Peer-Reviewed Exploration in Teaching: A Program for Stimulating and Recognizing Innovations in Teaching

In an academic world driven by student ratings and publication counts, faculty members are discouraged from exploring new pedagogical ideas because exploration takes time and often goes unrecognized. The contrast with research is striking: everyone is expected to explore and innovate in research, wh...

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Main Authors: Rahul Simha, Raluca Teodorescu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Georgia Southern University 2017-01-01
Series:International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/ij-sotl/vol11/iss1/3
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spelling doaj-e2f9f7520f1345b698aa08173dfb67d02020-11-24T22:50:03ZengGeorgia Southern UniversityInternational Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning1931-47442017-01-0111110.20429/ijsotl.2017.110103Peer-Reviewed Exploration in Teaching: A Program for Stimulating and Recognizing Innovations in TeachingRahul SimhaRaluca TeodorescuIn an academic world driven by student ratings and publication counts, faculty members are discouraged from exploring new pedagogical ideas because exploration takes time and often goes unrecognized. The contrast with research is striking: everyone is expected to explore and innovate in research, whereas very few make exploration in teaching their norm. This paper presents a case study illustrating a program, the Peer-Reviewed Exploration in Teaching (PRET) program, designed to encourage and recognize faculty when they implement teaching innovations. The program provides feedback during all stages of a teaching innovation, including outside-classroom activities, and incorporates a rigorous peer review process so that successive such PRETs can accumulate into a record for tenure and promotion. The paper describes the program’s rationale, initial implementation, and lessons learned. Perhaps one of the most interesting lessons is that faculty explorations often go beyond a standard inventory of active learning techniques when they are encouraged and supported to explore.https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/ij-sotl/vol11/iss1/3Teaching innovationsrecognizing teaching excellence
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rahul Simha
Raluca Teodorescu
spellingShingle Rahul Simha
Raluca Teodorescu
Peer-Reviewed Exploration in Teaching: A Program for Stimulating and Recognizing Innovations in Teaching
International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
Teaching innovations
recognizing teaching excellence
author_facet Rahul Simha
Raluca Teodorescu
author_sort Rahul Simha
title Peer-Reviewed Exploration in Teaching: A Program for Stimulating and Recognizing Innovations in Teaching
title_short Peer-Reviewed Exploration in Teaching: A Program for Stimulating and Recognizing Innovations in Teaching
title_full Peer-Reviewed Exploration in Teaching: A Program for Stimulating and Recognizing Innovations in Teaching
title_fullStr Peer-Reviewed Exploration in Teaching: A Program for Stimulating and Recognizing Innovations in Teaching
title_full_unstemmed Peer-Reviewed Exploration in Teaching: A Program for Stimulating and Recognizing Innovations in Teaching
title_sort peer-reviewed exploration in teaching: a program for stimulating and recognizing innovations in teaching
publisher Georgia Southern University
series International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
issn 1931-4744
publishDate 2017-01-01
description In an academic world driven by student ratings and publication counts, faculty members are discouraged from exploring new pedagogical ideas because exploration takes time and often goes unrecognized. The contrast with research is striking: everyone is expected to explore and innovate in research, whereas very few make exploration in teaching their norm. This paper presents a case study illustrating a program, the Peer-Reviewed Exploration in Teaching (PRET) program, designed to encourage and recognize faculty when they implement teaching innovations. The program provides feedback during all stages of a teaching innovation, including outside-classroom activities, and incorporates a rigorous peer review process so that successive such PRETs can accumulate into a record for tenure and promotion. The paper describes the program’s rationale, initial implementation, and lessons learned. Perhaps one of the most interesting lessons is that faculty explorations often go beyond a standard inventory of active learning techniques when they are encouraged and supported to explore.
topic Teaching innovations
recognizing teaching excellence
url https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/ij-sotl/vol11/iss1/3
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