What do we know of academics’ learning of teaching?

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Research and Development in Higher Education Vol. 36: The Place of Learning and Teaching

July, 2013, 534 pages
Published by
Frielick, S., Buissink-Smith, N., Wyse, P., Billot, J., Hallas, J. and Whitehead, E.
ISBN
Abstract 

Academics in Australian universities are under increasing pressure to teach more students more effectively. To help achieve this goal, academic developers provide a wide range of programmes and support, including graduate certificate programmes, informal workshops and/or self-study modules on particular topics, and other online resources. Despite careful planning, the effectiveness of these programmes is limited by contextual factors and personal factors. Contextual factors include voluntary participation and institutional favouring of research over teaching. Personal factors include academic self-identity and conceptions of teaching. Furthermore, academics report that most learning of teaching takes place outside of the formal curriculum offered by academic developers. To ensure academics are adequately placed to undertake learning of teaching throughout their careers it is essential to understand how they learn. The nature of academic learning of teaching outlined in the literature aligns most strongly with models of self-regulated learning and a longitudinal study based on these models is proposed.

Keywords: learning of teaching, academic learning, academic development