Table of Contents

AY 375 Fall 2014: Sixteenth Day Plan

The final class of Ay375 a discussion of the Teaching Portfolio, where to go from here, and Aaron getting some feedback on his revamped Ay10 course.

General Takeaways

  1. Keep a teaching portfolio. They are becoming increasingly important for faculty applications, and they serve as a good repository of your best teaching practices.
  2. Always keep thinking about teaching, despite what the research mongrels at places like UC Berkeley might tell you. Teaching can have a positive impact on your research, because teaching requires you to consider new material from alternative points of view, which in turn leads to new insights. And it's fun!

Teaching Portfolios and Philosophies (20 minutes)

As a class discussion:

More and more colleges and universities are reexamining their commitment to teaching and exploring ways to improve and reward it. Faculty are being held accountable to provide clear and concise evidence of the quality of their classroom teaching.

What is a teaching portfolio? It is a factual description of your teaching strengths and accomplishments. It includes documents and materials which collectively suggest the scope and quality of a professor's teaching performance. It is to teaching what lists of publications, grants, and honors are to research and scholarship.

The portfolio is not an exhaustive compilation of all the documents and materials that bear on teaching performance. Instead, it presents selected information on teaching activities and solid evidence of their effectiveness.

No teaching portfolio is the same, but there are some common elements:

Material on yourself:

Material from others:

Products of Teacher/Student Learning:

Other items that might appear:

Aaron's Ay10 (40 minutes)

Where To Go From Here and Course Closings (5 minutes)

Homework For Next Time

  1. None! We're done!