The Graduate Teacher Training Program: Analyzing and Improving Graduate Student Teaching of PsychologyInaugural Academic Symposium at UVA: April 14, 2011
MotivationLarge number of graduate student TAs.
Incoming TAs often express concerns about teaching.
Training through the Teaching Resource Center and TPT
No psychology-specific training.
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Graduate Student Teaching 2010-2011
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Students Who Teach
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The Graduate Teacher Training ProgramOverview:A two-year program for entering psychology graduate students.
Three main objectives:Orient students to basic practical issues related to college teaching.Provide methods of teaching to implement directly as teaching assistants and faculty.Help students develop teaching philosophies.
Orient students to basic practical issues related to college teaching: Participants attend workshops in:
AssessmentLearningTeaching Techniques
Participants also reflect their experiences.
Provide methods of teaching to implement directly as teaching assistants and faculty: Peer Observations: 4-person groups. Each member tapes themselves teaching twice.Each member also provides feedback on a peers teaching twice.Those being taped reflect on the experience.
Participants create a course syllabus.
Teaching Techniques workshops and talk.
Help students develop teaching philosophies: Mentorship program with psychology professors from James Madison University.
Reflective Teaching Statement.
Several brainstorming workshops.
Participants share drafts with peers and their JMU mentors.
Evidence of LearningPreliminary survey collected upon entrance into program.
Feedback from workshops and our Collab site.
Workshop reflections.
Peer observation reflections.
Semesterly survey.
Course evaluations from undergraduates.
Participants are motivated to reflect on their experiences:
Student Learning was most well-attended.
75% of attendees reflected on the experience.
This pattern is consistent across all workshops, 76% of attendees reflecting on at least one workshop.
First semester findings:Participants remained positive on their feelings of:being effective teachers, t(15) = 2.76, p < .02, one- sample.being fair graders, t(15) = 5.65, p < .001, one-sample. enjoying teaching, t(15) = 4.70, p < .001, one-sample.
Highest rated components:Mentorship and Peer Observation experiences.
ConcernsGrading and creating assessment.Future workshops to address these issues.
Future directions:Second-semester survey.
Spring course evaluation data.
Data will inform program efficacy and participant development.
Findings will be presented at the Eastern Conference on the Teaching of Psychology, summer 2011.
Thank you to:Our faculty board members: Dr. Brian Nosek, Dr. Dan Willingham, Dr. Denny Proffitt, and Dr. David Daniel
Our mentors at James Madison University: Dr. Jessica Irons, Dr. Bryan Saville, Dr. Tracy Zinn, Dr. Suzanne Baker, Dr. Kenn Barron, and Dr. Monica Reis-Bergen
The Teaching Resource Center and Tomorrows Professors Today: Dr. Michael Palmer, and Dr. Deandra Little