For the 2017 Times Higher Education Teaching Survey, we surveyed more than 1,100 university staff to find out what they think about the state of teaching in higher education. The full results will be published on Thursday 16 February.
In the meantime, many of the respondents took the opportunity to offer some teaching words of wisdom. Here, weāve pulled together some of those top teaching tips. Ā
āThe majority of the āworkā of learning should be done by the student. A teacher is there to make sure they are (vaguely) going in the right directionā
Postdoctoral researcher and part-time lecturer at a Russell Group university in London
āAllow for thinking time and silences; give everybody a chance to speak (even itās just reading out a bit of text)ā
Arts and humanities lecturer at a Russell Group university
Āé¶¹
āEliminate second marking if second markers cannot change marks; otherwise itās a waste of timeā
Arts and humanities lecturer at a Russell Group university
āDonāt lower your standards in pursuit of āstudent satisfactionā. Set the bar high and students will thank you for it in the long runā
Social sciences lecturer at a medium-sized pre-92 university
Āé¶¹
āBe friendly, speak more slowly than normal, repeat key points at least three times and insert silence gaps to allow students to catch upā
Medical sciences lecturer at a Russell Group university
āBe honest with your students about expectations from the beginning. Lay ground rules for email (for example, āI will respond within 24 working hours ā between 9-5, Monday to Friday and certainly not at weekendsā)ā
Arts and humanities lecturer at a pre-92 university in the Midlands
āMake a point that [the lecture theatre] is your space, not theirs. Students should be facing the front, taking notes and respecting their peers. Donāt be afraid to kick people out for being disruptive or to disallow latecomers from enteringā
Science lecturer at a large post-92 university in south-west England
āYour teaching persona can change everything. Donāt pretend to be more serious than you are in real life just because that is how you think most teachers are. Students will see right through itā
Arts and humanities lecturer at a US university
Āé¶¹
āStop allowing students to think they are experts on what they should be learning, and teach them to better respect the skills, education and authority of teaching staffā
Senior lecturer in creative arts at a large university in south-east England
āIf you allow your passion for learning and guiding young people towards discovery to shine through, it will become contagious and infect your students for the rest of their livesā
Head of department at a Canadian university
āHave a good teaching qualification: one in which you have been challenged to develop and rationalise the how and why of what you do as a teacher, and in which your conception of teaching and learning has been discussed and deeply thought aboutā
Senior lecturer in education at a large modern university in north-west England
āDonāt call it āteachingā. Call it āfacilitation of learningāā
Medical science lecturer at a post-92 university in south-east England
Āé¶¹
āTurn off your mobile notifications and check email at set times. Donāt waste energy resenting late-night student emails: ignore them until you start workā
Administrator at a large Russell Group university in London
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