of an “I” statement, by following a “When you said _____, it made me feel ___” model] (Thoughts on Teaching, 2008) References Elmborg. J.K. (2002). Teaching at the desk: Toward a reference pedagogy. Libraries and the Academy, 2(3), 455464. Gould, J. B. (2002). Thinking with the heart: Provoking emotion as a tool for learning. Excellence in College Teaching, 13(1), 5-27. Graff, G. (1992). Beyond the culture wars: How teaching the conflicts can I would also add: revitalize American education. New • Assume that everyone, like you, • the “ouch” and “oops” model (that York: W.W. Norton & Company. is seeking truth. Listen in a spirit I learned from a colleague who of humility, so you can learn learned it at a conference). When Lantinga, S. (1999). Psychology from others, painful though that a student feels that something of gender: Rules for discussion. process might be. One technique that has been said is hurtful or Psychology 343, Fall 1999, Dort College. is to honestly ask “what if what I offensive, that student can say Accessed from http://homepages. believe about this is really wrong, “ouch.” Likewise, if a student dordt.edu/~lantinga/gender_rules.htm and his/her perspective really is says something and then realizes on October 28, 2010. right?” that he/she may have created an • Every person is treated with “ouch” statement, that student can Jaggar, A.M. (1992). Love and respect. No personal attacks or say “oops,” acknowledging that an knowledge: Emotion in feminist comments [and here I would unintentional mistake has been epistemology. In E. D. Harvey & K. add, no non-verbal attacks made. Okruhlik, (Eds.), Women and reason or intimidation]. Say “I don’t (pp. 115-142). Ann Arbor: University understand how those ideas By generating guidelines for discussion, of Michigan Press. relate” rather than “You can’t students are better prepared to engage really believe that.” Ask clarifying in constructive conflict, to experience Some guidelines for discussion questions rather than making and share emotion, and to learn from participation. Thoughts on judgments about people. one another; a safe and structured teaching. Blog. Monday, April • Listen carefully to one another— learning environment has been 21, 2008. Accessed from http:// if you are thinking about how established based on an understanding thoughtsonteaching-jdunlap.blogspot. you are going to respond, you are of one another’s needs and expectations com/2008/04/some-guidelines-forprobably not listening. within the classroom community. discussion.html on October 27, 2010. • No interruptions. • After class is over, opinions can Thus far, in outlining the aspects of Vacarr, B. (2001). Moving beyond be discussed, but not people. That this article excerpt that make me polite correctness: Practicing ism you could say to your friends uncomfortable, I have not addressed mindfulness in the diverse classroom. later “Here’s one of the ideas that the aspect of “culture.” Issues of White Harvard Educational Review, 71(2), came up in class today” but not privilege and power, of Othering, and 285-296. “You wouldn’t believe what Virgil classroom oppression are all evident in said!” (Psychology of Gender: this passage by Vacarr. These are issues Rules for Discussion, 1999) that I will address in the second part of this article in the next issue. I welcome To this we might add: contributions to that part of the discussion, • “be non-attributive: Do if you have a particular reaction to the not describe a classmate’s Vacarr quotation. attributes but rather describe 14 Bridges, Vol. 9, No. 1 Sustainability Education: Leading by Example By Alice Cassidy I n 1986, as I was completing my Master’s thesis at McGill University, I took a break to camp at Point Pelee during the spring bird migration. My good friend and fellow bird fanatic, Tracey, flew out from the west coast to join me. After all the good times – impressing the other campers with our culinary skills on a Coleman stove, meeting friends at the campfire, returning to soggie Shreddies having seen the rare Worm-eating Warbler – it was time to pack up. I remember taking some aluminum beverage containers to the closest garbage can. “Hey Alice,” Tracey called out, “can you return those for a refund or recycle them somewhere?” I realized I didn’t know, but I always listen to my wise friend, and we bundled the cans into my Landrover and headed back to Montreal. I investigated where and how I could recycle, and from that day, wherever in the world I have found myself, have sought out recycling facilities, asked questions, and done my best to reduce my impact. It all started with a simple non-judgmental question that got me thinking and changed my actions. volunteers, me included. It provided tools and resources to promote and foster awareness about sustainability within our departments. I initiated such simple actions as re-using paper for printing, bringing second-hand dishes and cutlery to our kitchen, and providing energy-savings tips such as turning chargers and power bars off when not in use. Fellow staffers took part and became actively involved. We provide bins for food scraps, paper napkins and other compostable material for the in-vessel composter on campus, the resulting output used for gardens around the University (http://www.recycle.ubc.ca/ During my time working at the compost.htm). We collect batteries for University of British Columbia, I recycling (http://www.sustain.ubc.ca/ found opportunities to set examples and initiate programs that I hope have campus-sustainability/recycling-nonmade a difference. I shall describe three rechargeable-batteries) and plastic bags for re-use or recycling off campus. We of them here. developed protocols for e-commuting. The Sustainability Coordinators (SC) Program (http://www.sustain.ubc.ca/ Since my department was a teaching sustainability-coordinators) started support centre (then called the Centre in 1999 by recruiting about 150 for Teaching and Academic Growth, Bridges, Vol. 9, No. 1 15 TAG), every week colleagues from all across the University came for workshops and meetings, thousands of people each year. They took notice. They took ideas and actions back to their departments. For 14 years, I taught a third-year course, Human Ecology, involving my students in activities and assignments that would help them see connections between themselves and world around them (http:// www.zoology.ubc.ca/bio345/ gallery.htm). The course was built around basic ecological principles and techniques, such as ecosystems, biodiversity, nutrient cycles, field observation and inquirybased learning, blended with the study of current events and issues, both local and global. Much of the course content came out of what students were interested in, considered how ecology ties in to their daily life, and made connections between ecology and other disciplines they were studying. Students found ways to make a difference, through their individual actions and also in groups through community service-learning projects. One course had about 350 alumni and in keeping in touch with many of them, living all over the world, it is encouraging to see them contributing to a more sustainable planet. An invitation to attend a workshop in 2007 led to the design of a unique sustainability education program at UBC that has had many offshoots in the past two years. Freda Pagani, then www.usask.ca/gmcte director of UBC’s Sustainability Office invited me, as Associate Director of TAG, to take part in the Sustainability Across the Curriculum Leadership Workshop at Emory University in Atlanta, Georgia (see http://www. aashe.org/.) The only Canadian institution at the workshop, we were represented by myself as well as Kristin Orians, Associate Professor, Chemistry/ Chemical Oceanography and Associate Director, Environmental Sciences, and Yona Sipos, Graduate Academic Assistant, TAG and Ph.D. Candidate, Faculty of Land and Food Systems. We learned about the Ponderosa and Piedmont Projects that have helped over 200 faculty members in the United States adapt their courses to include a sustainability focus. The 2.5-day Intensive provides tools, resources and time for participants, undergraduate and graduate students, faculty, staff and post-docs are all invited to apply to develop a plan to integrate or enhance sustainability in their course, program or initiative. Studio sessions and financial support for UBC colleagues over six months culminate in a showcase event to share the results. Similar programs are now being developed at other post-secondary institutions (e.g. http://www.bcit. ca/construction/sustainability/ pacificspirit.shtml). A video highlights the programs at UBC and BCIT (http://www.youtube.com/ watch?v=h1y9nhuhLTU). It was created and produced by Sean Devlin, then Communications Coordinator for goBeyond (http://www.go-beyond. Once home, we set about to design ca/about-us), a multi-campus climate our own program, the Sustainability change network with a strong student Education Intensive (SEI; http://blogs. component. ubc.ca/tagsustainability/about/). With UBC’s reputation as a sustainability The first two years of our program have leader in North America, we were in a enjoyed participation of colleagues unique position to develop leadership from many disciplines at UBC as well both within and beyond our own as from four other post-secondary institution. institutions, including two in Ontario. As a result, sustainability has been Wanting to make our program unique introduced or enhanced in about 40 to UBC, noted for its undergraduate courses, programs and initiatives (see student leaders, Yona and I involved Outcomes on the SEI blog). undergraduate Sarah Nyrose in initial design and delivery, followed Two alumni of the first SEI, Angela by Angela Willock, an alumnus from Willock and Maggie Baynham, further the first year. We sought help from developed their SEI project as the colleagues in a variety of roles and BC-wide Sustainability Education from units across the University. We across the Province (SEAP; http:// are grateful for financial support www.sfu.ca/sustainability/sac/events/ through the Sustainability Office, the seapbc2010.html). Centre for Teaching and Academic Growth (which have each since Having an idea or asking a question, merged or become part of other units; taking action, being visible about it, see http://www.sustain.ubc.ca/ and setting examples for others. It can start http://ctlt.ubc.ca/) and UBC students small; it can start with one idea or one through the Teaching and Learning person. The above examples show how Enhancement Fund (TLEF; http:// quickly it can catch on and lead to tlef.ubc.ca/). other ideas and developments. Thanks 16 for asking about those cans I was going to throw out in 1986, Tracey! Further Reading Cassidy, A. (2008). The Value of Hands-on Learning: Techniques from instructor; results from students. Invited presentation at the 4th Annual Community and Education Symposium. Centre for Sustainable Food Systems at UBC Farm. April 25, 2008. University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC. Cassidy, A. and Y. Sipos. (2007). Students as Co-Researchers and Copresenters. Presented at the 27th Annual Conference of the Society for Teaching and Learning in Higher Education (STLHE) – Evolving Scholarship. June 13-16, 2007. University of Alberta. Edmonton, Alberta. Mayer-Smith, J. and L. Peterat (Eds). (2010). Get growing! Activities for food and gardening learning. A teacher resource elementary and middle grades. Vernon: Really Small Vernon Press. (220 pages) Podger, D.M., E. Mustakova-Possardt and A. Reid. (2010). A wholeperson approach to educating for sustainability. International Journal of Sustainability in Higher Education, 11(4), 339-352. About the author: Alice Cassidy, Principal of In View Education and Professional Development, is a biologist, science educator and educational developer. She has degrees from the University of Victoria, McGill University and the University of British Columbia. In the past 15 years, she taught in the Zoology Department and held leadership roles at UBC’s Centre for Teaching and Academic Growth and associated Institute for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning. Bridges, Vol. 9, No. 1 CHANGE AND INSTRUCTIONAL RENOVATION Sheryl Mills, PhD, Curriculum and Educational Development Specialist, GMCTE W hether it is loss of control or loss of certainty or because “change” represents a potential threat to security, safety, or survival, there are literally millions of books, articles, websites, newsletters and workshops about personal and organizational change. “Change” can conjure up images and feelings of excess uncertainty, surprise, shock, being “different,” loss of face, or concern about future competence. deciding whether or not to keep the innovation after it has been integrated. Although there are variations on the process of organizational change, the stages of disruption, reforming, and moving to stasis are consistent. There is a tendency for systems—individuals, groups, or organizations—to conserve energy by holding fast to rules, norms, and codes, or to a clear and stalwart vision of the future. The forces for change have to be great enough to overcome the desire to remain the same. The status quo does not have to be optimal, but the potential for change only occurs once the pain of the current situation is too great or the potential for benefit is greater than the perceived difficulties in making the change. There is little impetus for individuals to change if their situation is comfortable and things seem to work. There is surprising uniformity in the literature on change. Kurt Lewin (1951) offered a basic change model of unfreezing, changing, and refreezing. Fullan and Stiegelbauer (1991) expressed these stages as initiation, implementation, and continuation. Rogers’ model (1983, 1995) consisted of the five stages of (1) becoming aware of the innovation, (2) forming an opinion about it, (3) deciding to adopt, Only when it becomes apparent that (4) integrating the innovation, and (5) the existing situation is not as effective Bridges, Vol. 9, No. 1 17 as it could be that change is possible. The initial step in the change process, then, is simply to notice and accurately assess the current situation. A confluence of factors may be necessary to lead to this stage of awareness. Individually, factors may be “necessary but not sufficient” to instigate change. Certain conditions contribute to this the point at which change occurs. The qualities and characteristics of the innovation and of the individuals making the change within their organizational context have an impact on the adoption of new practices. “It is more difficult to change minds when perspectives are strongly held, and publicly, and by individuals of rigid temperament” (Gardner 2004, p. 62). Minds are more easily changed, however, when “individuals find themselves in a new environment, surrounded by peers of a different persuasion...or when individuals undergo shattering www.usask.ca/gmcte experiences...or encounter luminous personalities” (p. 62). The desire to change, knowing what to do and how to do it, the right climate, and appropriate rewards influence the acceptance—or rejection—of change. Generally when people are driven by curiosity, change is not dramatic at all. What I discovered in my research on instructional change is that it is more like instructional renovation. These renovations evolve over time in response to helping students better understand difficult concepts. Instructional change is in fact a gentle evolution rooted in perceived needs that are met gently and serendipitously with timely, appropriate, and applicable information. Instructional change is gently aligned with personal beliefs and discipline-rooted signature pedagogies. “Signature pedagogies” are characteristic forms of teaching and learning that organize and prepare future practitioners for their professional work (Schulman, 2005). A signature pedagogy is “a set of assumptions about how best to impart a certain body of knowledge and know-how. It has an “implicit structure, a moral dimension that comprises a set of beliefs about professional attitudes, values, and dispositions” (Schulman, 2005, p. 55). Inextricably linked with a particular profession, it is the way of teaching that is distinctive to that profession as well as pervasive within the curriculum and across similar institutions as elements of instruction and socialization (Schulman, 2005). Medical students expect clinical rounds and law students expect case discussions. Traditional lectures and “signature pedagogies” of professional colleges provide consistency and routine to faculty and students. Eventually we develop “personal signature pedagogies” that combine our beliefs and experiences about teaching and the discipline that has both formed and informed the way we learn—and teach (Mills, 2009). When you reflect on your teaching, think about how your instructional practices have been gently renovated over time. And when you think about difficulties students may have with particular concepts consider what other teaching strategies you might be able to use. Schulman, L. (2005). Signature pedagogies in the professions. Daedalus, 134 (3), 52-59. Schulman, L. (2005). The signature pedagogies of the professions of law, medicine, engineering, and the clergy: Potential lessons for the education of teachers. Retrieved 09/15/2008. http://hub.mspnet.org/media/data/ There are many teaching strategies Shulman_Signature_Pedagogies.pdf ? from which one can choose to enhance media_000000001297.pdf student learning. The Gwenna Moss Centre for Teaching Effectiveness can help. References Fullan, M., & Stiegelbauer, S. (1991). The new meaning of educational change. New York: Teachers College Press. Fullan, M. G. (2003). Change forces with a vengeance. New York: Routledge Palmer. Gardner, H. (2004). Changing minds: The art and science of changing our own and other people’s minds. Boston: Harvard University Press. Lewin, K. (1951). Field theory in social science: Selected theoretical papers. D. Cartwright (Ed.). New York: Harper & Brothers. Mills, S. (2009). Instructional Renovation: Integrating a “Good Idea” in Undergraduate Classes. Unpublished dissertation. University of Saskatchewan. Rogers, E. (1983). Diffusions of innovations. New York: Free Press. Rogers, E. (1995). Diffusion of innovations. (4th ed.). New York: Free Press. Schulman, L. (2005). Pedagogies of uncertainty. Liberal Learning, 91 (Spring), 18-25. 18 Further Reading about The Scholarship of Teaching and Learning. For people interested in the SOTL article featured in the previous issue of Bridges, you may also be very interested in an article by Eileen Herteis, former Program Director of the GMCTE and current Director of Mount Allison’s Purdy Crawford Teaching Centre, that is still available on the GMCTE and CDL websites (and originally published in the August 2002 issue of Bridges - Vol. 1, No. 2). The article in the most recent issue continues an important conversation started by Eileen, and Eileen’s work should have been referenced in that article. I would like to thank Eileen for her excellent work on the topic acheived during her term as Program Director here at the GMCTE. Brad Wuetherick, Program Director, GMCTE. Bridges, Vol. 9, No. 1 Master motivator By Kris Foster, GMCTE E dwin Ralph, the most recent recipient of the U of S Master Teacher Award, found inspiration for his teaching career from a travel commercial tagline from the ‘60s: “Getting there is half the fun!” Teaching and learning can indeed be fun, said Ralph, as long as learners are motivated, but that motivation needs to stem from the teacher’s persistence, energy, passion and enthusiasm for the subject. “I have purposefully sought out ways to enhance the learning-motivation of the individuals and groups with whom I have worked during the past five decades as a teacher— from the elementary-school level through to the adult-education stage,” said Ralph, curriculum studies professor, College of Education. Ralph was 18 years old and volunteering to lead a group of “to say it respectfully, challenging and uncooperative pre-adolescents,” he recalled. “I quickly learned the principle that effective teachers have espoused for years: interested, engaged and active learners have less inclination to become bored or disruptive.” Ralph is certainly a master of keeping boredom at bay and students engaged as evidenced by the list of teaching accolades he has reBridges, Vol. 9, No. 1 ceived during his more than two decades as a U of S professor. In addition to the Master Teacher Award, Ralph received the inaugural Provost’s Teaching Excellence Award for the College of Education in 2010 and six student-initiated teaching awards—three of which were USSU Teaching Excellence Awards. Edwin Ralph But to be recognized as a master Fall 2010 teacher, recipients must have, in Master Teacher Award addition to demonstrated excellence winner in front of the classroom, an active research agenda that contributes to the learning experience. Ralph’s scholarship in this area is extensive, with five books, 67 refereed journal articles and 88 workshop and conference presentations relating to teaching, learning and mentoring in higher education or preparing K-12 educators. very humbling, is not his motivation for practicing what he preaches. The most rewarding—and fun—part for Ralph, is when his students finally “get there”. “The most satisfying part of teaching is when I work myself out of “My research on teaching, learning a job, and reach a point when a and mentoring processes, has allearner no longer requires my assislowed me to study both the positive tance, guidance, support, or inspiraand the negative aspects of these tion. In other words, the protégé, in activities,” explained Ralph. “Conse- turn, becomes a mentor for other quently I have the opportunity and learners, and perhaps even me.” obligation to maximize the positive and minimize the negative in my own teaching practice and in that of my students and any colleagues who request my feedback.” The Master Teacher Award, said Ralph, while truly an honour and 19 www.usask.ca/gmcte Teaching Award News By Corinne Fasthuber, Assistant, GMCTE A s winter settles over the prairies, it is a good time to pause and reflect on the many outstanding teachers at our campus. Part of the University of Saskatchewan’s mission statement states, “As an academic community, our mission is to achieve excellence in the scholarly activities of teaching, discovering, preserving and applying knowledge.” Please take the time to recognize those whom you feel have achieved excellence in their teaching by nominating them for one of the following awards. • Provost’s Award for Outstanding Innovation in Learning. Deadline February 1st. • Outstanding New Teacher Award. Deadline February 1st. • Outstanding Graduate Student Teacher Award. Deadline February 1st. Information regarding these awards can be found on our website: http://www.usask.ca/gmcte/ drupal/?q=teaching_awards The University Learning Centre’s Learning Communities created an The Centre, in cooperation with the award last year with the first recipient Office of the Provost, offers the follow- being Wendy Roy, from the Departing awards/grants for excellent teachment of English, College of Arts and ing practices: Science. To read more about it see below: • Provost’s Prize for Innovative Practice in Teaching and Learn• First-Year Learning Communities ing. Deadline August 31st. Teaching Award. This is an award • Provost’s Project Grant for Inoffered by the University Learning novative Practice in Teaching and Centre. Instructors assigned to teach Learning. Deadline August 31 st. a class involved in First-Year Learn• Sylvia Wallace Sessional Lecturer ing Communities will be eligible to be Award. Deadline mid-November. nominated by LC students. The dead• U of S Master Teacher Award, for line for nominations is end of Noon-campus faculty only. Deadline vember. For more information on this mid-February. particular award, go to • Call for Proposals 2011: Teachhttp://www.usask.ca/ulc/lcaward ing and Learning Scholars Grant. Deadline August 31 st. If you know of someone who you feel • Provost’s College Awards for deserves recognition for their excellent Outstanding Teaching. Deadline teaching, please take the time to nomiFebruary 1st. nate them for one of these awards. • Provost’s Award for Excellence in Aboriginal Teaching. Deadline The Gwenna Moss Centre also proFebruary 1st. motes other teaching awards, both at • Provost’s Award for Excellence in this university and nationally. They are International Teaching. Deadline as follows: February 1st. 20 • U of S Student’s Union Award. Check the USSU website for their deadline: (http://www.ussu.ca/) • Society for Teaching and Learning in Higher Education (STLHE) Annual Conference Sponsorship. The 3M Fellowship Award. Deadline August 31, 2011 • Alan Blizzard Collaborative Projects Award. Deadline mid-January. Information can be found at http://www. stlhe.ca/en/stlhe/ “Good teaching cannot be reduced to technique; good teaching comes from the identity and integrity of the teacher.” — Parker J. Palmer (The Courage to Teach: Exploring the Inner Landscape of a Teacher’s Life) Bridges, Vol. 9, No. 1