Educational Development Services
The Coulter Faculty Commons educational development staff is comprised of experienced faculty with over 50 years of shared teaching experience in on-ground and online modalities. We have shared below some of the more common requests we receive.
We have changed our service model and are meeting with faculty by appointment only, no walk-ins. Schedule a Consultation by calling the main office at 828.227.7196 and we will get you connected to the CFC team quickly!
Appointments by Request Only
Test Writing Strategies
We support faculty test item writing through sharing of best practices for item construction.
Course Design
We help faculty with backwards course design processes – to emphasize the integration between learning outcomes, assessments, activities, and instructional content. An educational technologist staffed in the CFC often joins the consultation team to work through questions related to the LMS and software we support.
Academic Integrity
We can help you redesign an assignment to minimize student cheating. Many of the tactics we recommend can be implemented by faculty within a few days of the assignment start date. Others are more strategic and forward-looking.
Reading Strategies
Many faculty find students to be reluctant readers yet are dependent on the strong cognitive foundation that close reading produces. We share strategies faculty can share with students, such as the evidence-based practice “Think-Aloud Procedure” when students are tasked with researching and reading on the Internet.
Student-Centered Strategies
We can read and review an assignment for clarity of purpose, tasks, criteria/assessment, and learning-focused qualities. We also offer support for helping transition towards a learner-centered classroom through tools to support student self-assessment, peer assessment, student practice, and portfolio development.
Students Underperforming
Faculty often come to us and are unclear where to start. We are happy to sit down and simply talk about the challenges you are facing, prior to determining a way forward.
Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (SoTL)
The Coulter Faculty Commons supports faculty new to the scholarship of teaching and learning. We can advise good resources and campus connections for getting started. We also provide consultations for faculty related to data analysis and study design.
Teaching Analysis Polls
First-Year Faculty eager for a snapshot of their course (student perceptions of learning, student behaviors, course challenges) have found value in our mid-semester analysis service. Now called the Teaching Analysis Poll, a 20 minute visit to the class provides opportunity to conduct a focus group and confidential report to the faculty member, within a week of the class visit. Aside from this service, we have tools/handouts that can be implemented by the faculty member with same-day opportunity to ascertain student perceptions of the course.
Discussion Strategies
Given the importance of dialogue and inquiry in all classrooms, we emphasize the use of planning tools for faculty to pinpoint anticipated talking points, including questions for anticipated points of diversion. Tools will be shared with faculty during the consultation.
Syllabus Support
The Coulter Faculty Commons maintains the standardized syllabus for the university; it includes procedural and policy-driven verbiage, such as the Inclusive Excellence Statement adopted by Faculty Senate in 2019. In addition, we can read your syllabus for learning-centered qualities using a validated, reliable syllabus tool.
Alternative Assessment
Alternative forms of assessment afforded by strong educational practice or creative uses for the Internet can be brought into the on-ground or online classroom. Testing need not utilize a faculty-created (or publisher-developed) test bank. Includes rubric development, A to Z.
Humanizing Your Online Course
Part 2 of the Inclusive Pedagogy Series I started teaching online in 2003 for a for-profit institution. It was two years after receiving my M.Ed. in Research and Collaboration at TCU where my focus was on online asynchronous learning. I was anxious to apply my...
Prevent Burnout with Self-Care Strategies
Join us for our 2nd Annual Teaching & Learning Day. We will meet from 1 - 3:30 to discuss strategies faculty can use to prevent burnout in these demanding times. We will also discuss ways in which we can encourage and support our freshman and sophomores whose...
To Flip or Not to Flip? That is the Question.
Whether you call it inverted instruction, classroom flipping, or some other term, the concept behind this kind of instruction is basic. Students get the foundational knowledge they need outside the classroom and class time is spent on higher-level learning. Properly...