你在课堂上做的最重要的事情是什么?

Q2 Social Sciences Journal of Food Science Education Pub Date : 2021-07-11 DOI:10.1111/1541-4329.12226
Shelly J. Schmidt
{"title":"你在课堂上做的最重要的事情是什么?","authors":"Shelly J. Schmidt","doi":"10.1111/1541-4329.12226","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>A few years ago, I was out to dinner with a few colleagues and a candidate that we had invited to interview for an open faculty position. Everyone around the table was chatting about the research they do and the latest news and happenings in our respective fields. Then, during a brief lull in the conversation, the candidate asked me a question: “I've heard that you are an award-winning teacher, so would you mind sharing with me what you think is the most important thing you do in your classroom?”</p><p>Wow, what a question…one thing that I do, the most important thing I do…let me see…uhm. As I was quickly trying to formulate a response, a million and one possible ideas began running through my mind – use of active learning activities, focus on student-centered teaching strategies, emphasis on helping students learn how to learn, etc. Then, without my mind yet settled on an answer, out came my response: “I think the most important thing that I do is care, really care, about my students.” For a split second I felt like I wanted to take my seemingly primitive, unsophisticated response back and come up with something more impressive and pedagogically robust. But then, my mind seemed to relax and become more comfortable and satisfied with my rather spontaneous response—caring about my students, really caring, IS one of the most important things I do in my classroom. Perhaps my response was intuitive, rather than spontaneous?! The conversation busily continued around teaching and learning and soon dinner was served. However, through the rest of the evening and for many, many days and months to come, I kept thinking about how my response was connected to all the other things I do in my classroom that I also think are important…the list just kept growing. Then it dawned on me: everything good that I do as a teacher begins and ends with caring for my students. And so began my exploration of the scholarly literature about caring in higher education.</p><p>In this editorial, I would like to share with you the findings and implications of one of the articles that I came across in my search entitled, “‘If they don't care, I don't care’: Millennial and Generation Z students and the impact of faculty caring” by Miller and Mills (<span>2019</span>).</p><p>The Miller and Mills (<span>2019</span>) article begins by affirming the well-established centrality of caring to effective teaching in primary and secondary school settings (e.g., Finn, Schrodt, Witt, Elledge, Jernberg, &amp; Larson, <span>2009</span>). The article then quickly moves to introducing the more recent scholarship that has begun to call attention to the importance of faculty caring to students’ learning and success in higher education (e.g., Meyers, <span>2009</span>; Slate, LaPrairie, Schulte, &amp; Onwuegbuzie, <span>2011</span>). According to Miller and Mills (<span>2019</span>), this interest in the impact of caring faculty in higher education has emerged from both rising efforts to retain an increasingly diverse undergraduate student body and questions regarding the unique perspectives and needs of the newest generations of college students, Millennials and Generation Z. The Millennial and Generation Z students are often perceived as needing more attention and care than previous generations (Goldman and Martin, <span>2016</span>; Varallo, <span>2008</span>), and as higher education institutions strive to recruit, retain, and graduate these students, questions about what these students need to succeed is garnering center stage attention in numerous institutions (Mintz <span>2019</span>; Pelletier <span>2019</span>), including my home institution, the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Thus, the research question posed by Miller &amp; Mills (<span>2019</span>) was: How do Millennial and Generation Z undergraduate students conceptualize caring in higher education and what impact does this have on their learning?</p><p>To answer this question, Miller and Mills (<span>2019</span>) carried out in-depth, qualitative interviews and focus groups of undergraduate student attitudes regarding faculty instruction and course material in five historically difficult gateway courses, in both the humanities (history) and in STEM fields (chemistry, biology, and mathematics). The 31 interviews and 1 focus group, which were guided by a standard instrument exploring student perceptions and responses, were analyzed using an interactive, respondent-driven process. The specific topics contained in the instrument included questions on mindset, perceptions of instructors, classroom experiences, college readiness, and study habits. Though several key themes emerged from the data analysis, the article focused specifically on the data related to the theme of caring.</p><p>All study participants were in the Millennial and Generation Z birth cohorts, ranging in age from 18 to 29 years old, with a median age of 19 years old. Seventy-four percent of the participants were female and 26% were male. The racial identity of the participants was 55% black and 45% white, with no Hispanic or Asian students. Approximately 70% of the participants were first-generation college students. Participants represented a variety of majors, including humanities, STEM fields, and health care. The average GPA of the participants was 2.75/4.0, which was reflective of the demographic and academic profile of the undergraduate student body.</p><p>Overall, caring emerged as a significant theme throughout the data and was directly connected to student motivation to learn. Students clearly related the importance of faculty caring to their engagement in the class, their willingness to work hard, their likelihood of success, and their assessment of the course. As articulated by one student in the focus group: “If they don't care, I don't care.” However, unlike some prior research results (Cooper and Miness, <span>2014</span>; Tosolt, <span>2010</span>), Miller and Mills (<span>2019</span>) found that caring was not exclusively viewed by the students as a personality trait or attitude, but was also viewed as a practice evidenced by the teaching techniques faculty members employed.</p><p>In fact, in the eyes of the students, use of good teaching strategies often compensated for a perceived “bad” attitude by a faculty member. This finding, as we will discuss, carries with it several positive implications for helping students succeed in higher education. For now, let's examine the two-specific areas in which caring was identified (or not) by students in their interactions with faculty - caring as attitude and caring as teaching practice.</p><p>Prior research suggests that Millennial and Generation Z students need and expect a higher level of caring, well beyond what is traditionally expected from a normal faculty role (Varallo, <span>2008</span>). However, the research by Miller and Mills (<span>2019</span>) suggests “that such extensive emotional investment outside the classroom may not be necessary for students to perceive that faculty care.” Rather, the Millennial and Generation Z students expressed that teachers demonstrated care through both their attitude and their teaching practices and that the use of effective teaching practices trumped a perceived lack of a caring attitude. As stated so effectively by Miller and Mills (<span>2019</span>), “<i>A clear implication of this work is that effective teaching is at the core of caring and should be a priority for student success work on college campuses</i>. When we talk about student success, we often focus on auxiliary or support structures, such as tutoring, supplemental instruction, early alert systems, intrusive advising, and course sequencing or degree paths. All of these elements are important, but not sufficient if in-class engagement of faculty is not present. In fact, utilization of such support structures would likely be enhanced if students are motivated to work harder through their in-class and faculty-to-student interaction experiences. If classes and instruction de-motivate students, they will be less likely to avail themselves of resources. In contrast, if their in-class experiences with faculty inspire engagement in learning, students may well continue that motivation into the resource areas of campus that complement the work of faculty.”</p><p>It follows naturally, <i>if</i> effective teaching is at the core of caring, <i>then</i> it is imperative that faculty in higher education be formally trained to teach effectively. As expressed by Miller and Mills (<span>2019</span>), “Faculty development is thus a central component to the student success agenda. Many University faculty members have not had the opportunity to learn evidence-based teaching techniques; providing such development could dramatically improve student learning outcomes and their persistence to graduation.”</p><p><i>This call for faculty to receive some form of teacher training is growing louder</i>. For example, in his Fennema Essay, Richard Felder (<span>2021</span>), comparing two competing paradigms of STEM instruction – the traditional one and an emerging one, posed and responded to the question: “How should faculty members be prepared for their careers?” Addressing the need for faculty training in teaching, Felder writes, “Academicians are arguably the only skilled professionals who are not routinely trained for their careers. The apparent presumption is that if you get an advanced degree in a discipline, you must know how to teach it. (Anyone who has ever been a college student knows otherwise.).” Felder's proposed solution is to provide faculty with training in teaching and building a research program. Felder (<span>2021</span>) goes on to discuss research by Boice (<span>1992</span>, <span>2000</span>) who studied hundreds of new faculty members and found that roughly 95% of them took an average of 4 to 5 years to meet their institutions’ expectations for teaching effectiveness and research productivity, while only 5% accomplished that in 1 to 2 years (Brent &amp; Felder, <span>1998</span>). Boice (<span>1992</span>, <span>2000</span>) also found that effective training can shave years off the new faculty learning curve.</p><p>The good news is that training programs for those interested in careers in academics and those beginning careers in academics are available at some higher education institutions, as well as through disciplinary societies1. Although, to my knowledge, these types of programs are not yet commonplace, I am hopeful that more and more programs are in the works – they are surely needed! And perhaps one day teacher training will be required of higher education faculty and, likewise, “good teaching” will be rewarded on par with “good research.”</p><p>An example of a program in teacher training for those interested in careers in academics is available in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at Virginia Tech (<span>2021</span>) through the Graduate Teaching Scholarship (GTS) program. The GTS program prepares doctorate students “to be as bold and creative in the classroom as they are in their research” as stated on the program website. Upon completion of the GTS program, participants receive both a disciplinary-specific Ph.D. and a Future Professoriate certification. These students will have an advantage over their peers, as they bring clear evidence of teaching capabilities and experience at the university level to their academic career interviews.</p><p>An example of a program in teacher training focused on those beginning their academic careers is in the College of Agricultural, Consumer, and Environmental Sciences (ACES) at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign2, entitled the ACES Teaching &amp; Learning Academy. The ACES Teaching and Learning Academy (T&amp;LA) is a collaborative 8 to 10-week faculty development program (depending on the year it was offered) designed to enhance the teaching skills that faculty members already possess, while developing new competencies that will make instructional design, delivery, and assessment even more effective. The two overarching goals of the ACES T&amp;LA are to: (1) enhance faculty teaching effectiveness, efficiency, and self-confidence (also termed teacher self-efficacy, that is, confidence in their ability to promote students’ learning) by sharing best teaching and learning practices grounded in research findings; and (2) develop and foster a teaching community, similar to the communities that have evolved related to the research and outreach missions of the University of Illinois. I have been a member of the T&amp;LA teaching team since its inception in Fall 1997 (Schmidt, Buriak, D'Arcy, Litchfield, Javenkoski, and Barrick, <span>2002</span>).</p><p>The T&amp;LA has made a substantial impact on the quality of teaching in the College of ACES at Illinois, as evidenced by increases in student assessment scores of teaching effectiveness, as well as the large number of teaching awards garnered by ACES faculty members over the years. I would strongly encourage all higher education institutions to offer teaching programs for faculty members. It is so essential that we equip faculty with effective and efficient evidenced-based teaching practices3 to help them become scholarly teachers4. In my experience, the longevity of such teaching programs seems to be high if they are faculty-driven, highly valued by department heads as well as upper administration, and immediately useful to the faculty members (they can put what they are learning into practice tomorrow). It is also helpful if the teaching program is sustained by a cohort of faculty who are willing to patiently navigate the ups and downs of changing academic priorities and budget issues, because they are fiercely dedicated to the long-term purpose of the program.</p><p>Based on what I am learning about faculty care, I would like to add a couple of items to the ACES T&amp;LA agenda this fall in the session about understanding and caring for our students. The first item is to encourage faculty to not only include student-centered learning objectives in their course syllabus, but also to develop and share with their students student-centered care objectives. I started to work on the care objectives for the students in my freshman level “The Science of Food” course. Though I am still working on the best format for these objectives, here are a few examples of my student care objectives: 1) Because I care, I will strive to make social-emotional connections with my students; 2) Because I care, I will intentionally embed ways5 for my students to build relationships with other students in the course; and 3) Because I care, I will strive to share relatable examples from contemporary social circumstances to help my students connect and engage in meaningful ways with the course content. Of course, just as with student-centered learning objectives, I will need to determine more specifically how I will put each of these care objectives into practice and how their achievement (or not) can be measured.</p><p>The second item I would like to add to the T&amp;LA agenda this fall is a discussion about the difference between passive and active caring as talked about by Krall (<span>2018</span>) in his book entitled “Necessary Conditions.” As defined by Krall (<span>2018</span>), passive caring refers to nonspecific attitudes of care from teachers. Teachers are welcoming, but they don't do anything specific to care for their students. Krall (<span>2018</span>) also mentioned that passive caring can be rather one sided, as the student often must care for the work of school before the teacher will demonstrate personal care or interest in the student. Krall (<span>2018</span>) explains that active caring, on the other hand, involves teachers actively getting to know and encouraging their students specifically. For example, in passive caring, teachers know each student's name, whereas, in active caring teachers go deeper and get to know each student's interests and passions. In addition, active caring demands a two-way relationship independent of the student's academic dispositions. In active caring, the teacher intentionally develops a positive relationship with all students, not just those identified as “good” students, with the teacher intentionally providing all students with the same level of personal and cultural care.</p><p>As asserted by Krall (<span>2018</span>), “The question of passive versus active caring cuts deep.” Many faculty members love their subject matter and tend to develop active caring relationships with only those students that also love the subject matter and/or perform well in school. The rest of the students don't experience intentional harm, but, as stated by Krall (<span>2018</span>), “the state of the classroom serves to reinforce long-standing gaps in status,” where students who demonstrate enthusiasm for the material or have naturally attractive personalities are elevated, whereas average or soft-spoken students feel invisible and struggling students slide further behind. Krall (<span>2018</span>) suggests that teachers who actively care for their students over the course of the semester, build up “social capital” with each student and are therefore able to push all students when they need pushing and, more importantly, notice in a timely fashion when students need help in the first place. This key connection between faculty caring and enhancing student engagement and learning reminds me of two of my favorite quotes about the impact of caring (Andrew, <span>2015</span>): “Nobody cares how much you know until they know how much you care” by Theodore Roosevelt and “Brains are like hearts. They go where they are appreciated.\" by Robert McNamara.</p><p>The link exposed by Miller and Mills (<span>2019</span>) between faculty caring and student motivation and success is a very important and timely one, as so many institutions of higher education are searching feverishly for answers to a myriad of student success issues and concerns. If we frame the problem of student success as being about students demanding too much attention or being too needy, “it becomes an intractable one that only can be addressed through massive cultural change” – which is most unlikely to occur. But, “if we consider the power of changing the way we teach, however, the conversation shifts.” Miller and Mills (<span>2019</span>) research “indicates that student motivation can be improved without a huge out-of-class time investment or ‘hand holding’ on the part of faculty. Rather, utilizing adaptive teaching techniques and intentionally communicating that one cares if students learn can impact student motivation and engagement in their own learning process.” This is indeed good news! News that deserves attention, intentional implementation, and continued exploration.</p>","PeriodicalId":44041,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Food Science Education","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-07-11","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1111/1541-4329.12226","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"What is the most important thing you do in your classroom?\",\"authors\":\"Shelly J. Schmidt\",\"doi\":\"10.1111/1541-4329.12226\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>A few years ago, I was out to dinner with a few colleagues and a candidate that we had invited to interview for an open faculty position. Everyone around the table was chatting about the research they do and the latest news and happenings in our respective fields. Then, during a brief lull in the conversation, the candidate asked me a question: “I've heard that you are an award-winning teacher, so would you mind sharing with me what you think is the most important thing you do in your classroom?”</p><p>Wow, what a question…one thing that I do, the most important thing I do…let me see…uhm. As I was quickly trying to formulate a response, a million and one possible ideas began running through my mind – use of active learning activities, focus on student-centered teaching strategies, emphasis on helping students learn how to learn, etc. Then, without my mind yet settled on an answer, out came my response: “I think the most important thing that I do is care, really care, about my students.” For a split second I felt like I wanted to take my seemingly primitive, unsophisticated response back and come up with something more impressive and pedagogically robust. But then, my mind seemed to relax and become more comfortable and satisfied with my rather spontaneous response—caring about my students, really caring, IS one of the most important things I do in my classroom. Perhaps my response was intuitive, rather than spontaneous?! The conversation busily continued around teaching and learning and soon dinner was served. However, through the rest of the evening and for many, many days and months to come, I kept thinking about how my response was connected to all the other things I do in my classroom that I also think are important…the list just kept growing. Then it dawned on me: everything good that I do as a teacher begins and ends with caring for my students. And so began my exploration of the scholarly literature about caring in higher education.</p><p>In this editorial, I would like to share with you the findings and implications of one of the articles that I came across in my search entitled, “‘If they don't care, I don't care’: Millennial and Generation Z students and the impact of faculty caring” by Miller and Mills (<span>2019</span>).</p><p>The Miller and Mills (<span>2019</span>) article begins by affirming the well-established centrality of caring to effective teaching in primary and secondary school settings (e.g., Finn, Schrodt, Witt, Elledge, Jernberg, &amp; Larson, <span>2009</span>). The article then quickly moves to introducing the more recent scholarship that has begun to call attention to the importance of faculty caring to students’ learning and success in higher education (e.g., Meyers, <span>2009</span>; Slate, LaPrairie, Schulte, &amp; Onwuegbuzie, <span>2011</span>). According to Miller and Mills (<span>2019</span>), this interest in the impact of caring faculty in higher education has emerged from both rising efforts to retain an increasingly diverse undergraduate student body and questions regarding the unique perspectives and needs of the newest generations of college students, Millennials and Generation Z. The Millennial and Generation Z students are often perceived as needing more attention and care than previous generations (Goldman and Martin, <span>2016</span>; Varallo, <span>2008</span>), and as higher education institutions strive to recruit, retain, and graduate these students, questions about what these students need to succeed is garnering center stage attention in numerous institutions (Mintz <span>2019</span>; Pelletier <span>2019</span>), including my home institution, the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Thus, the research question posed by Miller &amp; Mills (<span>2019</span>) was: How do Millennial and Generation Z undergraduate students conceptualize caring in higher education and what impact does this have on their learning?</p><p>To answer this question, Miller and Mills (<span>2019</span>) carried out in-depth, qualitative interviews and focus groups of undergraduate student attitudes regarding faculty instruction and course material in five historically difficult gateway courses, in both the humanities (history) and in STEM fields (chemistry, biology, and mathematics). The 31 interviews and 1 focus group, which were guided by a standard instrument exploring student perceptions and responses, were analyzed using an interactive, respondent-driven process. The specific topics contained in the instrument included questions on mindset, perceptions of instructors, classroom experiences, college readiness, and study habits. Though several key themes emerged from the data analysis, the article focused specifically on the data related to the theme of caring.</p><p>All study participants were in the Millennial and Generation Z birth cohorts, ranging in age from 18 to 29 years old, with a median age of 19 years old. Seventy-four percent of the participants were female and 26% were male. The racial identity of the participants was 55% black and 45% white, with no Hispanic or Asian students. Approximately 70% of the participants were first-generation college students. Participants represented a variety of majors, including humanities, STEM fields, and health care. The average GPA of the participants was 2.75/4.0, which was reflective of the demographic and academic profile of the undergraduate student body.</p><p>Overall, caring emerged as a significant theme throughout the data and was directly connected to student motivation to learn. Students clearly related the importance of faculty caring to their engagement in the class, their willingness to work hard, their likelihood of success, and their assessment of the course. As articulated by one student in the focus group: “If they don't care, I don't care.” However, unlike some prior research results (Cooper and Miness, <span>2014</span>; Tosolt, <span>2010</span>), Miller and Mills (<span>2019</span>) found that caring was not exclusively viewed by the students as a personality trait or attitude, but was also viewed as a practice evidenced by the teaching techniques faculty members employed.</p><p>In fact, in the eyes of the students, use of good teaching strategies often compensated for a perceived “bad” attitude by a faculty member. This finding, as we will discuss, carries with it several positive implications for helping students succeed in higher education. For now, let's examine the two-specific areas in which caring was identified (or not) by students in their interactions with faculty - caring as attitude and caring as teaching practice.</p><p>Prior research suggests that Millennial and Generation Z students need and expect a higher level of caring, well beyond what is traditionally expected from a normal faculty role (Varallo, <span>2008</span>). However, the research by Miller and Mills (<span>2019</span>) suggests “that such extensive emotional investment outside the classroom may not be necessary for students to perceive that faculty care.” Rather, the Millennial and Generation Z students expressed that teachers demonstrated care through both their attitude and their teaching practices and that the use of effective teaching practices trumped a perceived lack of a caring attitude. As stated so effectively by Miller and Mills (<span>2019</span>), “<i>A clear implication of this work is that effective teaching is at the core of caring and should be a priority for student success work on college campuses</i>. When we talk about student success, we often focus on auxiliary or support structures, such as tutoring, supplemental instruction, early alert systems, intrusive advising, and course sequencing or degree paths. All of these elements are important, but not sufficient if in-class engagement of faculty is not present. In fact, utilization of such support structures would likely be enhanced if students are motivated to work harder through their in-class and faculty-to-student interaction experiences. If classes and instruction de-motivate students, they will be less likely to avail themselves of resources. In contrast, if their in-class experiences with faculty inspire engagement in learning, students may well continue that motivation into the resource areas of campus that complement the work of faculty.”</p><p>It follows naturally, <i>if</i> effective teaching is at the core of caring, <i>then</i> it is imperative that faculty in higher education be formally trained to teach effectively. As expressed by Miller and Mills (<span>2019</span>), “Faculty development is thus a central component to the student success agenda. Many University faculty members have not had the opportunity to learn evidence-based teaching techniques; providing such development could dramatically improve student learning outcomes and their persistence to graduation.”</p><p><i>This call for faculty to receive some form of teacher training is growing louder</i>. For example, in his Fennema Essay, Richard Felder (<span>2021</span>), comparing two competing paradigms of STEM instruction – the traditional one and an emerging one, posed and responded to the question: “How should faculty members be prepared for their careers?” Addressing the need for faculty training in teaching, Felder writes, “Academicians are arguably the only skilled professionals who are not routinely trained for their careers. The apparent presumption is that if you get an advanced degree in a discipline, you must know how to teach it. (Anyone who has ever been a college student knows otherwise.).” Felder's proposed solution is to provide faculty with training in teaching and building a research program. Felder (<span>2021</span>) goes on to discuss research by Boice (<span>1992</span>, <span>2000</span>) who studied hundreds of new faculty members and found that roughly 95% of them took an average of 4 to 5 years to meet their institutions’ expectations for teaching effectiveness and research productivity, while only 5% accomplished that in 1 to 2 years (Brent &amp; Felder, <span>1998</span>). Boice (<span>1992</span>, <span>2000</span>) also found that effective training can shave years off the new faculty learning curve.</p><p>The good news is that training programs for those interested in careers in academics and those beginning careers in academics are available at some higher education institutions, as well as through disciplinary societies1. Although, to my knowledge, these types of programs are not yet commonplace, I am hopeful that more and more programs are in the works – they are surely needed! And perhaps one day teacher training will be required of higher education faculty and, likewise, “good teaching” will be rewarded on par with “good research.”</p><p>An example of a program in teacher training for those interested in careers in academics is available in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at Virginia Tech (<span>2021</span>) through the Graduate Teaching Scholarship (GTS) program. The GTS program prepares doctorate students “to be as bold and creative in the classroom as they are in their research” as stated on the program website. Upon completion of the GTS program, participants receive both a disciplinary-specific Ph.D. and a Future Professoriate certification. These students will have an advantage over their peers, as they bring clear evidence of teaching capabilities and experience at the university level to their academic career interviews.</p><p>An example of a program in teacher training focused on those beginning their academic careers is in the College of Agricultural, Consumer, and Environmental Sciences (ACES) at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign2, entitled the ACES Teaching &amp; Learning Academy. The ACES Teaching and Learning Academy (T&amp;LA) is a collaborative 8 to 10-week faculty development program (depending on the year it was offered) designed to enhance the teaching skills that faculty members already possess, while developing new competencies that will make instructional design, delivery, and assessment even more effective. The two overarching goals of the ACES T&amp;LA are to: (1) enhance faculty teaching effectiveness, efficiency, and self-confidence (also termed teacher self-efficacy, that is, confidence in their ability to promote students’ learning) by sharing best teaching and learning practices grounded in research findings; and (2) develop and foster a teaching community, similar to the communities that have evolved related to the research and outreach missions of the University of Illinois. I have been a member of the T&amp;LA teaching team since its inception in Fall 1997 (Schmidt, Buriak, D'Arcy, Litchfield, Javenkoski, and Barrick, <span>2002</span>).</p><p>The T&amp;LA has made a substantial impact on the quality of teaching in the College of ACES at Illinois, as evidenced by increases in student assessment scores of teaching effectiveness, as well as the large number of teaching awards garnered by ACES faculty members over the years. I would strongly encourage all higher education institutions to offer teaching programs for faculty members. It is so essential that we equip faculty with effective and efficient evidenced-based teaching practices3 to help them become scholarly teachers4. In my experience, the longevity of such teaching programs seems to be high if they are faculty-driven, highly valued by department heads as well as upper administration, and immediately useful to the faculty members (they can put what they are learning into practice tomorrow). It is also helpful if the teaching program is sustained by a cohort of faculty who are willing to patiently navigate the ups and downs of changing academic priorities and budget issues, because they are fiercely dedicated to the long-term purpose of the program.</p><p>Based on what I am learning about faculty care, I would like to add a couple of items to the ACES T&amp;LA agenda this fall in the session about understanding and caring for our students. The first item is to encourage faculty to not only include student-centered learning objectives in their course syllabus, but also to develop and share with their students student-centered care objectives. I started to work on the care objectives for the students in my freshman level “The Science of Food” course. Though I am still working on the best format for these objectives, here are a few examples of my student care objectives: 1) Because I care, I will strive to make social-emotional connections with my students; 2) Because I care, I will intentionally embed ways5 for my students to build relationships with other students in the course; and 3) Because I care, I will strive to share relatable examples from contemporary social circumstances to help my students connect and engage in meaningful ways with the course content. Of course, just as with student-centered learning objectives, I will need to determine more specifically how I will put each of these care objectives into practice and how their achievement (or not) can be measured.</p><p>The second item I would like to add to the T&amp;LA agenda this fall is a discussion about the difference between passive and active caring as talked about by Krall (<span>2018</span>) in his book entitled “Necessary Conditions.” As defined by Krall (<span>2018</span>), passive caring refers to nonspecific attitudes of care from teachers. Teachers are welcoming, but they don't do anything specific to care for their students. Krall (<span>2018</span>) also mentioned that passive caring can be rather one sided, as the student often must care for the work of school before the teacher will demonstrate personal care or interest in the student. Krall (<span>2018</span>) explains that active caring, on the other hand, involves teachers actively getting to know and encouraging their students specifically. For example, in passive caring, teachers know each student's name, whereas, in active caring teachers go deeper and get to know each student's interests and passions. In addition, active caring demands a two-way relationship independent of the student's academic dispositions. In active caring, the teacher intentionally develops a positive relationship with all students, not just those identified as “good” students, with the teacher intentionally providing all students with the same level of personal and cultural care.</p><p>As asserted by Krall (<span>2018</span>), “The question of passive versus active caring cuts deep.” Many faculty members love their subject matter and tend to develop active caring relationships with only those students that also love the subject matter and/or perform well in school. The rest of the students don't experience intentional harm, but, as stated by Krall (<span>2018</span>), “the state of the classroom serves to reinforce long-standing gaps in status,” where students who demonstrate enthusiasm for the material or have naturally attractive personalities are elevated, whereas average or soft-spoken students feel invisible and struggling students slide further behind. Krall (<span>2018</span>) suggests that teachers who actively care for their students over the course of the semester, build up “social capital” with each student and are therefore able to push all students when they need pushing and, more importantly, notice in a timely fashion when students need help in the first place. This key connection between faculty caring and enhancing student engagement and learning reminds me of two of my favorite quotes about the impact of caring (Andrew, <span>2015</span>): “Nobody cares how much you know until they know how much you care” by Theodore Roosevelt and “Brains are like hearts. They go where they are appreciated.\\\" by Robert McNamara.</p><p>The link exposed by Miller and Mills (<span>2019</span>) between faculty caring and student motivation and success is a very important and timely one, as so many institutions of higher education are searching feverishly for answers to a myriad of student success issues and concerns. If we frame the problem of student success as being about students demanding too much attention or being too needy, “it becomes an intractable one that only can be addressed through massive cultural change” – which is most unlikely to occur. But, “if we consider the power of changing the way we teach, however, the conversation shifts.” Miller and Mills (<span>2019</span>) research “indicates that student motivation can be improved without a huge out-of-class time investment or ‘hand holding’ on the part of faculty. Rather, utilizing adaptive teaching techniques and intentionally communicating that one cares if students learn can impact student motivation and engagement in their own learning process.” This is indeed good news! 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引用次数: 1

摘要

几年前,我和几个同事一起出去吃饭,我们邀请了一位候选人去面试一个空缺的教员职位。桌子周围的每个人都在谈论他们所做的研究,以及我们各自领域的最新新闻和事件。然后,在谈话的短暂停顿中,候选人问了我一个问题:“我听说你是一位获奖的老师,所以你介意和我分享一下你认为你在课堂上做的最重要的事情是什么吗?”哇,好一个问题,我做的一件事,我做的最重要的一件事,让我想想。当我试图快速地制定一个回应时,成百上千个可能的想法开始在我的脑海中闪现——使用积极的学习活动,关注以学生为中心的教学策略,强调帮助学生学习如何学习,等等。然后,我还没想好答案,我的回答就出来了:“我认为我做的最重要的事情就是关心,真的关心我的学生。”有那么一瞬间,我觉得我想把我看似原始、简单的回答收回来,想出一些更令人印象深刻、更具教学意义的东西。但随后,我的头脑似乎放松了,对自己自发的反应感到更加舒适和满意——关心我的学生,真正的关心,是我在课堂上做的最重要的事情之一。也许我的反应是直觉,而不是自发的?谈话继续围绕着教学和学习,很快晚餐就上了。然而,在那天晚上剩下的时间里,在接下来的许多天、许多月里,我一直在思考我的回答是如何与我在课堂上做的所有其他我认为很重要的事情联系在一起的……然后我恍然大悟:作为一名教师,我所做的每一件好事都始于关心我的学生。于是,我开始了对高等教育中关怀的学术文献的探索。在这篇社论中,我想与大家分享我在搜索中发现的一篇文章的发现和含义,题为“‘如果他们不在乎,我也不在乎’:千禧一代和Z一代学生以及教师关怀的影响”,作者是米勒和米尔斯(2019)。Miller和Mills(2019)的文章首先肯定了关怀对中小学有效教学的既定中心地位(例如Finn, Schrodt, Witt, Elledge, Jernberg, &拉森,2009)。然后,文章迅速转向介绍最近的学术研究,这些研究开始呼吁人们关注教师关心学生在高等教育中的学习和成功的重要性(例如,Meyers, 2009;Slate, LaPrairie, Schulte, &Onwuegbuzie, 2011)。根据Miller和Mills(2019)的研究,这种对关怀型教师在高等教育中的影响的兴趣源于两方面,一方面是为了保持越来越多样化的本科学生群体,另一方面是关于最新一代大学生——千禧一代和Z一代——独特视角和需求的问题。千禧一代和Z一代学生通常被认为比前几代人需要更多的关注和照顾(Goldman and Martin, 2016;Varallo, 2008),随着高等教育机构努力招收、留住和毕业这些学生,关于这些学生需要什么才能成功的问题在许多机构中引起了人们的关注(Mintz 2019;Pelletier 2019),包括我的母校伊利诺伊大学厄巴纳-香槟分校。因此,Miller &米尔斯(2019)的研究是:千禧一代和Z一代本科生如何将高等教育中的关怀概念化,这对他们的学习有什么影响?为了回答这个问题,Miller和Mills(2019)在人文学科(历史)和STEM领域(化学、生物和数学)的五门历史上困难的入门课程中,对本科生对教师教学和课程材料的态度进行了深入的定性访谈和焦点小组。31个访谈和1个焦点小组,在探索学生的看法和反应的标准工具的指导下,使用交互式的,受访者驱动的过程进行分析。该工具中包含的具体主题包括心态、对教师的看法、课堂经验、大学准备和学习习惯等问题。虽然从数据分析中出现了几个关键主题,但本文特别关注与关怀主题相关的数据。所有研究参与者都是千禧一代和Z一代,年龄从18岁到29岁不等,中位年龄为19岁。74%的参与者是女性,26%是男性。参与者的种族身份为55%的黑人和45%的白人,没有西班牙裔或亚裔学生。 大约70%的参与者是第一代大学生。参与者代表了各种专业,包括人文学科、STEM领域和医疗保健。参与者的平均GPA为2.75/4.0,这反映了本科学生群体的人口统计学和学术概况。总的来说,关心是整个数据的一个重要主题,与学生的学习动机直接相关。学生们清楚地认识到教师关心他们在课堂上的参与度、他们努力学习的意愿、他们成功的可能性以及他们对课程的评估的重要性。正如焦点小组中的一名学生所说:“如果他们不在乎,我也不在乎。”然而,与之前的一些研究结果(Cooper and Miness, 2014;Tosolt, 2010), Miller和Mills(2019)发现,关怀并不仅仅被学生视为一种人格特质或态度,也被视为一种实践,教职员工采用的教学技巧证明了这一点。事实上,在学生的眼中,使用好的教学策略往往弥补了教师的“坏”态度。正如我们将讨论的那样,这一发现对帮助学生在高等教育中取得成功具有若干积极意义。现在,让我们来看看两个特定的领域,在他们与教师的互动中,学生确定(或不确定)关心——作为态度的关心和作为教学实践的关心。先前的研究表明,千禧一代和Z一代的学生需要并期望更高水平的关怀,远远超出了传统上对普通教师角色的期望(Varallo, 2008)。然而,Miller和Mills(2019)的研究表明,“课堂外如此广泛的情感投入可能不是学生感受到教师关怀的必要条件。”相反,千禧一代和Z一代的学生表示,教师通过他们的态度和教学实践来表现关怀,并且使用有效的教学实践胜过了他们认为缺乏关怀的态度。正如米勒和米尔斯(2019)所言,“这项工作的一个明确含义是,有效的教学是关怀的核心,应该是大学校园学生成功工作的优先事项。”当我们谈论学生的成功时,我们经常关注辅助或支持结构,如辅导、补充指导、早期预警系统、侵入性建议、课程顺序或学位路径。所有这些因素都很重要,但如果教师在课堂上没有参与,这些因素是不够的。事实上,如果学生能通过课堂上和师生之间的互动体验来激励他们更加努力地学习,这种支持结构的利用可能会得到加强。如果课堂和教学使学生失去动力,他们就不太可能利用自己的资源。相比之下,如果他们与教师的课堂体验激发了他们的学习积极性,学生很可能会将这种动力延续到校园的资源领域,以补充教师的工作。”自然,如果有效的教学是关怀的核心,那么高等教育中的教师就必须接受有效教学的正式培训。正如米勒和米尔斯(2019)所表达的那样,“教师发展因此是学生成功议程的核心组成部分。”许多大学教师没有机会学习循证教学技巧;提供这样的发展可以极大地提高学生的学习成果,并使他们坚持到毕业。”要求教师接受某种形式的教师培训的呼声越来越高。例如,在他的Fennema论文中,Richard Felder(2021)比较了两种相互竞争的STEM教学范式——传统的和新兴的,提出并回答了这样一个问题:“教师应该如何为他们的职业生涯做好准备?”针对教师在教学方面的培训需求,费尔德写道:“院士可以说是唯一没有接受过常规职业培训的熟练专业人士。显而易见的假设是,如果你在一门学科中获得了高级学位,你就必须知道如何教授这门学科。(任何当过大学生的人都知道不是这样的。)”费尔德提出的解决方案是为教师提供教学培训,并建立一个研究项目。Felder(2021)接着讨论了Boice(1992,2000)的研究,Boice对数百名新教师进行了研究,发现大约95%的人平均需要4到5年的时间才能达到他们所在机构对教学效率和研究生产力的期望,而只有5%的人在1到2年内完成了这一目标(Brent &镶嵌地块,1998)。Boice(1992,2000)也发现,有效的培训可以缩短新教师的学习曲线。 好消息是,针对有志于从事学术工作和刚开始从事学术工作的人的培训项目在一些高等教育机构和学科协会都有提供。虽然,据我所知,这些类型的节目还不普遍,我希望越来越多的节目在工作-他们肯定是需要的!也许有一天,高等教育将要求教师接受培训,同样,“优秀的教学”将与“优秀的研究”一样得到奖励。弗吉尼亚理工大学农业与生命科学学院(2021年)通过研究生教学奖学金(GTS)项目为那些对学术事业感兴趣的教师提供培训计划的一个例子。GTS项目网站上说,该项目培养博士生“在课堂上和在研究中一样大胆和有创造力”。完成GTS课程后,参与者将获得特定学科的博士学位和未来教授认证。这些学生将比他们的同龄人有优势,因为他们在学术职业面试中会带来清晰的教学能力和大学水平经验的证据。伊利诺伊大学厄巴纳-香槟分校农业、消费者与环境科学学院(ACES)的教师培训项目就是一个例子,该项目的名称是“ACES教学与培训”。学院学习。ACES教学与学习学院(T&LA)是一个为期8至10周的教师发展合作项目(取决于提供的年份),旨在提高教师已经拥有的教学技能,同时开发新的能力,使教学设计,交付和评估更加有效。ACES T&LA的两个首要目标是:(1)通过分享基于研究成果的最佳教学和学习实践,提高教师的教学效果、效率和自信(也称为教师自我效能感,即对他们促进学生学习能力的信心);(2)发展和培养一个教学社区,类似于与伊利诺伊大学的研究和推广任务相关的社区。自1997年秋季成立以来,我一直是t&la教学团队的一员(Schmidt, Buriak, D'Arcy, Litchfield, Javenkoski, and Barrick, 2002)。T&LA对伊利诺伊州ace学院的教学质量产生了重大影响,这一点可以从学生教学效率评估分数的提高以及多年来ace教师获得的大量教学奖项中得到证明。我强烈建议所有高等教育机构为教师提供教学项目。我们必须为教师提供有效、高效的实证教学实践,以帮助他们成为有学问的教师。根据我的经验,如果这些教学项目是由教师主导的,受到系主任和高层管理人员的高度重视,并且对教师们立即有用(他们可以把他们所学的知识应用到明天的实践中),那么这些教学项目的寿命似乎是很高的。如果教学项目是由一群愿意耐心应对不断变化的学术重点和预算问题的起起落落的教师维持的,这也是有帮助的,因为他们坚定地致力于项目的长期目标。基于我在教师关怀方面的了解,我想在今年秋天的ACES T&LA议程中增加一些关于理解和关爱学生的项目。第一项是鼓励教师在课程教学大纲中不仅包括以学生为中心的学习目标,而且还制定并与学生分享以学生为中心的关怀目标。我开始在大一的“食品科学”课程中为学生制定护理目标。虽然我仍在为这些目标寻找最好的形式,但这里有一些我的学生关怀目标的例子:1)因为我关心,我会努力与我的学生建立社会情感联系;2)因为我关心,我会在课程中有意为我的学生提供与其他学生建立关系的方法;3)因为我关心,我将努力分享来自当代社会环境的相关例子,以帮助我的学生以有意义的方式与课程内容建立联系并参与其中。当然,就像以学生为中心的学习目标一样,我需要更具体地决定如何将这些关怀目标付诸实践,以及如何衡量它们的成就(或不成就)。 今年秋天,我想在洛杉矶的议程上增加的第二个项目是关于被动关怀和主动关怀之间区别的讨论,正如克劳(2018)在他题为《必要条件》(Necessary Conditions)的书中所说的那样。根据Krall(2018)的定义,被动关怀是指教师对关爱的非特异性态度。老师们很受欢迎,但他们没有做任何具体的事情来照顾他们的学生。Krall(2018)还提到,被动关怀可能是相当片面的,因为学生通常必须先关心学校的工作,然后老师才会表现出对学生的个人关心或兴趣。Krall(2018)解释说,另一方面,主动关怀涉及教师积极地了解和鼓励学生。例如,在被动关怀中,老师知道每个学生的名字,而在主动关怀中,老师更深入地了解每个学生的兴趣和激情。此外,积极关怀需要一种独立于学生学业倾向的双向关系。在积极关怀中,教师有意地与所有学生建立积极的关系,而不仅仅是那些被认为是“好”的学生,教师有意地为所有学生提供相同水平的个人和文化关怀。正如Krall(2018)所断言的那样,“被动关怀与主动关怀的问题非常深刻。”许多教师喜欢他们的学科,并且倾向于只与那些也喜欢该学科和/或在学校表现良好的学生发展积极的关怀关系。其他学生并没有受到故意的伤害,但是,正如克劳(2018)所说,“课堂的状态加剧了长期存在的地位差距”,对材料表现出热情或天生具有吸引力的学生得到了提升,而普通或说话温和的学生则感觉被忽视,而努力学习的学生则进一步落后。Krall(2018)建议,在整个学期中积极关心学生的教师,与每个学生建立“社会资本”,因此能够在所有学生需要推动时推动他们,更重要的是,在学生需要帮助时及时注意到。教师关怀与提高学生参与度和学习之间的关键联系让我想起了我最喜欢的两句关于关怀影响的名言(安德鲁,2015):“没有人在乎你知道多少,直到他们知道你关心多少”,这是西奥多·罗斯福(Theodore Roosevelt)和“大脑就像心脏”。他们会去那些被欣赏的地方。”Miller和Mills(2019)揭示了教师关怀与学生动机和成功之间的联系,这是一个非常重要和及时的联系,因为许多高等教育机构都在狂热地寻找各种学生成功问题和担忧的答案。如果我们把学生成功的问题定义为学生要求太多关注或太需要帮助,“这就变成了一个棘手的问题,只能通过大规模的文化变革来解决”——这是最不可能发生的。但是,“如果我们考虑到改变教学方式的力量,话题就会发生变化。”Miller和Mills(2019)的研究“表明,学生的动机可以在没有大量课外时间投入或教师‘手把手’的情况下得到提高。”相反,利用适应性教学技术,有意识地传达关心学生是否学习的信息,会影响学生在自己学习过程中的动机和参与度。”这真是个好消息!值得关注的新闻,有意实施,并继续探索。
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What is the most important thing you do in your classroom?

A few years ago, I was out to dinner with a few colleagues and a candidate that we had invited to interview for an open faculty position. Everyone around the table was chatting about the research they do and the latest news and happenings in our respective fields. Then, during a brief lull in the conversation, the candidate asked me a question: “I've heard that you are an award-winning teacher, so would you mind sharing with me what you think is the most important thing you do in your classroom?”

Wow, what a question…one thing that I do, the most important thing I do…let me see…uhm. As I was quickly trying to formulate a response, a million and one possible ideas began running through my mind – use of active learning activities, focus on student-centered teaching strategies, emphasis on helping students learn how to learn, etc. Then, without my mind yet settled on an answer, out came my response: “I think the most important thing that I do is care, really care, about my students.” For a split second I felt like I wanted to take my seemingly primitive, unsophisticated response back and come up with something more impressive and pedagogically robust. But then, my mind seemed to relax and become more comfortable and satisfied with my rather spontaneous response—caring about my students, really caring, IS one of the most important things I do in my classroom. Perhaps my response was intuitive, rather than spontaneous?! The conversation busily continued around teaching and learning and soon dinner was served. However, through the rest of the evening and for many, many days and months to come, I kept thinking about how my response was connected to all the other things I do in my classroom that I also think are important…the list just kept growing. Then it dawned on me: everything good that I do as a teacher begins and ends with caring for my students. And so began my exploration of the scholarly literature about caring in higher education.

In this editorial, I would like to share with you the findings and implications of one of the articles that I came across in my search entitled, “‘If they don't care, I don't care’: Millennial and Generation Z students and the impact of faculty caring” by Miller and Mills (2019).

The Miller and Mills (2019) article begins by affirming the well-established centrality of caring to effective teaching in primary and secondary school settings (e.g., Finn, Schrodt, Witt, Elledge, Jernberg, & Larson, 2009). The article then quickly moves to introducing the more recent scholarship that has begun to call attention to the importance of faculty caring to students’ learning and success in higher education (e.g., Meyers, 2009; Slate, LaPrairie, Schulte, & Onwuegbuzie, 2011). According to Miller and Mills (2019), this interest in the impact of caring faculty in higher education has emerged from both rising efforts to retain an increasingly diverse undergraduate student body and questions regarding the unique perspectives and needs of the newest generations of college students, Millennials and Generation Z. The Millennial and Generation Z students are often perceived as needing more attention and care than previous generations (Goldman and Martin, 2016; Varallo, 2008), and as higher education institutions strive to recruit, retain, and graduate these students, questions about what these students need to succeed is garnering center stage attention in numerous institutions (Mintz 2019; Pelletier 2019), including my home institution, the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Thus, the research question posed by Miller & Mills (2019) was: How do Millennial and Generation Z undergraduate students conceptualize caring in higher education and what impact does this have on their learning?

To answer this question, Miller and Mills (2019) carried out in-depth, qualitative interviews and focus groups of undergraduate student attitudes regarding faculty instruction and course material in five historically difficult gateway courses, in both the humanities (history) and in STEM fields (chemistry, biology, and mathematics). The 31 interviews and 1 focus group, which were guided by a standard instrument exploring student perceptions and responses, were analyzed using an interactive, respondent-driven process. The specific topics contained in the instrument included questions on mindset, perceptions of instructors, classroom experiences, college readiness, and study habits. Though several key themes emerged from the data analysis, the article focused specifically on the data related to the theme of caring.

All study participants were in the Millennial and Generation Z birth cohorts, ranging in age from 18 to 29 years old, with a median age of 19 years old. Seventy-four percent of the participants were female and 26% were male. The racial identity of the participants was 55% black and 45% white, with no Hispanic or Asian students. Approximately 70% of the participants were first-generation college students. Participants represented a variety of majors, including humanities, STEM fields, and health care. The average GPA of the participants was 2.75/4.0, which was reflective of the demographic and academic profile of the undergraduate student body.

Overall, caring emerged as a significant theme throughout the data and was directly connected to student motivation to learn. Students clearly related the importance of faculty caring to their engagement in the class, their willingness to work hard, their likelihood of success, and their assessment of the course. As articulated by one student in the focus group: “If they don't care, I don't care.” However, unlike some prior research results (Cooper and Miness, 2014; Tosolt, 2010), Miller and Mills (2019) found that caring was not exclusively viewed by the students as a personality trait or attitude, but was also viewed as a practice evidenced by the teaching techniques faculty members employed.

In fact, in the eyes of the students, use of good teaching strategies often compensated for a perceived “bad” attitude by a faculty member. This finding, as we will discuss, carries with it several positive implications for helping students succeed in higher education. For now, let's examine the two-specific areas in which caring was identified (or not) by students in their interactions with faculty - caring as attitude and caring as teaching practice.

Prior research suggests that Millennial and Generation Z students need and expect a higher level of caring, well beyond what is traditionally expected from a normal faculty role (Varallo, 2008). However, the research by Miller and Mills (2019) suggests “that such extensive emotional investment outside the classroom may not be necessary for students to perceive that faculty care.” Rather, the Millennial and Generation Z students expressed that teachers demonstrated care through both their attitude and their teaching practices and that the use of effective teaching practices trumped a perceived lack of a caring attitude. As stated so effectively by Miller and Mills (2019), “A clear implication of this work is that effective teaching is at the core of caring and should be a priority for student success work on college campuses. When we talk about student success, we often focus on auxiliary or support structures, such as tutoring, supplemental instruction, early alert systems, intrusive advising, and course sequencing or degree paths. All of these elements are important, but not sufficient if in-class engagement of faculty is not present. In fact, utilization of such support structures would likely be enhanced if students are motivated to work harder through their in-class and faculty-to-student interaction experiences. If classes and instruction de-motivate students, they will be less likely to avail themselves of resources. In contrast, if their in-class experiences with faculty inspire engagement in learning, students may well continue that motivation into the resource areas of campus that complement the work of faculty.”

It follows naturally, if effective teaching is at the core of caring, then it is imperative that faculty in higher education be formally trained to teach effectively. As expressed by Miller and Mills (2019), “Faculty development is thus a central component to the student success agenda. Many University faculty members have not had the opportunity to learn evidence-based teaching techniques; providing such development could dramatically improve student learning outcomes and their persistence to graduation.”

This call for faculty to receive some form of teacher training is growing louder. For example, in his Fennema Essay, Richard Felder (2021), comparing two competing paradigms of STEM instruction – the traditional one and an emerging one, posed and responded to the question: “How should faculty members be prepared for their careers?” Addressing the need for faculty training in teaching, Felder writes, “Academicians are arguably the only skilled professionals who are not routinely trained for their careers. The apparent presumption is that if you get an advanced degree in a discipline, you must know how to teach it. (Anyone who has ever been a college student knows otherwise.).” Felder's proposed solution is to provide faculty with training in teaching and building a research program. Felder (2021) goes on to discuss research by Boice (1992, 2000) who studied hundreds of new faculty members and found that roughly 95% of them took an average of 4 to 5 years to meet their institutions’ expectations for teaching effectiveness and research productivity, while only 5% accomplished that in 1 to 2 years (Brent & Felder, 1998). Boice (1992, 2000) also found that effective training can shave years off the new faculty learning curve.

The good news is that training programs for those interested in careers in academics and those beginning careers in academics are available at some higher education institutions, as well as through disciplinary societies1. Although, to my knowledge, these types of programs are not yet commonplace, I am hopeful that more and more programs are in the works – they are surely needed! And perhaps one day teacher training will be required of higher education faculty and, likewise, “good teaching” will be rewarded on par with “good research.”

An example of a program in teacher training for those interested in careers in academics is available in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences at Virginia Tech (2021) through the Graduate Teaching Scholarship (GTS) program. The GTS program prepares doctorate students “to be as bold and creative in the classroom as they are in their research” as stated on the program website. Upon completion of the GTS program, participants receive both a disciplinary-specific Ph.D. and a Future Professoriate certification. These students will have an advantage over their peers, as they bring clear evidence of teaching capabilities and experience at the university level to their academic career interviews.

An example of a program in teacher training focused on those beginning their academic careers is in the College of Agricultural, Consumer, and Environmental Sciences (ACES) at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign2, entitled the ACES Teaching & Learning Academy. The ACES Teaching and Learning Academy (T&LA) is a collaborative 8 to 10-week faculty development program (depending on the year it was offered) designed to enhance the teaching skills that faculty members already possess, while developing new competencies that will make instructional design, delivery, and assessment even more effective. The two overarching goals of the ACES T&LA are to: (1) enhance faculty teaching effectiveness, efficiency, and self-confidence (also termed teacher self-efficacy, that is, confidence in their ability to promote students’ learning) by sharing best teaching and learning practices grounded in research findings; and (2) develop and foster a teaching community, similar to the communities that have evolved related to the research and outreach missions of the University of Illinois. I have been a member of the T&LA teaching team since its inception in Fall 1997 (Schmidt, Buriak, D'Arcy, Litchfield, Javenkoski, and Barrick, 2002).

The T&LA has made a substantial impact on the quality of teaching in the College of ACES at Illinois, as evidenced by increases in student assessment scores of teaching effectiveness, as well as the large number of teaching awards garnered by ACES faculty members over the years. I would strongly encourage all higher education institutions to offer teaching programs for faculty members. It is so essential that we equip faculty with effective and efficient evidenced-based teaching practices3 to help them become scholarly teachers4. In my experience, the longevity of such teaching programs seems to be high if they are faculty-driven, highly valued by department heads as well as upper administration, and immediately useful to the faculty members (they can put what they are learning into practice tomorrow). It is also helpful if the teaching program is sustained by a cohort of faculty who are willing to patiently navigate the ups and downs of changing academic priorities and budget issues, because they are fiercely dedicated to the long-term purpose of the program.

Based on what I am learning about faculty care, I would like to add a couple of items to the ACES T&LA agenda this fall in the session about understanding and caring for our students. The first item is to encourage faculty to not only include student-centered learning objectives in their course syllabus, but also to develop and share with their students student-centered care objectives. I started to work on the care objectives for the students in my freshman level “The Science of Food” course. Though I am still working on the best format for these objectives, here are a few examples of my student care objectives: 1) Because I care, I will strive to make social-emotional connections with my students; 2) Because I care, I will intentionally embed ways5 for my students to build relationships with other students in the course; and 3) Because I care, I will strive to share relatable examples from contemporary social circumstances to help my students connect and engage in meaningful ways with the course content. Of course, just as with student-centered learning objectives, I will need to determine more specifically how I will put each of these care objectives into practice and how their achievement (or not) can be measured.

The second item I would like to add to the T&LA agenda this fall is a discussion about the difference between passive and active caring as talked about by Krall (2018) in his book entitled “Necessary Conditions.” As defined by Krall (2018), passive caring refers to nonspecific attitudes of care from teachers. Teachers are welcoming, but they don't do anything specific to care for their students. Krall (2018) also mentioned that passive caring can be rather one sided, as the student often must care for the work of school before the teacher will demonstrate personal care or interest in the student. Krall (2018) explains that active caring, on the other hand, involves teachers actively getting to know and encouraging their students specifically. For example, in passive caring, teachers know each student's name, whereas, in active caring teachers go deeper and get to know each student's interests and passions. In addition, active caring demands a two-way relationship independent of the student's academic dispositions. In active caring, the teacher intentionally develops a positive relationship with all students, not just those identified as “good” students, with the teacher intentionally providing all students with the same level of personal and cultural care.

As asserted by Krall (2018), “The question of passive versus active caring cuts deep.” Many faculty members love their subject matter and tend to develop active caring relationships with only those students that also love the subject matter and/or perform well in school. The rest of the students don't experience intentional harm, but, as stated by Krall (2018), “the state of the classroom serves to reinforce long-standing gaps in status,” where students who demonstrate enthusiasm for the material or have naturally attractive personalities are elevated, whereas average or soft-spoken students feel invisible and struggling students slide further behind. Krall (2018) suggests that teachers who actively care for their students over the course of the semester, build up “social capital” with each student and are therefore able to push all students when they need pushing and, more importantly, notice in a timely fashion when students need help in the first place. This key connection between faculty caring and enhancing student engagement and learning reminds me of two of my favorite quotes about the impact of caring (Andrew, 2015): “Nobody cares how much you know until they know how much you care” by Theodore Roosevelt and “Brains are like hearts. They go where they are appreciated." by Robert McNamara.

The link exposed by Miller and Mills (2019) between faculty caring and student motivation and success is a very important and timely one, as so many institutions of higher education are searching feverishly for answers to a myriad of student success issues and concerns. If we frame the problem of student success as being about students demanding too much attention or being too needy, “it becomes an intractable one that only can be addressed through massive cultural change” – which is most unlikely to occur. But, “if we consider the power of changing the way we teach, however, the conversation shifts.” Miller and Mills (2019) research “indicates that student motivation can be improved without a huge out-of-class time investment or ‘hand holding’ on the part of faculty. Rather, utilizing adaptive teaching techniques and intentionally communicating that one cares if students learn can impact student motivation and engagement in their own learning process.” This is indeed good news! News that deserves attention, intentional implementation, and continued exploration.

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来源期刊
Journal of Food Science Education
Journal of Food Science Education EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES-
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期刊介绍: The Institute of Food Technologists (IFT) publishes the Journal of Food Science Education (JFSE) to serve the interest of its members in the field of food science education at all levels. The journal is aimed at all those committed to the improvement of food science education, including primary, secondary, undergraduate and graduate, continuing, and workplace education. It serves as an international forum for scholarly and innovative development in all aspects of food science education for "teachers" (individuals who facilitate, mentor, or instruct) and "students" (individuals who are the focus of learning efforts).
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Issue Information Flipped laboratory classes: Student performance and perceptions in undergraduate food science and technology Next steps Student perspectives of various learning approaches used in an undergraduate food science and technology subject Grab the opportunity
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