We
are hearing a lot these days about the need to help students persist in college
and increase their rates of graduation. Oddly, teaching gets limited mention in
these discussions.
A
somewhat abridged version of this post was originally published in the
Christian Science Monitor (http://www.csmonitor.com/Commentary/Opinion/2013/0322/Time-to-help-college-professors-be-better-teachers)
and reprinted in the UTNE Reader online (http://www.utne.com/politics/time-to-help-college-professors-become-better-teachers.aspx).
***
Right
after I gave my opening lecture on Oedipus the King to the thirty
employees of Los Angeles’s criminal justice system, I handed out a few pages of
notes I would have taken if I were sitting in their seats listening to the
likes of me. The students ranged from gang-intervention workers to traffic cops
to a few detectives, and they were in a special program leading to a college
degree.
My
course was Introduction to Humanities, and I knew from a survey I gave them
that many hadn’t been in a classroom in a long time—and some didn’t get such
great educations when they were. So we spent the last half hour of the class
comparing my notes with the ones they had just taken, talking about the way I
signaled that something was important, how they could separate out a big idea
from specific facts, how to ask a question without looking like a dummy.
I
taught that humanities course over thirty years ago, but I was thinking about
it as I read the new report from the National Commission on Higher Education
Attainment, “College Completion Must Be Our Priority,” a call to leaders in
higher education to increase graduation rates by scheduling courses and
services to accommodate working adults, developing more on-line learning,
easing the ability of students to transfer, and a host of other sensible
solutions to the many barriers that are contributing to stagnating graduation
rates.
But
if we want more students to succeed in college, then we have to turn full
attention to teaching. Students spend more time with their teachers than with
all other institutional agents combined, and as a community college
administrator I know puts it, students succeed one class at a time. To their
credit, the authors of the college completion report call for better
professional development for college faculty; however, most reports of this
type have little to say about teaching, focusing instead on structural and
administrative reforms outside the classroom. It is a glaring omission.
Perhaps
the authors of these reports believe that teaching is such an individual
activity that not much can be done to affect it. Another reason has to do with
the way college teaching gets defined in practice. Faculty become expert in a
field and then they pass on their knowledge to others in introductory or
higher-level courses. Some teachers get very good at this delivery—compelling
lectures, creative demonstrations and assignments—but it is rare that a teacher
thinks beyond her subject to the general intellectual development of the
undergraduates before her, to enhancing the way they learn and make sense of
the world. Finally, I don’t see much evidence at the policy level of a deep
understanding of teaching or a respect for its craft.
The
problem starts in the graduate programs where college instructors are minted.
Students learn a great deal about, let’s say, astrophysics or political
science, but not how to teach it. They might assist in courses and pay
attention to how their professors teach, but none of this is systematic or a
focus of study or mentoring. And there is no place in their curriculum where
they consider the difficulties students might have as they learn how to think
like an astrophysicist or political scientist or the reading and writing
difficulties that can emerge when encountering a discipline for the first time.
The same is true in acquiring a trade. People are trained to be diesel
mechanics or cosmetologists or nurses but not to teach their occupations.
The
majority of new college faculty want to teach well—and many do. But they won’t
find on most college campuses an institutional culture that fosters teaching.
To be sure, there are rewards for good teaching—awards, the esteem of students—and
most institutions, even research universities, consider exemplary teaching as a
factor in promotion. And some campuses have programs that provide resources for
instruction, but they tend to be low-status and under-utilized operations. As a
community college vice president I interviewed said, “We don’t cultivate a
professional identity around teaching.” In the untold number of faculty
meetings I’ve attended, teaching has been discussed as part of an individual’s
personnel action, but never as a general topic of interest.
Teaching
has special meaning now, as the authors of the report on student success point
out, because close to half of American undergraduates are a bit more like those
students in my humanities class than our image of the traditional college
student fresh out of high school. Particularly in the community colleges and
state colleges where the majority of Americans receive their higher education,
students are older, they work, and many have children. A significant percentage
are the first in their families to go to college; somewhere between forty to
fifty percent need to take one or more remedial courses in English or
mathematics.
To
do right by these students, we need to rethink how to teach them. This does not
mean rushing to electronic technology—a common move these days—for on-line
instruction of any variety will only be as good as the understanding of
teaching and learning that underlies it.
We
can begin by elevating the value of teaching and creating more opportunities to
get better at it—which would also mean seeing the classroom through the eyes of
our new students. For those students who need help with writing, mathematics,
and study skills, there are tutoring centers and other campus resources.
Faculty should forge connections with them but realize that we too can provide
guidance to learning our subjects, provide both tricks of the trade—like taking
good notes—as well as an orientation to our field: this is the way an
astrophysicist or political scientist or diesel mechanic thinks. And, in my
experience, students at flagship universities and elite colleges could also
benefit from this approach to instruction. Just ask them.
Doing
such things does not mean abandoning our subject area but rather enhancing it
and opening a door to it. It is through
our subjects that students can come to better learn how to learn and how to
think scientifically, politically, or mechanically.
Working
with those humanities students on their notes helped them develop better
notetaking techniques. But as we studied technique, we also thought hard about
how to determine what’s important—and how to make someone else’s information
your own. All this involved talking further about Greek tragedy, about literary
interpretation, and about what the humanities can provide for us.
Finally,
what’s at stake is not only increasing graduation rates but also making the
acquisition of knowledge more democratic, providing a quality education for
those who, a generation or two ago, would not have seen college as possible.
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Moleskin notebook, a good mechanical pencil, and a decent humanist letterform. I also carry a small architect's rule and a beautiful brass English pencil-compass for geometry. Simple indeed, but enough to record anything I come across, or to explore design and ideas.
ReplyDeleteI loved this piece when I read it in CSM. I blogged on it here:
ReplyDeletehttp://teachingandlearninginhighered.org/2013/03/24/time-to-help-college-professors-be-better-teachers-mike-rose/