Title: Pacific Northwest Higher Education Teaching
1Building a Disciplinary Commons using Course
Portfolios
- Josh TenenbergJanet Ash, Donald Chinn, Ravi
Gandham, Michael Gelotte, Richard Hoagland,
Laurie Murphy, Brad Richards, John Staneff,
Phyllis Topham, Jeffrey Weiss
2Teaching as a private activity
- Privatized teaching spaces
- Aside from his syllabi and fading memories, he
had no real record of what happened in those
award winning courses - Institutional isolation (or worse)
3Outline
- Deprivatizing Teaching the Disciplinary Commons
- What did we do?
- What is a Course Portfolio?
- How much does this cost?
- What might you learn?
- Why do this in a single discipline?
- Why do you want to do this with others?
- Do try this at home!
- Where is the Scholarship?
4Deprivatizing Teaching
- Faculty meet on common ground, using scholarly
practices to investigate teaching and learning in
their own classrooms. - The practices and artifacts produced become
common property, available for use and
adaptation by others.
5What did we do?
- 11 Computer Science (CS) teachers meeting
face-to-face, monthly for ½ day throughout the
academic year - Crossing borders CS faculty from different
institutions engaged in common practices and
common goals - Talking about teaching as scholars and
practitioners - Parallel construction and mutual critique of
Course Portfolios - http//depts.washington.edu/comgrnd/
6The Disciplinary Commons A face-to-face Yackpack
7What is a Course Portfolio?
- An organized collection of ideas and principles
that guide the design and implementation of a
particular course. - Focuses on the course.
- It is NOT a student portfolio.
- It is NOT a teaching portfolio, although it can
be part of one.
8What is in a Course Portfolio?
- One or more of the following
- Course description content, structure
- How the course fits in the curriculum
- Course learning objectives
- Teaching methods
- Teaching philosophy
- How learning is assessed
- What you include depends on why you are creating
a course portfolio
9How much does this cost?
- 128 Hours per person (average), as we did it
- Doing it as a group increased the cost due to
meetings and travel time - You can do this by yourself in about 80 hours
direct time - Benefit of group interaction far outweighs
extra cost - Its probably your time, so the institutional
cost is minimal (unless .) - Benefit to your other courses is immeasurably
valuable!
10What might you learn?
- There is commonality of teaching contexts and
practices We are all in the same boat! - Benefit from articulating and sharing your
teaching practices Now you know why you do
things the way you do them! - Realize that some of your practices do not
directly relate to course objectives A reality
check! - Find new ways to enhance the your courses
effectiveness from peer insights A sense of
self-accountability and accomplishment!
11Why do this in a single discipline?
12Why do this in a single discipline?
- Able to make assumptions about understanding
- More emphasis on rational for teaching choices
- More thoughtful peer observations
13Why do this in a single discipline?
non-traditional students
transfer students
teaching load
institutional and individual differences
semester
quarter
budgetary constraints
traditional students
running start students
14Why do this in a single discipline?
The power of the portfolio approach is multiplied
when there are several examples available for a
single disciplinary aspect.
Course Portfolio CSCI144 Evergreen Community
College Java I
Course Portfolio CS 142 South Puget Sound
Community College Object-Oriented Prog I
Course Portfolio CIS 121 Pierce
College Introduction to Computer Information
Systems
Course Portfolio CS-210 Bellevue Community
College Fundamentals of Computer Science I
Course Portfolio CS-210 Bellevue Community
College Fundamentals of Computer Science I
Course Portfolio CS100 Introduction to
Computer Science
Course Portfolio CSCI161b University of Puget
Sound Introduction to Computer Science
Course Portfolio CSCE144 Pacific Lutheran
University Introduction to Computer Science
Course Portfolio Compu 142 Shoreline Community
College Intro. to Computer Programming with
Java
Course Portfolio TCSS 390 UW-Tacma Undergraduate
Seminar in CSS
Course Portfolio CIS 201c Pierce College Intro
to Java
15Why you might want to make a Course Portfolio
- For permission to take the time
- to reflect on what you are doing
- To focus on the Big Picture
- The curriculum/program
- The course
- The teaching
- and focus on an element
- Testing, lectures, homework
16Why you might want to make a Course Portfolio 2
- For permission to research
- From others
- On your teaching
- To Document
- To Share
17Why you might not want to do this alone
- Begin with the end in mind - sharing
- A common framework elicits discipline
- Encouragement and camaraderie in the face of a
rather large amount of work - Building a community of resources
- And besides, it couldnt possibly be as much fun
18(No Transcript)
19Characteristics of Scholarship
- Clear Goals
- Adequate Preparation
- Appropriate Methods
- Significant Results
- Effective Presentation
- Reflective Critique
- Scholarship Assessed Evaluation of the
Professoriate, Charles Glassick, Mary Huber, and
Gene Maeroff, Jossey Bass Publishers, San
Francisco, 1997
20Acknowledgements
- Sally Fincher has been a collaborator throughout
this project. She runs a Commons in the UK. - Funding has been provided by the Washington State
Board of Community and Technical Colleges, the
University of Washington Tacomas Institute of
Technology, and the UWT Founders Endowment. - Julie Jacob of the SBCTC and Orlando Baiocchi and
Larry Crum from UWT have been especially
supportive.
21Participants and Affiliations
- Josh Tenenberg University of Washington Tacoma
- Janet Ash Green River Community College
- Donald Chinn University of Washington Tacoma
- Ravi Gandham Bellevue Community College
- Michael Gelotte Bellevue Community College
- Richard Hoagland South Puget Sound Community
College - Laurie Murphy Pacific Lutheran University
- Brad Richards University of Puget Sound
- John Staneff Pierce College Fort Steilacoom
- Phyllis Topham Shoreline Community College
- Jeffrey Weiss Pierce College Puyallup
22Panel Q/A