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Showing 1 to 15 of 104 results Save | Export
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Lindsey E. Moseley; Kimberly B. Garza; Channing R. Ford – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2024
It can be challenging to articulate who we are as professionals, especially early in our careers or at transition points. Yet, developing a sense of professional identity as health professions educators is important for feeling confident and knowledgeable in our roles, and for optimizing the development of students. This chapter explores the…
Descriptors: Professional Identity, Allied Health Occupations Education, Allied Health Personnel, Scientists
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Bulloch, Marilyn N.; Giovane, Richard – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2020
Mentorship has existed in the health professions disciplines for centuries. This chapter discusses the challenges of mentorship specifically tailored to students in academic difficulty.
Descriptors: Mentors, College Faculty, Teacher Role, Allied Health Occupations Education
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Jordan, Judith V.; Schwartz, Harriet L. – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2018
Radical empathy positions us to engage and connect with our students while also staying grounded in our role and responsibilities as educators.
Descriptors: Empathy, Teaching (Occupation), Teacher Student Relationship, Teacher Role
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Jerke, Darin; Mosterd, Eric – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2017
This chapter explores the web presence needed for instructors, students, administrators, and staff as hybrid courses are implemented at the institutional level and discusses the physical presence (office(s) and staff) needed to effectively provide and sustain online support for hybrid education.
Descriptors: Blended Learning, Web Sites, Teacher Role, Student Role
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Gale, Richard A. – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2016
Building collaboration with students into the teaching process brings with it many benefits for learning, but it also requires accepting the risk and unease that comes from redefining the roles of students and teachers.
Descriptors: Teacher Student Relationship, Teamwork, Educational Practices, Teacher Role
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Noordhoff, Karen – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2012
This chapter makes the case for engaging teacher candidates with matters of personal identity and integrity, using explorations of the paradox of self and role, in teacher education programs dominated by a focus on professional knowledge and skills, based on the analysis of interviews with novice teachers. The author argues that both teacher…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Teacher Education Programs, Ambiguity (Context), Integrity
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Cuneo, Carl; Harnish, Del; Roy, Dale; Vajoczki, Susan – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2012
There are unique moments in curriculum development when an opportunity for a fresh start or a major turn in design fleetingly presents itself. These moments opened up in different locations across McMaster University at different times and eventually led to several quite different initiatives in inquiry-guided learning (IGL). Well-travelled…
Descriptors: Inquiry, Active Learning, Universities, College Instruction
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Hao, Richie Neil – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2011
Informed by Rosenberg's (2003) concept of nonviolent communication, the author's pedagogical perspective encourages educators to criticize institutional and classroom practices that ideologically place underserved students at disadvantaged positions. At the same time, this perspective urges teachers to be self-reflective of their actions through…
Descriptors: First Generation College Students, Altruism, Teaching Methods, Teacher Role
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Michalec, Paul; Brower, Gary – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2012
A group of faculty and staff gather in a conference room in the student union to share experiences with the soul-role divide at work and in the classroom. The meeting begins with a reminder of the group's conversational norms that invite deep reflection and a safe place for the soul. The purpose of the meeting is exploring the deep heartfelt and…
Descriptors: Meetings, Higher Education, Campuses, Reflection
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Booth, Melanie – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2012
Faculty in higher education may find themselves reading student work or hearing students' voices in class or in online course discussion boards that reveal a lot of personal information, information that they think might be better kept private, information that may be concerning or even threatening. In their attempts to create richer learning…
Descriptors: Learning Activities, Ethics, Assignments, Online Courses
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Austin, Ann E.; Sorcinelli, Mary Deane – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2013
Faculty development has been evolving in focus and form over the past five decades. Originally organized around sabbatical leaves, faculty development now offers a wide array of programs and involves a growing body of highly professional, deeply dedicated professionals. As both faculty members and faculty developers with over fifty collective…
Descriptors: Higher Education, College Faculty, Organizational Development, Organizational Change
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Donovan, Timothy; Porter, Richard; Stellar, James – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2010
The concept of experiential learning, in one form or another, has been around a long time, some would say going back to Confucius. More recently, however, within the United States it was put into practice in a very aggressive form, cooperative education, created by Herman Schneider and initiated at the University of Cincinnati (UC) in 1906.…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, College Programs, Cooperative Education, Program Development
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Colbeck, Carol L.; O'Meara, KerryAnn; Austin, Ann E. – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2008
This volume builds on a relatively new but already rich line of research about education for the professoriate. Several of the authors have previously contributed to the growing body of evidence that shows that the intense formal and informal focus on learning to conduct research in doctoral programs leaves future faculty insufficiently prepared…
Descriptors: Doctoral Programs, Professional Education, Postdoctoral Education, Faculty
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Fong, Mary – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2009
Spiritualism can exist in a secular educational institution. In this autoethnography, the author shares the spiritual challenge she had with students in her initial years of teaching as an assistant professor. She discusses her spiritual pedagogical approach, which she integrates into her teaching strategies to touch the minds, hearts, and spirits…
Descriptors: Teacher Role, Teaching Methods, Mentors, Teacher Student Relationship
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Coppola, Brian P. – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2009
In this chapter, the author begins with something that is nearly self-evident: a primary reason that STEM faculty members are so successful in research, even in the face of constantly changing and exponentially growing information, is the highly intentional program of professional preparation that they receive. For over a hundred years,…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Study, Science Education, Technology Education, Engineering Education
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