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Office of Faculty & Instructional Development. Preparing a Course Portfolio Workshop Facilitated by Prof. Ali M. Ali Director, Core Curriculum Program, QU November, 2011. Office of Faculty & Instructional Development. Preparing a Course Portfolio Workshop Session 1
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Office of Faculty & Instructional Development Preparing a Course Portfolio Workshop Facilitated by Prof. Ali M. Ali Director, Core Curriculum Program, QU November, 2011
Office of Faculty & Instructional Development Preparing a Course Portfolio Workshop Session 1 Tuesday, November 15/2011 1:00-2:30pm
Contact Information • Name: Ali M. Ali • Position: Director, Core Curriculum Program • Prof. of Instructional Technology • Mobile #: 55314669 • Office #: 4403 - 4043, 4 • Email: Prof.Ali@qu.edu.qa • quccprogram@qu.edu.qa • Location: Exhibition Building, Women’s Section, next to the Library, Room 106, 107.
Workshop Agenda & Activities Self-Introduction of Participants Workshop Goals Workshop Format & Structure Workshop Outcomes
Workshop Agenda & Activities Workshop Strategies Workshop Handouts & Resources
Major Goals of the Workshop Initiate the process of course portfolio development & assessment Develop a mental/visual image/picture of your course portfolio
Workshop Goals What is a course portfolio? what are its major components? Why should I prepare a course portfolios? How to develop my teaching philosophy and course reflection journal?
Workshop Format & Nature A 2- session workshop; Session 1: Tuesday November 15-2011 Session 2: Tuesday, November 22-2011 A follow-up session To be announced in Spring 2012 Interactive workshop that builds on participants’ past experience
Workshop Outcomes An overall structure of your course portfolio. First draft of your teaching philosophy. A set of procedures and guidelines for preparing, compiling, organizing and assessing your course portfolio.
Workshop Materials& Resources Links & Resources Haugen, Lee. “Writing a Teaching Philosophy Statement.” Center for Teaching Effectiveness. Iowa State University. http://www.celt.iastate.edu/teaching/philosophy.html. Montell, Gabriela. “What’s your Philosophy on Teaching, and Does it Matter?” The Chronicle of Higher Education. March 27, 2003. http://chronicle.com/article/Whats-Your-Philosophy-on/45132/. O'Neal, Chris, Deborah Meizlish, and Matthew Kaplan. "Writing a Teaching Philosophy for the Academic Job Search." CRLT Occasional Papers. No. 23. University of Michigan Center for Research on Learning and Teaching. 2007. http://www.crlt.umich.edu/publinks/CRLT_no23.pdf . Van Note Chism, Nancy. "Writing a Philosophy of Teaching Statement.” Ohio State University. http://ftad.osu.edu/portfolio/philosophy/Philosophy.html.
Workshop Materials & Resources Teaching Philosophy Rubrics Below you will find links to three teaching philosophy rubrics suitable for printing. • Teaching Philosophy Rubric 1 (pdf). This rubric allows a reader to rate several elements of persuasiveness and format on a scale of 1 to 5. • Teaching Philosophy Rubric 2 (pdf). This rubric contains prompts for assessing purpose and audience, voice, beliefs and support, and conventions. • Teaching Philosophy Rubric 3 (pdf). This rubric contains prompts for assessing content, format, and writing quality.
Workshop Materials & Resources Links & Resources Philosophy of teaching statements - "Let the brainstorming begin!" (PDF file) Office of Faculty and TA Development, The Ohio State University. Writing a philosophy of teaching statement. http://ftad.osu.edu/portfolio/philosophy/Philosophy.html Chism, Nancy Van Note (1998). Developing a philosophy of teaching statement. http://www.cofc.edu/~cetl/Essays/DevelopingaPhilosophyofTeaching.html
What Does a Course Portfolio Present? • A course portfolio presents the: • Design; • Execution; • Results; and • Future directions • of a particular course that you select overtime.
What Is a Course Portfolio? • An exhibition of evidence on teaching effectiveness; • A detailed anatomy of a course showing what we do as faculty and what students do as learners .
Why Construct a Course Portfolio? To meet one of the requirements of the Faculty Performance Review and Development System To document and provide scholarly evidence of teaching excellence & innovation.
Why Construct a Course Portfolio? To increase self-reflection on teaching and enhance professional growth. To provide a document for internal & external review for promotion, tenure or teaching award.
Major Components of a Course Portfolio 1 Personal Teaching Philosophy Detailed Course Syllabus Samples of Faculty Work Samples of Student Work
Major Components of Course Portfolio 2 Presentation & Analysis of Student’s Results Course Evaluation Results Course Reflection Journal
Additional Components That Might Be Included 1 Faculty Profile Course History Instructional Innovations Attempted
Additional Components That Might Be Included 2 Research on the Course Professional Development Activities Related to the Course Participation in off-campus Activities Related to the Course
Cover / Title PageTable of Contents • Introductory Page • Personal Teaching Philosophy • Course Syllabus & Analysis • Samples of Personal Materials • Samples of Student Products • Course Environment • Course Results & Analysis • Course Reflection Journal • Appendices
Writing your Teaching Philosophy - Your teaching philosophy should present your beliefs, values and attitudes about teaching and learning. - It should include examples of how you put your beliefs into practice by including concrete examples of what you do in the classroom.
Length of a Teaching Philosophy • Approximately one to four pages in length. • Aim for two double- spaced pages. • Keep it focused, brief but cogent and well organized . • Discuss it with your colleagues in your department. • Make your teaching philosophy a road map for preparing your course portfolio.
Getting Started Answer These Basic Questions To Lay The Foundations for Your Teaching Philosophy • What is good teaching? • Howdo my students best learn? • Why is my teaching approach significant? • Who am I as a teacher?
Nature of Teaching Philosophy Philosophies Change As You Grow Professionally • Teaching Philosophies are Organic • What Happens Now? • How Can I Use What I’ve Created? • In The Classroom? • In Interviews? • As A Means for Personal Growth?
Teaching Philosophy Statements • I believe in creating an atmosphere in which students can learn. • I believe in providing students with skills that they can use to teach themselves. • I enjoy lecturing, and I am good at it. I always make an effort to engage and motivate my students when I lecture. Are these as simple as they look?
How Does One Develop a Course Portfolio? Getting Started: The Need for a Model to Follow
A Model for Preparing a Course Portfolio 2 Assess Collect 1 5 Select Organize Close the Loop 4 Reflect 3 6
Constructing Your Portfolio What would I collect? How would I select? How would I reflect? How would I organize my CP? How would I assess my CP?
Constructing Your Portfolio • What would I Collect? • Items related to: • Course design; • Course delivery; • Assessment of student learning outcomes; • Students work; • Course evaluation.
What Would I Collect? • Personal Materials You Constructed • Tests , Quizzes & other assessment tools. • Handouts & Worksheets. • PowerPoint Presentations. • Individual & Small Group Assignments. • Project Descriptions & Scoring Rubrics. • What else do u recommend?
What Would I Collect? • Student Materials / Products • Projects; • Worksheets; • Reports & Essays; • Answers on Tests & Quizzes; • Class Notes; • Feedback on the Course; • What else do u recommend?
What Would I collect? • Materials from Others • Peer Evaluation Reports; • Department Statements; • Honors & Awards; • Commercially Produced Materials. • What else do u recommend?
Constructing Your Portfolio • How Would I Select? • Consider the following criteria: • Quality not quantity; always select the best; • Variety; • Innovation; • Professionalism.
How Would I Select? • Consider Samples from different levels of students success on the same assignments (Excellent, Good & Poor). • Recall what you mentioned in your teaching philosophy and select materials to prove it . • Select materials that document your teaching effectiveness. • What else would you recommend?
Constructing Your Portfolio • How Do I Reflect? • Write a narrative • Link to your teaching philosophy; • Link to your course learning outcomes; • Link to course nature; and • State the connection clearly.
How Do I Reflect? • If possible, write a narrative for each single material you include in your course portfolio explaining your selection and if the material worked or not and why. • Be transparent and through. • What else would you recommend?
Constructing Your Portfolio • How Do I Organize My CP? • Select your course portfolio Format: • Paper; • Electronic (Web, via Blackboard, CD); • Some combination; • Remember, the University will be switching soon to e-Portfolio.
How Do I Organize My Course Portfolio? • Order your course portfolio components logically and systematically using sections. • Make a cover page and introductory page. • Provide a list of contents and give a narrative introduction to each section. • Use Appendices. • Present your portfolio content using different styles (text, diagrams, graphs, tables whenever appropriate).
Constructing Your Portfolio • How Do I Assess My CP? • Self-assessment guided by some criteria or a scoring rubric. • Peer Review. • Benchmarking against other portfolios in the same field& similar conditions.
How Does One Develop a Course Portfolio? Course Portfolio Versus Course Syllabus
Required Elements of a Course Syllabus 1 Course Information Faculty Information Course Description Course Objectives Course Learning Outcomes
Required Elements of a Course Syllabus 2 Content Distribution by Week Delivery Methods Media & Technology Assessment Policy & Tools Learning Activities & Tasks
Required Elements of a Course Syllabus 3 Course Regulations References & Additional Resources • Appendices • Course Matrix • Evaluation Criteria (Rubrics)
Benchmark Your Course Syllabus Use the attached Course Syllabus Review Rubric to determine how comprehensive and effective is your course syllabus
End of Session 1 Thank You Your comments and questions are highly appreciated
Contact Information • Name: Ali M. Ali • Position: Director, Core Curriculum Program • Prof. of Instructional Technology • Mobile #: 55314669 • Office #: 4403-4043, 4 • Email: Prof.Ali@qu.edu.qa • quccprogram@qu.edu.qa • Location: Exhibition Building, Women’s Section, next to the Library, Room 106, 107.