Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
What is SoTL
One telling measure of how differently teaching is
regarded from traditional scholarship or research within the academy is what
a difference it makes to have a "problem" in one versus the other. In
scholarship and research, having a "problem" is at the heart of the
investigative process; it is the compound of the generative questions around
which all creative and productive activity revolves. But in one’s teaching,
a "problem" is something you don’t want to have, and if you have one, you
probably want to fix it. Asking a colleague about a problem in his or
her research is an invitation; asking about a problem in one’s teaching
would probably seem like an accusation. Changing the status of the
problem in teaching from terminal remediation to ongoing investigation
is precisely what the movement for a scholarship of teaching is all about.
How might we make the problematization of teaching a matter of regular
communal discourse? How might we think of teaching practice, and the
evidence of student learning, as problems to be investigated, analyzed,
represented, and debated?
Randy Bass, The Scholarship of Teaching: What’s the Problem
http://www.doiiit.gmu.edu/Archives/feb98/rbass.htm
Links
The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching
http://www.carnegiefoundation.org/programs/index.asp?key=21
The International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
http://www.georgiasouthern.edu/ijsotl/sotl.htm