Faculty Reflections on Teaching, Learning, and Working By Dr. William Caraher, Asst Professor of History As another semester fades from view and the entire campus community recovers from the scramble of final exams, students tend to turn their mind to summer pursuits. Faculty, on the other hand, often catch their breath by reflecting on their past year’s labors. For first and second year faculty, these reflections often take on a more thoughtful cast as they consider the challenges and opportunities of coming to new and place and encountering new possibilities. Over the past three years, the Office of Instructional Development’s teaching blog, Teaching Thursday, has invited first and second year faculty to present their reflections to a glo...
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When discussing learning in the context of academia, most people would think of students learning fr...
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I teach in classrooms where, ten years ago, I sat as a student. People who were my teachers are now ...
Teaching experience is only valuable when we reflect on our practices as professors. This reflection...
The notion of reflection has become an object of attention in education, but the research on this to...
Richard Tiberius: Reflections on a Graduate Course at the University of Toronto Sally Atkins: Reflec...
Many practitioners believe that classroom experience alone does not provide instructors with suffici...
Lessons From 10 Exemplary Faculty Cheating: An Analysis of Relevant Circumstance
My Quest as Teacher and Learner: A Narrative in the Making -- Welcome to CSUMB, New Faculty! -- Lear...
Transitioning from their training programs to their own classrooms, new teachers may feel a disconne...
How can the lessons faculty gain through inquiry and innovation in particular classrooms and program...
This dissertation is a narrative autobiographical story of my lived experience as an educator, and t...
This essay delves into the feelings of fear and self-doubt that a rookie teacher experienced her fir...
The first year of my teaching career ended with the following advice from the building administrator...
I think my ideas differ somewhat from the general drift of talk about SOTL in that I think a great m...
When discussing learning in the context of academia, most people would think of students learning fr...
An inquiry invites many questions. How does one pause to write about learning and living begun in t...
I teach in classrooms where, ten years ago, I sat as a student. People who were my teachers are now ...
Teaching experience is only valuable when we reflect on our practices as professors. This reflection...
The notion of reflection has become an object of attention in education, but the research on this to...
Richard Tiberius: Reflections on a Graduate Course at the University of Toronto Sally Atkins: Reflec...