Faculty perspective on competency development in higher education: An international study
The purpose of this research is to establish common ground on how faculty development should be instituted and the needs it should address on an international level, with its major focus being the development of competencies. A survey was developed and distributed to a sample of 764 university teac...
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doaj-d6e306f6118441f482ef3a09655d238e2020-11-24T22:27:52ZengLaureate Education IncHigher Learning Research Communications2157-62542014-12-014410.18870/hlrc.v4i4.223223Faculty perspective on competency development in higher education: An international studyPaloma Julia Velasco0Begoña Learreta1Claudia Kober2Irene Tan3Universidad Europea de MadridUniversidad Europea de MadridUniversidade Anhembi MorumbiINTI International University The purpose of this research is to establish common ground on how faculty development should be instituted and the needs it should address on an international level, with its major focus being the development of competencies. A survey was developed and distributed to a sample of 764 university teaching professionals. Results show that 90% find that it is either important or very important to develop competencies in higher education, and that 73% find they are well or very well trained in developing and assessing competencies, particularly with regard to applying theoretical knowledge in practice, teamwork, and oral and written communication skills. The least valued competencies are found to be entrepreneurship and leadership. The most valued teaching methods are: project based learning, immersion in a professional environment, visits, field trips, and anything that closes the gap between the professional and academic worlds. University teaching staff consider the best assessment scenarios to be those that involve a certain amount of immersion in real situations, problem posing, and simulation; the optimum measurement instruments use observation techniques and rubrics. The need to create academic teaching communities is found to be of great importance. A common assessment method is also seen as a useful addition. DOI: 10.18870/hlrc.v4i4.223 http://hlrcjournal.com/index.php/HLRC/article/view/223Competenciesfaculty perspectivesassessmentteaching methods |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Paloma Julia Velasco Begoña Learreta Claudia Kober Irene Tan |
spellingShingle |
Paloma Julia Velasco Begoña Learreta Claudia Kober Irene Tan Faculty perspective on competency development in higher education: An international study Higher Learning Research Communications Competencies faculty perspectives assessment teaching methods |
author_facet |
Paloma Julia Velasco Begoña Learreta Claudia Kober Irene Tan |
author_sort |
Paloma Julia Velasco |
title |
Faculty perspective on competency development in higher education: An international study |
title_short |
Faculty perspective on competency development in higher education: An international study |
title_full |
Faculty perspective on competency development in higher education: An international study |
title_fullStr |
Faculty perspective on competency development in higher education: An international study |
title_full_unstemmed |
Faculty perspective on competency development in higher education: An international study |
title_sort |
faculty perspective on competency development in higher education: an international study |
publisher |
Laureate Education Inc |
series |
Higher Learning Research Communications |
issn |
2157-6254 |
publishDate |
2014-12-01 |
description |
The purpose of this research is to establish common ground on how faculty development should be instituted and the needs it should address on an international level, with its major focus being the development of competencies. A survey was developed and distributed to a sample of 764 university teaching professionals. Results show that 90% find that it is either important or very important to develop competencies in higher education, and that 73% find they are well or very well trained in developing and assessing competencies, particularly with regard to applying theoretical knowledge in practice, teamwork, and oral and written communication skills. The least valued competencies are found to be entrepreneurship and leadership. The most valued teaching methods are: project based learning, immersion in a professional environment, visits, field trips, and anything that closes the gap between the professional and academic worlds. University teaching staff consider the best assessment scenarios to be those that involve a certain amount of immersion in real situations, problem posing, and simulation; the optimum measurement instruments use observation techniques and rubrics. The need to create academic teaching communities is found to be of great importance. A common assessment method is also seen as a useful addition.
DOI: 10.18870/hlrc.v4i4.223
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topic |
Competencies faculty perspectives assessment teaching methods |
url |
http://hlrcjournal.com/index.php/HLRC/article/view/223 |
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