Articles
2018: Conference on Teaching and Learning - Proceedings
What influences teachers to develop their pedagogical practice?
- Per Warfvinge
- Torgny Roxå
- Jennifer Löfgreen
-
Submitted
-
October 25, 2019
-
Published
-
2018-12-06
Abstract
This paper explores to what extent, and how, teachers applying for recognition as excellent teaching practitioners (ETP), express influence of significant others on their pedagogical practice, and how these influences relate to whether the teacher was successful in his/her application or not. The study was based on nineteen portfolios submitted for ETP in 2018 at the Faculty of Engineering (LTH) at Lund University. The portfolios suggest that teachers are primarily influenced by their academic peers and by student feedback. Secondary influencers are pedagogical training and scientific literature. The number of references given to significant others correlate strongly with the chances to be awarded ETP. We suggest that effective academic development and practice are favoured by rich social interactions informed by literature and student voices, benchmarked by stakeholders and facilitated by academic developers.
Similar Articles
-
Marwan Abugabbara,
Zeynep Ekim,
Johan Ingvarson,
Fernando Vieira Lima,
Perceived workload during the pandemic: A study considering students and teachers
,
Project and Conference Reports - CEE, LTH: 2021: Introduction to Teaching and Learning in Higher Education
-
Elham Akbari,
Johan Boström,
Jimmy Ljungberg,
Maximilian Nitsch,
Alsu Zubairova,
Teaching in Swedish for non-native Swedish speakers – Challenges and Opportunities
,
Project and Conference Reports - CEE, LTH: 2022: Introduction to Teaching and Learning in Higher Education
-
Lingdong Jiang,
Javier Linares-Pasten,
Yusak Budo Susilo,
Manish Singh,
Anders Boman,
Approaching teacher self-assessment practice
,
Project and Conference Reports - CEE, LTH: 2016: Introduction to Teaching and Learning in Higher Education
-
Florian Adolphi,
Bryan Lougheed,
Waleed Shoaib,
Abdallah Shokry,
Christian Svensson,
Web-based teaching and learning: A short empirical study with a focus on group work
,
Project and Conference Reports - CEE, LTH: 2013: Introduction to Teaching and Learning in Higher Education
-
Thi Kim Cuong Le,
Meena Raveesh,
Magnus Svensson,
Robin Wollesen de Jonge,
Simon Wozny,
Teaching assistants’ feedback pathways at higher education
,
Project and Conference Reports - CEE, LTH: 2021: Introduction to Teaching and Learning in Higher Education
-
Anahita Baninajjar,
Baichuan Huang,
Peng Kuang,
Filip Malmberg,
Marcus Sandberg,
Elevating Teaching in Computer Science from COVID experiences
,
Project and Conference Reports - CEE, LTH: 2022: Introduction to Teaching and Learning in Higher Education
-
Frida Ekstrand,
Israt Mukti,
Jundie Chen,
Lila Chergui,
Simon Ek,
Previous participants’ perceived value of the course “Introduction to Teaching and Learning in Higher Education”
,
Project and Conference Reports - CEE, LTH: 2022: Introduction to Teaching and Learning in Higher Education
-
Leonardo Colombo,
Juanita Francis,
Azin Khodaverdi,
Karolina Södergren,
Tobias Wrammefors,
How do you teach in a way that makes students see the relevance and applicability of the material?
,
Project and Conference Reports - CEE, LTH: 2022: Introduction to Teaching and Learning in Higher Education
-
Axel Broman,
Erik Löfquist,
Esra Yilmaz,
Lingping Zhang,
Mattias Ammitzböll,
Overview of the Consequences of PhD Students as Teachers
,
Project and Conference Reports - CEE, LTH: 2022: Introduction to Teaching and Learning in Higher Education
-
Daniel Honfi,
Lexin Lin,
Mikael Garmendia Mujika,
Roshni Pramanik,
Emmanuel Raju,
Teaching in a Foreign Country: Challenges and Experiences
,
Project and Conference Reports - CEE, LTH: 2011: Introduction to Teaching and Learning in Higher Education
<< < 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 > >>
You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.