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Indicators of Teaching Excellence in Higher Education

  • Higher Education
  • Categories:Education Theory
  • Language:English(Translation Services Available)
  • Publication date:March,2025
  • Pages:96
  • Retail Price:(Unknown)
  • Size:(Unknown)
  • Publication Place:United Kingdom
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English title 《 Indicators of Teaching Excellence in Higher Education 》
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Description

An innovative take on the controversial question of teaching excellence in Higher Education (HE). After critiquing the very idea of 'measuring' teaching excellence, Hayes and Garnett offer a critical approach to re-conceptualising and measuring teaching excellence and the controversies surrounding current teaching excellence rankings in the UK and internationally.

The book proposes a shift in conceptualising the ways in which ‘evidence’ of teaching excellence can be produced by higher education providers. It suggests that measurement can be approached as developmental and can create agency for university leaders in making decisions about teaching and learning, in contrast to the performativity of current approaches. It emphasises the impact of teaching and learning processes on student outcomes and the skills required. The book guides readers through statistical approaches which allow exploration of the relationality of epistemic frames of teaching excellence in institutions, ie, how it is comprised of relationships an connections of what happens in classrooms and across the institution.

Written in an accessible style tailored for HE leaders at all levels, this book is packed with real-world examples and opportunities for critical reflection, and can be understood by readers who have no prior knowledge of statistics.

Author

Aneta Hayes is Reader in Education at Keele University. She is interested in applications of critical data science to developing understandings of teaching and learning in higher education. To date, Aneta has applied these interests in publications that tackle the controversial metrics of teaching excellence and how we can change them to decolonise our teaching and to account for epistemic inclusion of (international) students.

Nicholas Garnett is a Principal Lecturer in Psychology at Nottingham Trent University. His expertise is focused across three domains: intervention science, self-limiting behaviours in education, and the impact of policy on educational outcomes. Having worked with a variety of institutions from schools and universities to voluntary and statutory organisations he has a wealth of experience of utilising data to inform and evaluate strategy and policy within complex institutions.

Contents

1. ‘Teaching Excellence’: a contested idea
2. (Mis-) representing teaching excellence in measurement
3. Fixing things with a critical approach
4. Getting on with assessing teaching excellence as a concept of relations – part 1
5. Getting on with assessing teaching excellence as a concept of relations – part 2
6. Indicators of teaching excellence are not just for league tables

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