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What Constitutes Good Teaching?*


Students and faculty "know" good teaching when they experience it, but often find it difficult to articulate the specifics of what they experience as good teaching. The many approaches to understanding teaching have been addressed in broad reviews of the research literature on post secondary teaching.

One such review synthesized 31 studies in which students and faculty members specified characteristics important to good teaching (Feldman, 1988). The analysis revealed extensive similarities across studies and between the two groups. In these studies, students and faculty members at the same institutions (universities, four-year colleges, and 2-year colleges) were asked to describe attitudes or practices important to good teaching; some students asked respondents to characterize "best" or "ideal" teachers. Both students and faculty members gave high rankings to the following seven categories (although students placed somewhat more emphasis than faculty on instructor's stimulation of interest and their elocutionary skills). The following phrases from survey questions used by researchers serve to define the seven categories.

Faculty and Students Agree -- Good Teaching Involves:>

Sensitivity to, and Concern with, Class Level and Progress:

Preparation; Organization of the Course:

Knowledge of the Subject:

Enthusiasm (for Subject or for Teaching):

Clarity and Understandableness:

Availability and Helpfulness:

Impartial Evaluation of Students; Quality of Examinations:

These phrases could be useful in putting together a mid-term course evaluation while there's still time to make improvements. Collecting feedback at the end of the course is useful as feedback and for evaluation, but mid-term evaluations often are more useful in improving instruction.


Reference:
Feldman, K.A. (1988) "Effective College Teaching from the Students' and Facultys' View: matched or mismatched priorities?" Research in Higher Education . 28 (4). 291-344.


EVALUATING GOOD TEACHING: To evaluate your teaching, check for student comprehension. Here are two sources to help you do that.

Classroom Assessment Techniques

Technology and Classroom Assessment


*Taken from Instructional News . Shirley Ronkowski (ed.) Instructional Development. University of California Santa Barbara. Fall, 1993.