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Faculty perspectives and institutional climate for teaching quality in engineering

  • Autores: Jacqueline C. Mcneil, Matthew W. Ohland, Catherine E. Brawner
  • Localización: The International journal of engineering education, ISSN-e 0949-149X, Vol. 32, no. Extra 4, 2016, págs. 1801-1812
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Texto completo no disponible (Saber más ...)
  • Resumen
    • This paper analyzes faculty comments collected in 1997, 1999, and 2002 in surveys of engineering faculty teaching practicesusing thematic analysis. The objective was to see if there were common themes in the comments from faculty in supportive/unsupportive climates. Comments from a 2014 survey administration were classified by teaching practices (traditional vs.non-traditional) and institutional climate (traditional vs. non-traditional), creating four conditions. These comments werethen analyzed using a collective case study approach. The study of the two collections of open-ended comments wassupplemented by multinomial logistic regression of survey items from the 2014 administration relating faculty teachingpractices and the institutional climate for teaching. In the historical data, faculty views of student evaluations evolved fromseeing it as a negative burden to describing is as positive evidence of student learning. Faculty comments included manyreferences to administrators who only ‘‘pay lip service’’ to the importance of teaching, although some faculty spokepositively about their campus’s commitment to quality teaching. Faculty awareness of and pressure to use student-centered methods increased with time. The collective case study identified faculty in all four conditions, although they werenot equally prevalent, and illustrates the experience in each condition using faculty comments.Keywords:engineering faculty; faculty development; institutional climate


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