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Scholarship
July 3, 2025
Making Teaching and Learning Visible: Course Portfolios and the Peer Review of Teaching
- Author
- Bernstein, Daniel, Amy Nelson Burnett, Amy Goodburn, and Paul Savory
- Publisher
- Anker Publishing Company, Bolton, MA
- ISBN
- 1882982967
- Table of Contents
-
About the Authors
Foreword
Preface
Acknowledgments
ch. 1 Making Teaching and Learning Visible
ch. 2 Capturing the Intellectual Work of Teaching: The Benchmark Portfolio
ch. 3 The Benchmark Portfolio: Five Examples
ch. 4 Inquiring Into Specific Aspects of Teaching: The Inquiry Portfolio
ch. 5 Soliciting and Writing External reviews for course Portfolios
ch. 6 Using Course Portfolios to Foster Campus Collaboration
ch. 7 Creating a Campus Community for the Peer Review of Teaching
ch. 8 Addressing Larger Issues in Peer Review
With higher education’s refocus over the last three decades on bringing greater recognition and reward to good teaching, the idea of peer review has gained popularity. One tool for documenting and reflecting on the quality of teaching and student learning is a course portfolio. A course portfolio captures and makes visible the careful, difficult, and intentional scholarly work of planning and teaching a course.
Illustrated through examples of course portfolios created during a four-year project on peer review of teaching, this book demonstrates how faculty can integrate well-designed peer review into their daily professional lives, thus improving their teaching by incorporating a means for assessment and collaboration and revealing the student learning that happens with effective teaching within an institutional reward systems.
This book offers a model of peer review intended to help faculty document, assess, reflect on, and improve teaching and student learning through the use of a course portfolio. It features a rich collection of materials—including four dozen exhibits to help assemble a portfolio, reviewers’ comments, and reflections drawn from more than 200 professors and portfolio authors in various disciplines and institutions—that faculty can use to develop their course portfolios to be used in their peer review of teaching. (From the Publisher)
Illustrated through examples of course portfolios created during a four-year project on peer review of teaching, this book demonstrates how faculty can integrate well-designed peer review into their daily professional lives, thus improving their teaching by incorporating a means for assessment and collaboration and revealing the student learning that happens with effective teaching within an institutional reward systems.
This book offers a model of peer review intended to help faculty document, assess, reflect on, and improve teaching and student learning through the use of a course portfolio. It features a rich collection of materials—including four dozen exhibits to help assemble a portfolio, reviewers’ comments, and reflections drawn from more than 200 professors and portfolio authors in various disciplines and institutions—that faculty can use to develop their course portfolios to be used in their peer review of teaching. (From the Publisher)