Faculty Experience Teaching in an Interdisciplinary First-Year Seminar Program: The Case of the University of Guelph

被引:4
|
作者
Murray, Jacqueline [1 ]
Wolf, Peter [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Guelph, Guelph, ON N1G 2W1, Canada
[2] Queens Univ, Kingston, ON K7L 3N6, Canada
关键词
first-year seminars; faculty teaching experience; faculty professional development; university teaching; educational development; teaching-research link;
D O I
10.5206/cjsotl-rcacea.2016.1.4
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
First-year seminar programs have been a feature on the landscape of post-secondary teaching and learning in the United States, since they first appeared in the 1880s at Boston University (Mamrick, 2005). More recently, they have begun to appear at Canadian universities. For example, first-year seminars were introduced a decade ago at the University of Guelph, as a campus-wide initiative. To recognize the first decade that these unique, interdisciplinary seminars have been offered, faculty were surveyed to understand better the impact of the program on those teaching in it, as well as their perceptions of their students. The experience of the University of Guelph suggests first-year seminar programs can have a significant influence on the teaching and professional experience of faculty and encourages them to extend their networks beyond the department and across the campus. Significantly, seminars serve as sites for pedagogical experimentation that can influence departmental curricula. Faculty who teach a first-year seminar have high satisfaction and report myriad benefits to morale, teaching, and research. The salutary effects of a first-year seminar program are not local but would be transferable across post-secondary institutions.
引用
收藏
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] The Relationship Between First-Year University Students' Characteristics and Their Levels of Interdisciplinary Understanding
    Schijf, Jennifer E.
    van der Werf, Greetje P. C.
    Jansen, Ellen P. W. A.
    INNOVATIVE HIGHER EDUCATION, 2025,
  • [22] Faculty perceptions of teaching information literacy to first-year students: A phenomenographic study
    Dawes, Lorna
    JOURNAL OF LIBRARIANSHIP AND INFORMATION SCIENCE, 2019, 51 (02) : 545 - 560
  • [23] FIRST THINGS FIRST - AN ESSAY ON TEACHING FIRST-YEAR HISTORY AT THE UNIVERSITY-OF-WITWATERSRAND
    KROS, C
    SUID-AFRIKAANSE HISTORIESE JOERNAAL-SOUTH AFRICAN HISTORICAL JOURNAL, 1995, (33): : 119 - 130
  • [24] BMEntored: Enhancing the First-Year Experience in a BME Doctoral Program
    Lacy White
    Mae Lewis
    Marialice Mastronardi
    Maura Borrego
    H. Grady Rylander
    Mia K. Markey
    Biomedical Engineering Education, 2022, 2 (2): : 197 - 202
  • [25] Developing a culture of commenting in a first-year seminar
    Kreniske, Philip
    COMPUTERS IN HUMAN BEHAVIOR, 2017, 72 : 724 - 732
  • [26] A multidisciplinary first-year seminar about tuberculosis
    Fluck, RA
    AMERICAN BIOLOGY TEACHER, 2001, 63 (09): : 648 - 654
  • [27] Using a First-Year Seminar to Introduce Nursing
    Mennenga, Heidi A.
    Tschetter, Lois
    NURSE EDUCATOR, 2013, 38 (05) : 218 - 222
  • [28] A first-year primary care experience for first-year medical students: is it a positive experience?
    Haist, SA
    Blue, AV
    Wilson, JF
    Brigham, NL
    MEDICAL TEACHER, 1998, 20 (04) : 378 - 379
  • [29] Perceived Impact of an Outdoor Orientation Program for First-Year University Students
    Wolfe, Brent D.
    Kay, Gregor
    JOURNAL OF EXPERIENTIAL EDUCATION, 2011, 34 (01) : 19 - 34
  • [30] ELECTIVE CLINICAL TEACHING PROGRAM FOR FIRST-YEAR MEDICAL-STUDENTS
    CURRERI, PW
    BAXTER, CR
    JOURNAL OF SURGICAL RESEARCH, 1973, 14 (02) : 114 - 119