When faculty life is insane (the ENTIRE month of September for most of us), our research agenda can begin to fall behind. It happens. We simply have to grade certain items, or we get pulled into committee meetings now that a new semester is under way, then we find ourselves presenting at conferences (or planning them)...the end result is the same. We are left struggling to get that "research" time. Research time, for me, cannot be a few moments grabbed in between meetings. I truly need time to sink into my research, to wallow into it, to have the literature or data wrapped around me. I can't just stick a toe into Lake Research and find progress has been made. I have go all in. I have to jump. I have to swim.
I need at least an hour of uninterrupted time to make productive advances with my research. Those hours are really hard to find as I near tenure review time. This scares me since, at this point in my career, I need to be the most productive. So, I came up with dedicated time frames for research. And, though I protected them valiantly, I am a mere non-tenured faculty person and there are many things outside of my control (such as meetings called by those who far outrank me). I watched as my research time became less and less prioritized. This had to end!
Enter the Research Power-Hour. Okay, so I made up a cheesy name--but it does reflect the reality of what I now do. I look at my trusty iPad calendar EACH morning and wiggle in at least an hour of time every day. Then, while at the office, I click on my timer app (used for speech classes but handy in the office and kitchen). I have a pre-set time frame, aptly titled "research power hour" and hit start. The first two minutes has me silencing the phone, closing all email account notifications, and posting a note on the shared office door (in a really obnoxious red) saying "do not disturb." And then I put my head down and work.
Often, I am moving along so well that the hour ends and I can hit reset and do another hour (since I'm not distracted by emails and phone), but I do have days where I have to rush right to class, meetings, or open the door and communication channels for office hours. It may not seem like a lot of time, but since implementing my daily calendar reviews and the power hour of research I am able to keep my head above water despite the complete insanity of the year leading up to tenure consideration.
There are some folks who can do this by blocking time at home, but with my teaching schedule I can't get home in between classes and I have so many committee meetings that it is ridiculous. This little solution has helped me continue projects that would otherwise sit for months or end up using every bit of the weekend to try and push a project forward. And, the power hour technique helps me to avoid that guilt.
We know the feeling. That back-of-the-mind-I-should-be-working-on-some-research-right-now-but-somehow-have-to-do-eight-other-things feeling. That has been the best part of the research power hours for me. I find that I don't panic all day and all night about what I'm not doing or how unfair it is that my research time was stolen by Dr. MoreImportantThanMe scheduling a last minute meeting right in my desired time frame. Instead, I can quiet that voice and trust that each day I will make some progress.
This blog examines the world of higher education through a communicative lens. Topics include: faculty life, socialization, issues faced by faculty and administrators, teaching and pedagogy, and technology in higher education. This blog candidly explores trends in higher education culture, access, information flow, and faculty life. @CommHigherEd #facultylife Views expressed on this blog are my own and do not necessarily represent the positions, strategies, or opinions of my employer.
Friday, September 23, 2011
Wednesday, September 21, 2011
Embracing the large lecture environment
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free use: flickr.com |
I sat in a 360-person lecture hall at Purdue University for a few of my science and math classes as an undergraduate and I will never forget the large lecture environment. Students crowding over The Exponent (the campus paper), eating, sleeping, talking, and taking notes. Though there were many amazing professors at Purdue, I had a hard time as a student learning in most of my larger lecture halls. Later, teaching in a larger lecture hall, I realized how challenging it can be to FEEL the audience. It can feel like an echo chamber or it can feel chaotic or, in the best of classes, it can be a dynamic learning environment. It takes some time to develop that large lecture rapport. Reminiscing on my time, I find myself thankful for the ability to currently teach in smaller class sizes. But changes may be on the horizon. Budget cuts, program changes...higher education today is a shifting, uncertain place. I want to be ready for any opportunities or changes that may come. If you're a regular reader, you know that I will (of course) turn to technology to see what might be available to me when it comes to enhancing the larger lecture environment.
So, I have spent a few weeks exploring LectureTools. I found LectureTools while doing a search on lecturing, lecture capture, and student engagement. I initially thought I was exploring another lecture-capture program, but was surprised by the content. If you have a large class, or a student population who seems connected to their digital device, you might find LectureTools helpful to enhance your learning environment. Let me share what I learned and explore some basic uses.
LectureTools is not lecture capture. It is a tool designed to help student engagement during your lecture. It offers a variety of ways for profs to build in interactive elements into the lecture -- students, typically via laptops or cell phones, can participate easily despite the size of the course. Professors prepare materials (stored in the cloud) that can include image maps, free response, rank orders, polls and during the lecture students can respond. Perhaps most useful (in my eyes) is the feature where students can take notes, note their confusion, and type questions the lecturer can address. So even students who may not typically speak up have the chance to be heard. {See more about the note-taking features: http://vimeo.com/26877030}.
An unexpected treat with the notes feature is the ability for the professor to go back, see where many students expressed confusion or interest, and modify future lessons or review information. The site is intuitive to use and there are a lot of demonstrations, videos, screen shots, and the ability to request (and rapidly receive) a demo is easy. They also have a very interesting blog. It is worth a few moments to check out their website and explore the demo videos and overviews if you're teaching a class larger than mine (30 people) or if you are interested in exploring new ways to incorporate interactivity with students.
As a professor, I like the fact that I would be able to save previous lectures and use them in future classes. The interactive tools are very easy to incorporate (just clicks of buttons) and the tool could help those professors struggling to reach students in a large classroom environment. While in class, ideally, a TA would assist or monitor during discussions or live chats (also available). LectureTools is currently adapting to the changing landscape of higher education, too. They are currently working with new features to help add smart phones and iPads (safari-based devices).
My thoughts on LectureTools: it is an interesting way to reintroduce technology-based communication to enhance the learning environment. It would, however, work the best in larger courses and where students own their own laptops/cell phones, and where the professor can utilize a TA to help monitor (and rapidly respond) to questions/thoughts now available through the interactive capabilities of LectureTools.
Keep your eyes open for the upcoming safari-based changes from LectureTools and see if you can change the sometimes cavernous feeling of the large lecture hall by harnessing the true potential for interactivity among all of those students.
Friday, September 16, 2011
Social media in the college classroom
I use social media in all of my classes in one way or
another. I do believe it should have a pedagogical purpose for being in the
class when used with course content---so I don’t like when profs add it just to
add it. It should serve a purpose to reinforce the instruction. I encourage you to use social media as a
way that helps the students to better understand and relate to their course content.
My favorite teaching tool is Twitter, but here are some general ideas for a
variety of social media (see below). Most are free and many the students use
regularly anyway. I hope you may find this information useful.



OR: Have students create and market their own videos involving
the content of the course. They can make a PRIVATE group on an LMS or through
vimeo, youtube or through some other video-sharing services (I use YouSeeU.com)
– They collaborate, synthesize information, create, and post for the rest of
the class to view.



How to get started:
I would first explore your
institutional policy on social media. Then, I want to note that it is best to
consider what type of social media your students are comfortable with. Lastly,
consider what type you are comfortable with. Then, I would recommend you
explore issues of privacy and access. Those questions will help you determine
what type and use of social media is right for your class. If you want public
access option consider Twitter, but if you want a more private option, consider
the LMS wiki or blog features (or make a private page/restrict authors at
Blogger or Wordpress or Wikispaces). As with any assignment, share with the
students guidelines or rubrics.
I have a few of earlier entries on similar topics that you might
find helpful:
Please share any successful ideas that you have for class activities!
I wish you the best of luck!
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Tuesday, September 13, 2011
Gen X women at work in the academy
There has been plenty of research on women in academia, but there should still be MORE in this humble blogger's mind. Today I was reflecting on the role of women in academia after reading the following section of an article:
[From Huffignton Post article, "Gen X women succeed at work, have fewer kids" on 9-13-11]
"The women of Generation X are a hard-working bunch. They're so hard working, in fact, that many of them are opting to not have children, according to new research from the Center for Work Life Policy. The study, titled "The X Factor: Tapping into the Strengths of the 33 to 46-year-old Generation," concluded that Gen Xers, who you might think of as the "Reality Bites" generation, have gradually shed their slacker reputation to become more ambitious and educated.But they are also more likely to be childless than members of their parents' generation -- over 40 percent of women between the ages of 41 to 45 surveyed didn't have children. It's also true that whether it's extreme jobs, or the financial pressure on this generation, many individuals decide they want to do two things well, and not three things badly. Those two things are their relationship and their career."
Though the Center for Work Life study above notes this is a generational trend, it is also a trend long-seen in certain careers, such as higher education. Women in academia have struggled with the decision about if and when to have children while balancing their work life and the tenure track, which coincides with peak/traditional childbearing years. This dilemma showed up in my dissertation research back in 2007 and seems as prominent today. Here is a brief excerpt from my dissertation titled "A phenomenological examination of tenure-track female faculty members' socialization into the culture of higher education" which looked at the lives of 8 pre-tenure, tenure-track women at R1 universities in a variety of disciplines.
"She perceived the males around her as being pushed to move
up more than the females, “I often see male colleagues being more groomed for
leadership positions.” Sandy
remarked that females were equally represented in her field, that her
experiences have been gender-neutral, but that, “I do feel like they [women]
have to do more to be equal.” This showed her concern for gender beyond equal
representation in her field of education technology, but also for equal
acceptance. Dianna felt that sex was an
over-played issue in academia. She did not see any concern about females in her
field. She believed in the truth of hard work, commenting “And I think that you
can do whatever you want as long as you put in the work and set your
boundaries” and added, “You can do it. It just takes perseverance and hard
work.” She had a staunch faith in the fairness of the system and that good work
could not be denied. At the same time, she also believed that females may face
more obstacles than males, but stated with conviction that sex would not
prohibit a hard working assistant professor of either sex from achieving
tenure, “What are they going to say if you have 15 publications? ‘No, you’re not
going to get tenure because you’re female?’ No, they can’t say that. So if you
do the work, you take away the excuses.”
![]() |
"balance" (free use photo from Flickr) |
Others were not as sure as Dianna, after hearing stories of
women who had done everything ‘right’ but who were denied tenure. Simply
working and succeeding within higher education, Olivia felt, was more difficult
for women, because of priorities in their home, social roles, and the necessary
element of relocation for merit pay and advancement in higher education. This was
true for Joyce. After three years in her position, she felt that her
marketability was difficult to enhance because she was uncomfortable moving her
family,
But I have kids. I don’t have that
freedom. Like okay honey, let’s just pull up if you have just a partner and
even then it’s tricky. I have kids; it’s like I’m not pulling them after a
couple of years so that we’re going to move.
Family roles bled over to concerns about sex and how the
women were seen. Taking time off from tenure for children concerned the women.
As Olivia noted,
You have to take time off to
actually have a kid and I think even though some schools, including this school
they’ll give you an extra year on your tenure clock if you have a kid. It’s
still like looked down upon.
Such policies shaped the way Molly saw herself in her work.
The senior women she interacted with had not been supportive and did not offer
empathy when child care issues arose: If I can do it, so can you, without help
or excuses, was the message she received. Even the tenured female faculty
members with children sent that message as Molly noted, “She . . . told a new assistant professor, your
children should never be an excuse for why you’re missing a meeting.” This was
felt by several of the pre-tenure faculty members as warnings about the time
and place for children. Though most did not hear this as bluntly as Martha did,
whose mentor told her, “One should wait until one gets tenure before having
children.”"
I included this excerpt along with Huffington Post's report as a way for
us in academia, male and female, to analyze how we talk with others
about family and tenure. Words like "mommy-track" and "daddy-track" are often times used without thought for the impression they may send those new to academia. This HP article was a great reminder for all of us to be cognizant of the way we interact with our peers AND for us to realize that our professions aren't the only determinant on our decisions. As noted, the generation we come from may also contribute to how we view ourselves, what we value, and the choices we make. Perhaps just as important, we should consider the impact we make on our work culture -- consider what type of culture you are shaping...
- August, L. & Waltman, J. (2004). Culture, climate and contribution: Career satisfaction among female faculty. Research in Higher Education, 45(2), 177-192.
- Banerji, S. (2006). AAUP: Women professors lag in tenure, salary. Diverse: Issues inHigher Education, 23(20), 27.
- Robst, J., VanGilder, J., & Polacheck, S. (2003). Perceptions of female faculty treatment inhigher education: Which institutions treat women more fairly? Economics of Education Review, 22(1), 59-68.
- Takiff, H. A., Sanchez, D. T., & Stewart, T. L. (2001). What’s in a name? The status implications of students’ terms of address for male and female professors. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 25, 134-144.
- Umbach, P. D. (2007). Gender equity in the academic labor market: An analysis of academic disciplines. Research in Higher Education, 48(2), 169-192.
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Friday, September 9, 2011
Prezi's "Zoom back to school" contest
As a huge fan of the Prezi presentational experience, I was excited to see this contest announcement (see previous blog entries: Prezi: the PowerPoint alternative, So you want to learn Prezi, and Prezi retuns). After several months of working with Prezi and now teaching it regularly in the classroom, I find it is a great tool for students AND educators.
The goodies:
-1 winner will win a new iPad, with the Prezi iPad viewer included.
-3 winners will win FREE 1-year Prezi Pro licenses. (If winner already has a Pro license, winner will receive an additional 12 months on the Pro license.)
-Winners will be featured on Prezi.com landing page (1 of 4 featured prezis)
-3 winners will win FREE 1-year Prezi Pro licenses. (If winner already has a Pro license, winner will receive an additional 12 months on the Pro license.)
-Winners will be featured on Prezi.com landing page (1 of 4 featured prezis)
-
Prezi “Zoom Back to School” Contest
In honor of school getting back in session this year, Prezi has put out the call to thinkers everywhere: Create a Prezi teaching us about what are you excited to study this year, and how you are using Prezi to facilitate the open exchange of ideas in your classroom.
One Grand Prize Winner will win a new iPad with the Prezi Viewer, so they can pinch and zoom their Prezis in the classroom. Three runner-ups will also win 1 year Prezi-pro licenses.
Here’s How to Enter: CREATE A PREZI
Tell us about how you plan to use Prezi to teach and learn in your classroom. Inform us about your topic, and what makes you so excited about it.
POST YOUR PREZI on the PREZI FACEBOOK
Just visit our page and click on the “Like” button at the top. Then submit your prezi on the “Contests” tab at Left.
TELL THE WORLD
The Prezi with the most “Likes” on Facebook wins; So get the word out about your Prezi!
WIN!
Grand Prize: Wins a new iPad with the Prezi Viewer iPad app. 3 Runners-up: Win free Prezi Pro Accounts
Contest Guidelines:
• Your Prezi should showcase a “Lesson” about the ideas you are excited to explore this year. It should teach people about your subject.
• Best Use of the Prezi Functionalities: How can you use the possibilities of Prezi in innovative ways to best illustrate your concepts?
• Most Fun! How can you use Prezi to show just how excited/ passionate you are.
• Most Liked: Spread the word and get people to ‘like’ your prezi!
The “Zoom Back to School” Contest is open for submissions now until October 15th, 2011. Then there will be a 2 week voting period, until October 30th. Winners will be announced on November 1.
Thanks everyone- we look forward to seeing how you plan “Zoom Back to School” this year with Prezi! - Contest Starts: September 01, 2011 @ 12:01 am (PDT)
- Contest Ends: October 15, 2011 @ 11:59 pm (PDT)
Best of luck to all who enter!
Images from www.Prezi.com
Thursday, September 8, 2011
Prepping for RTP
How can we examine faculty life without talking about RTP (retention, tenure, promotion)? While institutions vary in their policies and in their acronyms, there are many similarities that can help new and more seasoned faculty members through the tenure journey.
At my institution, we have RTP. One of the great things (and really annoying things) about my institution is the policy that all tenure-track faculty must submit an annual retention package. This is annoying only because it is a TON of work at the busiest time of the year (August-September). The annual RTP dossier is great for many reasons, it allows you to examine what progress you have made in the past year, it helps you see holes in your faculty work ('oops, I need more publications' or 'uh oh, my service record really dropped this year'), it helps you organize your semester and plan for activities (see previous post"The Tenure Tally"), it organizes your work so that the tenure dossier should be quite easy to put together. In fact, my entire filing system has morphed into a version of my annual retention packet.
Whether going up for Full Professor or just starting your first year on the tenure track, here are a few things that have helped me while I complete my annual packet.
BEFORE step 1: Read your institution's policies. Be familiar with the handbook and their expectations. The scoring procedure at my institution detailed how I should break down my dossier. This then lead directly to how I would file my work and organize my documents. Without that knowledge, even the best filing system won't save you time or energy when you need to create your RTP dossier.
1. Organizing throughout the year. All year, I file everything (hard copy and electric files are managed in the same way). I do this by academic year. Then I split up the files into the
six categories for retention (the same six will be for tenure). Then
(because I am really over-committed to organization), I color-code
sub-folders. I keep files out that are in-progress and anything that is
complete is filed in the appropriate folder, so by the time the
retention dates come up I can simply grab the folder marked
"Grant-writing efforts" and copy the items to include in the dossier.
All of the "evidence" required for the retention packet is continually
placed right where I'll need it come RTP time. When you're busy and overwhelmed, you can easily shove a folder in the right spot--so it may get messy, but it is a very organized type of mess (see picture).
2. I focus on colored sticky notes and flags that highlight important parts of documents. This helps me to remember why I think a certain document should go in the dossier or why I placed a document in a certain section. This handy sticky note system was given to me by my father and it works beautifully for the task. The sticky notes last forever (as you can see) and I use primarily green and yellow.
3. Pictures. Why not include some pictures in the dossier? Show the committee that you were registering, that the club you advise hosted an event, that you spoke at the conference. I add all kinds of evidence to help the reviewers move through the dossier easily.
4. Electronic supplements. My institution does not utilize e-dossiers or allow their submission, unfortunately, but if yours does then consider the structure and organization carefully. It should "read" in line with your RTP standards.
4. Retain copies or electronic scans of everything you submit. Though rare, problems can happen. Take the time to give yourself a back-up option and keep copies or e-copies of everything. I have a dedicated external hard drive for this. The finished version should be a well-organized, clearly structured, dossier that easily mirrors the scoring process for your RTP requirements. This means the committee can find what they need, can score you on your actual work, and you again can see areas that may need to be developed before the next RTP step.
5. Repeat steps 1-4. Each year do these steps. Then, by the time you prepare your Tenure (or Promotion) packet, you have everything right where it should be.
How do you communicate what work you have done and who you are academically? The trick is to make the dossier speak for you. It should be professional, polished, organized, and efficient--just like you. So take the time out NOW to organize for the future. Plan ahead for materials and procedures so the image you put forward gives you the best chance to attain your faculty goals.
This entire post encourages faculty to work smarter and not harder. Work throughout the year (and throughout your pre-/post-tenure track time) to focus on the next career stage and make informed, focused decisions based on your accomplished tasks. Best of luck to you wherever you are on the RTP journey!
At my institution, we have RTP. One of the great things (and really annoying things) about my institution is the policy that all tenure-track faculty must submit an annual retention package. This is annoying only because it is a TON of work at the busiest time of the year (August-September). The annual RTP dossier is great for many reasons, it allows you to examine what progress you have made in the past year, it helps you see holes in your faculty work ('oops, I need more publications' or 'uh oh, my service record really dropped this year'), it helps you organize your semester and plan for activities (see previous post"The Tenure Tally"), it organizes your work so that the tenure dossier should be quite easy to put together. In fact, my entire filing system has morphed into a version of my annual retention packet.
Whether going up for Full Professor or just starting your first year on the tenure track, here are a few things that have helped me while I complete my annual packet.
BEFORE step 1: Read your institution's policies. Be familiar with the handbook and their expectations. The scoring procedure at my institution detailed how I should break down my dossier. This then lead directly to how I would file my work and organize my documents. Without that knowledge, even the best filing system won't save you time or energy when you need to create your RTP dossier.
![]() |
Organized by year, then category & color-coded |
![]() |
Sticky notes to help organize |
3. Pictures. Why not include some pictures in the dossier? Show the committee that you were registering, that the club you advise hosted an event, that you spoke at the conference. I add all kinds of evidence to help the reviewers move through the dossier easily.
4. Electronic supplements. My institution does not utilize e-dossiers or allow their submission, unfortunately, but if yours does then consider the structure and organization carefully. It should "read" in line with your RTP standards.
4. Retain copies or electronic scans of everything you submit. Though rare, problems can happen. Take the time to give yourself a back-up option and keep copies or e-copies of everything. I have a dedicated external hard drive for this. The finished version should be a well-organized, clearly structured, dossier that easily mirrors the scoring process for your RTP requirements. This means the committee can find what they need, can score you on your actual work, and you again can see areas that may need to be developed before the next RTP step.
5. Repeat steps 1-4. Each year do these steps. Then, by the time you prepare your Tenure (or Promotion) packet, you have everything right where it should be.
How do you communicate what work you have done and who you are academically? The trick is to make the dossier speak for you. It should be professional, polished, organized, and efficient--just like you. So take the time out NOW to organize for the future. Plan ahead for materials and procedures so the image you put forward gives you the best chance to attain your faculty goals.
This entire post encourages faculty to work smarter and not harder. Work throughout the year (and throughout your pre-/post-tenure track time) to focus on the next career stage and make informed, focused decisions based on your accomplished tasks. Best of luck to you wherever you are on the RTP journey!
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The finished product! A dossier full of organized "evidence" |
Tuesday, September 6, 2011
The super power of productive faculty
One of the things I love, and hate, about faculty life is the flexible job description. So often, we can carve out our own path and enjoy our own interests while providing service to the institution. You like discussing pedagogy and new instructional ideas? Serve on the institution's CETL committee. Eager to guide the institution toward a certain role in the landscape of higher education? Consider the community outreach committees. Do you have a desire to speak for other faculty? Why not serve a term on faculty senate?
But there are times when the lack of boundaries in a faculty member's job description can lead to an overworked and over-committed professor. Yes, I know, I know. I am completely ruining your previously held belief that faculty members not only should, but could, do all things academic. However, too many of us are being used in ineffective ways. Are you shocked? Ask around. See what your colleagues say. There are many of us who have a variety of skill sets that may not be fully maximized by our institutions. And perhaps worse, we are losing energy and zest working outside of those skills trying to meet the needs of everyone all the time.
What can we, mere faculty members, do about this gross oversight? Break out your cape and get ready to use the one super power we all have. What is it? It is a tantalizingly simple, often over-looked, usually under-used word: "No."
Those faculty members who seem to "do it all" and manage everything actually use this superpower. Watch them in action! They skillfully target their skills to the issues, move tasks to others, and say "no" with confidence and tact.
Now we all know it is not as easy as saying no, but so many of us fear that word will raise a complicated issue (and we certainly should just say "yes" so we don't have to link ourselves in the potential problems around the word "no") that we don't use it -- but let me share something with you: we all have this super power. Why not explore yours? If you never try it, you'll never know!
I speak from years of heavy-service experience. You name the committee and I've probably served on it. Strategic planning, re-accreditation (times 3), student review, grants and outreach, countless searches, QEP, women's council, CETL, student conduct, faculty senate...from university-wide to departmental, I've been lifting that service load. Until I learned that the earth did not shatter when I threw on a (mental) cape, strapped on (imaginary) boots, and found confidence behind a (completely unreal) mask as I tried this new super power out. Would it work for me? Could I see it in action as it righted previous wrongs and cleansed the area of (not-so-evil, but definitely problematic) time-stealing requests? Yes.
Don't mistake me. I encourage you to participate actively in your campus (See "Service: Who participates?" and "demographics of service" blog entries about some benefits/drawbacks to junior faculty serving on committees). We can learn from committees. Meet colleagues from"other" parts of campus. Be involved in the future direction of our institutions. But also be realistic (she says sardonically as she houses this blog entry in the metaphor of super heroism). Focus on committees that YOU want to be involved with OR those that can benefit from the skills/background/knowledge that you can bring to the table. Try to be sparing and purposeful in your service. Learn and befriend the word "no" -- it truly has remarkable powers. Though still on the puny side in my ability (as I am rather new to the use of this power), I can now call up this remarkable word and use it to improve faculty life. Do you also have this power? Do you dare give it a try? Seeing that I have tested it out for you and the end-of-the-world-doom-and-gloom image some of us have around using the word is not true, why not? There were no explosions, no glares, no whispered comments, no earth cracking in half or sun exploding. I promise. I tried it. Will you?
But there are times when the lack of boundaries in a faculty member's job description can lead to an overworked and over-committed professor. Yes, I know, I know. I am completely ruining your previously held belief that faculty members not only should, but could, do all things academic. However, too many of us are being used in ineffective ways. Are you shocked? Ask around. See what your colleagues say. There are many of us who have a variety of skill sets that may not be fully maximized by our institutions. And perhaps worse, we are losing energy and zest working outside of those skills trying to meet the needs of everyone all the time.
![]() |
What can we, mere faculty members, do about this gross oversight? Break out your cape and get ready to use the one super power we all have. What is it? It is a tantalizingly simple, often over-looked, usually under-used word: "No."
Those faculty members who seem to "do it all" and manage everything actually use this superpower. Watch them in action! They skillfully target their skills to the issues, move tasks to others, and say "no" with confidence and tact.
Now we all know it is not as easy as saying no, but so many of us fear that word will raise a complicated issue (and we certainly should just say "yes" so we don't have to link ourselves in the potential problems around the word "no") that we don't use it -- but let me share something with you: we all have this super power. Why not explore yours? If you never try it, you'll never know!
I speak from years of heavy-service experience. You name the committee and I've probably served on it. Strategic planning, re-accreditation (times 3), student review, grants and outreach, countless searches, QEP, women's council, CETL, student conduct, faculty senate...from university-wide to departmental, I've been lifting that service load. Until I learned that the earth did not shatter when I threw on a (mental) cape, strapped on (imaginary) boots, and found confidence behind a (completely unreal) mask as I tried this new super power out. Would it work for me? Could I see it in action as it righted previous wrongs and cleansed the area of (not-so-evil, but definitely problematic) time-stealing requests? Yes.
![]() |
http://images.cdn.fotopedia.com/flickr-142079357-hd.jpg |
Don't mistake me. I encourage you to participate actively in your campus (See "Service: Who participates?" and "demographics of service" blog entries about some benefits/drawbacks to junior faculty serving on committees). We can learn from committees. Meet colleagues from"other" parts of campus. Be involved in the future direction of our institutions. But also be realistic (she says sardonically as she houses this blog entry in the metaphor of super heroism). Focus on committees that YOU want to be involved with OR those that can benefit from the skills/background/knowledge that you can bring to the table. Try to be sparing and purposeful in your service. Learn and befriend the word "no" -- it truly has remarkable powers. Though still on the puny side in my ability (as I am rather new to the use of this power), I can now call up this remarkable word and use it to improve faculty life. Do you also have this power? Do you dare give it a try? Seeing that I have tested it out for you and the end-of-the-world-doom-and-gloom image some of us have around using the word is not true, why not? There were no explosions, no glares, no whispered comments, no earth cracking in half or sun exploding. I promise. I tried it. Will you?
Friday, September 2, 2011
Climbing the ladder
Somehow, years have passed and I am no longer an institutional "newbie" -- I now find myself answering a lot of questions from newer faculty members. This includes questions on tenure, retention process, service, and institutional policies. Just this week, I had newer colleagues seek information on the deadline for our annual retention packets, had others seek to review mine from last year as a sample, and was asked to "discuss managing writing and teaching" by two who are newer to the institution. I was shocked. Have I really become a less-junior faculty member? Have I moved out of the "new junior faculty member" phase to the "old junior faculty member" phase. Is there such a thing? I go up for tenure next year and though I often write about the pressures, joys, and the issues related to tenure track life, I was surprised to be so heavily sought out these first two weeks of the term.
When others come to me, I share my successes and those important lessons that I had to learn on my own no matter how many folks told me (protect your writing time is a prime example). I avoid a laundry list of problems or struggles, resisting negativity and 'venting' about the process. These are new faculty, so I try to offer them meaningful assistance. I focus on techniques and avoiding pitfalls. I found myself repeating a few references and tips often enough that I think they merit mentioning here. I hope you or your colleagues may find them useful as the new semester moves forward:
Lora's lessons:
Share your tactics by commenting on this post: what advice do you have for new or junior tenure-track faculty? What lessons have you learned as you journey along the tenure track?
When others come to me, I share my successes and those important lessons that I had to learn on my own no matter how many folks told me (protect your writing time is a prime example). I avoid a laundry list of problems or struggles, resisting negativity and 'venting' about the process. These are new faculty, so I try to offer them meaningful assistance. I focus on techniques and avoiding pitfalls. I found myself repeating a few references and tips often enough that I think they merit mentioning here. I hope you or your colleagues may find them useful as the new semester moves forward:
Lora's lessons:
- Craft your campus communication carefully. Whether inter-personally in a face-to-face setting or via email, be aware of tone and image at all times.
- Communicating in the culture of higher education can be tricky. There are multiple audiences with a variety of personal and professional stakes in your addition to the faculty/department/institution. Go slow and steady until you get a feel for your department and institution.
- Find a person OUTSIDE of your institution, but familiar with academia, to use as not only a mentor, but a relatively objective outsider. Bounce off issues that are too political or personal to bring to the institution. Use this person as a sounding-board.
- Seek out a mentor INSIDE the institution. Do this carefully. Explore research efforts, grant writing, observe collegiality, and then determine if that faculty member could work as a good mentor for you. Schedule regular meetings that have clear goals to help you with areas that are a challenge...I even kept a little running list of things to ask my inside/outside mentors such as: How do I say 'no' to committee work? What committees should I serve on as a new faculty member? Will any of XYZ activities count toward tenure? What should I improve upon?
- Schedule that writing time and protect it as you would any meeting in your calendar. This is an on-going struggle for me, but it is something I strive for at the beginning of each day.
- Put on your research-colored glasses. View EVERYTHING as an opportunity to begin a new research project. Keep something in the research pipeline at all times. Follow up regularly and stay active.
- Reach out to your students. Show them you want them to succeed and that teaching is a valuable part of your day. If the students are a continuous joyful part of your daily life then the rest of faculty life becomes much easier and colleagues begin to see you as a long-term part of the department.
- Explore the institution's history (and the area's history if you are new to the region). This can not only inform your activities, hobbies, and social activities, but it can add a lens to any research and help you to understand students and institutional culture.
- Boice, R. (2000). Advice for new faculty members. Needham Heights, MA: Allyn & Bacon.
- hooks, b. (1994). Teaching to transgress: Education as the practice of freedom. Routledge.
- McKeachie, W. (2010). McKeachie's teaching tips, 13th ed. Belmont, CA: Wadsworth.
- Schoenfeld, C., & Magnan, R. (2004). Mentor in a manual: Climbing the academic ladder to tenure. Madison, WI: Atwood Publishing.
- Smith, J. O. et al. (2001). Peer networking as a dynamic approach to supporting new faculty. Innovative Higher Education, 25, 197-207.
Share your tactics by commenting on this post: what advice do you have for new or junior tenure-track faculty? What lessons have you learned as you journey along the tenure track?
Thursday, September 1, 2011
Instructors talking about technology research: Participants needed!
We are conducting a study looking at how instructors talk about
technology and its use in their classroom syllabus. If you are currently
teaching a class that talks about technology in your syllabus (i.e.,
you have a laptop and/or cell phone policy, discuss how blogs or wikis
will be utilized in the classroom), and would be willing to share your
syllabus with us, and fill out a quick survey (under 10 minutes) about
your teaching experiences, your participation would be greatly
appreciated. The results of this study may help researchers and
instructors better understand technology policies. We will accept
syllabus submissions through October 31, 2011.
If you choose to participate, you will first submit a copy of your syllabus to CommInstructionalDesign@gmail.com . You will next be provided with a response email including access to a survey website that will have the consent information provided. If you agree to participate in the study, you will move forward and respond to demographic questions about your past teaching (i.e., number of years). You will also respond to questions about your views of technology and technology use. Any demographic data collected from this study will only be used to describe the participants as a whole in the study write up, but individual information will be destroyed after the summary is constructed.All personal identifying information will be removed from all aspects of the data before analysis.
There is minimal risk involved with the study, as you might feel uncomfortable thinking about your classroom technology policies. However, you may skip any questions that you are uncomfortable with. There is no more risk than you would experience in your daily interactions.
Your identity will not be revealed in either written documents, or verbal presentations of the data. The following steps will be taken to protect your identity and confidentiality.
1. Consent forms will be separated from the data.
2. Personal identifying information will be eliminated from the data and any reporting of the data.
3. You can refuse to answer any question asked.
4. Files will be kept on a password protected computer and/or a locked cabinet.
If you have questions about the study or research related injuries, feel free to contact the primary investigator, Katherine Denker, (765) 285-1965 or kjdenker@bsu.edu. Lora Helvie-Mason can be contacted at (504)286-5013 or helviemason@gmail.com or lmason@suno.edu. If you have questions about your rights as a research subject, please contact: Research Compliance, Sponsored Programs Office,Ball State University,Muncie, IN 47306, (765) 285-5070, irb@bsu.edu
Your participation is voluntary. You may quit at any time and you may refuse to answer any question. Finally, by submitting a syllabus and completing the survey you are giving consent to participating in the study.
Thank you for your participation!
Dr. Katherine Denker
Dr. Lora Helvie-Mason
If you choose to participate, you will first submit a copy of your syllabus to CommInstructionalDesign@gmail.com . You will next be provided with a response email including access to a survey website that will have the consent information provided. If you agree to participate in the study, you will move forward and respond to demographic questions about your past teaching (i.e., number of years). You will also respond to questions about your views of technology and technology use. Any demographic data collected from this study will only be used to describe the participants as a whole in the study write up, but individual information will be destroyed after the summary is constructed.All personal identifying information will be removed from all aspects of the data before analysis.
There is minimal risk involved with the study, as you might feel uncomfortable thinking about your classroom technology policies. However, you may skip any questions that you are uncomfortable with. There is no more risk than you would experience in your daily interactions.
Your identity will not be revealed in either written documents, or verbal presentations of the data. The following steps will be taken to protect your identity and confidentiality.
1. Consent forms will be separated from the data.
2. Personal identifying information will be eliminated from the data and any reporting of the data.
3. You can refuse to answer any question asked.
4. Files will be kept on a password protected computer and/or a locked cabinet.
If you have questions about the study or research related injuries, feel free to contact the primary investigator, Katherine Denker, (765) 285-1965 or kjdenker@bsu.edu. Lora Helvie-Mason can be contacted at (504)286-5013 or helviemason@gmail.com or lmason@suno.edu. If you have questions about your rights as a research subject, please contact: Research Compliance, Sponsored Programs Office,Ball State University,Muncie, IN 47306, (765) 285-5070, irb@bsu.edu
Your participation is voluntary. You may quit at any time and you may refuse to answer any question. Finally, by submitting a syllabus and completing the survey you are giving consent to participating in the study.
Thank you for your participation!
Dr. Katherine Denker
Dr. Lora Helvie-Mason
Tuesday, August 30, 2011
Getting hands-on
There are times in this faculty life where the students simply inspire you to get out of bed and face another day. This usually happens after we stumble to our coffee cups, mentally start ticking through the tasks of the week/day, and realize we are overwhelmed. The crushing sense of panic begins: the research deadlines have been screaming at you, there may be un-analyzed data collecting dust, emails from students must be answered, there are meetings that require your participation, collaborative projects insist on your time. In short, faculty-life creeps like a fog over all of your life, becoming part of your thoughts, and your focus is never fully shifted elsewhere...
Until those amazing students come snap you out of it with their energy, ideas, and dedication.
I take strength from my students' presence. I know they are worth every effort and yesterday they buoyed me up as I face those (insane) September deadlines. As the faculty advisor for a student club, I am constantly rewarded by students and their desire to work. Yesterday the officers of our club met and I was reminded, again, how important it is to give students true trust and work---they can handle it! They are clamoring for hands-on activities and willing to push their learning beyond the campus.
As faculty, we should not only encourage this, but also facilitate it! It doesn't take much time to help students find a forum for all of that energy. It might be a regional or national research project, or a simple undergraduate research day (see previous blogs, "renewed by student research" and "undergrad research during fiscal cuts" ), or you can go further and embrace a community event or competition. We host a lot of community outreach activities and the students learn about their majors, their communities, and themselves with hands-on efforts. Whether it is a spoken word poetry event in town, a 5k charity walk or competing for the College Television Awards, I push my students to go beyond the college classroom.
One competition that I am encouraging all of my students to explore is the Adobe Imagination Challenge. This is a student-friendly contest with several deadlines (the first opened last week and continues through 9/3 while others are:9/4-9/17, 9/18-10/1, and 10/2-10/15.
What do they have to do? Simple! They embrace their creative side and use the Adobe Creative Suite 5.5 Student and Teacher Edition to craft a project which Adobe says should "take our breath away." What incentive do your students have? There are 5 chances to win $10,000 and 36 chances to win $550. Let your students, regardless of their discipline, take time to work hands-on in this great challenge. Plus they can vote, visit the galleries, and get inspired by other students. What a great way to expand the walls of your classroom while fostering hands-on experience for students!
Are your students missing out on Adobe products? Then try out the free 30-day trial on Priemier Pro, Photoshop, Firewroks, and Illustrator or encourage your students to take advantage of the awesome student discount.
Let's see what they can create when given Adobe's CS5.5 tools and a little faculty encouragement.
Good luck!
Until those amazing students come snap you out of it with their energy, ideas, and dedication.
I take strength from my students' presence. I know they are worth every effort and yesterday they buoyed me up as I face those (insane) September deadlines. As the faculty advisor for a student club, I am constantly rewarded by students and their desire to work. Yesterday the officers of our club met and I was reminded, again, how important it is to give students true trust and work---they can handle it! They are clamoring for hands-on activities and willing to push their learning beyond the campus.
As faculty, we should not only encourage this, but also facilitate it! It doesn't take much time to help students find a forum for all of that energy. It might be a regional or national research project, or a simple undergraduate research day (see previous blogs, "renewed by student research" and "undergrad research during fiscal cuts" ), or you can go further and embrace a community event or competition. We host a lot of community outreach activities and the students learn about their majors, their communities, and themselves with hands-on efforts. Whether it is a spoken word poetry event in town, a 5k charity walk or competing for the College Television Awards, I push my students to go beyond the college classroom.
![]() |
https://students-adobe.com/na?sdid=JBRUY |
What do they have to do? Simple! They embrace their creative side and use the Adobe Creative Suite 5.5 Student and Teacher Edition to craft a project which Adobe says should "take our breath away." What incentive do your students have? There are 5 chances to win $10,000 and 36 chances to win $550. Let your students, regardless of their discipline, take time to work hands-on in this great challenge. Plus they can vote, visit the galleries, and get inspired by other students. What a great way to expand the walls of your classroom while fostering hands-on experience for students!
Are your students missing out on Adobe products? Then try out the free 30-day trial on Priemier Pro, Photoshop, Firewroks, and Illustrator or encourage your students to take advantage of the awesome student discount.
Let's see what they can create when given Adobe's CS5.5 tools and a little faculty encouragement.
Good luck!
Tuesday, August 23, 2011
The first week: revisited
There's something wonderful about the first days of class. The students are energized, the environment seems exciting, and faculty are engaging. Wouldn't it be nice if we could bottle it all up and store it for those other times in the semester (midterms, finals) when the energy level starts to drain?! I've had two beautiful days in the first week of this new term, and I can already tell my students are going to make it a great semester. Isn't it comforting to see the students bring ALL of themselves to the class? To see students go beyond "checking in" to a class and push to really be involved and a part of the class...it is magical.
But facing that group of desks can sometimes be a challenge. Over the years, I have found a few easy steps help to foster that exciting energy in the classroom during the first week of class. These are easy, no-cost ways to start the semester off with a bit of zest and a little zing:
Good luck and best wishes for a GREAT term ahead!
UPDATE:
I had a few emails about the class bingo idea. Here's what the bingo sheet looks like (used this week for a class). I hand it out and then the students wander around meeting one another and initialing the box that matches their "unique fact" -- it is fun as I award 3-5 "bingo prizes" so there is a fun sense of urgency and competition and it only takes a few moments! Let me know if you give it a try and how you found it to work. Thanks for all of the interest!
![]() |
http://www.flickr.com/photos /28481088@N00/2992013920/ |
But facing that group of desks can sometimes be a challenge. Over the years, I have found a few easy steps help to foster that exciting energy in the classroom during the first week of class. These are easy, no-cost ways to start the semester off with a bit of zest and a little zing:
- Be prepared. Have all of your materials in order before the first day. Students can easily find the items (online or on campus) and see that you have a detailed plan for the semester.
- Spice it up a bit. The first week can be tedious for students as they wander from class to class hearing lists of requirements read verbatim from the syllabus. Add examples, dynamic questions, or sample situations that help students visualize what you want from them while providing information. Consider student activities where they move around, meet one another, and begin with the course content. Activity idea: The first day of class I collect the common note card full of student contact information. I add to it the prompt: "List one unique factor about yourself" -- then I take that information and make a sort of BINGO sheet using the unique factors as squares. Students on the second day of class go around trying to find the person who matches the factor...and try to find enough in a row to make a BINGO. I have pens/pencils/mini-staplers/sticky notes that I buy at super discounted prices as a prize option to keep it interesting.
- Variety. The first day should involve a little burst of what students will see from YOU this term. So, engage them accordingly. Activity idea: I do this by showing my energy for the topic, providing a brief narrative, and then turning it around to the students so THEY tell ME what they will get out of the class. It is a great way to foster student buy-in and allow them to think through the needs of the course. I divide students by major, then have them work out why EACH major would benefit from the class. Basically, I say "Social Work majors...why are YOU all here today?" and they craft a response that already has them thinking about the benefits of my course, meeting others in their major, and committing to public speaking. They also see that I value their voice and I believe in a co-constructed learning environment.
- Put yourself in their shoes. What will a student need to know the first week? What could they struggle with? What might be a comfort to them? What might they need to challenge them? Think through these questions as you craft your plan for the first week of instruction. Activity idea; Be the student: In my introductory public speaking course, I always share my example of nerves and shyness where, as a student, I threw up in front of a public speaking class because I was so anxious. This helps us all understand the path we are on and it breaks the ice. Share your student stories (or just reflect on them) to help remember the first week from the students' perspective.
- Make it enjoyable. You can make class interesting and fun without losing any of the content. Show the students the first day that you are in the front of the classroom because you ENJOY what you do. This can go a long way for both YOU and the STUDENT to see the semester ahead as a journey. It doesn't have to be an easy journey, the challenging parts help us all learn, but you can make it an enjoyable journey. Seek student feedback often so you can improve this element of your teaching. Incorporate current events, popular culture, campus issues, and what you know about the students (even if you ONLY know they are all sophomores) into your approach to tailor the information and improve the relevance of your dialogue.
- Model what you want the students to do. Be on time, be organized, be accurate. They will respect this and you can note you expect the same from them. So often we've 'done all of this before' and don't realize that we can sound mechanical, rote, or even (gasp!) boring on the first day. Try to zest it up by planning ahead with the steps above or share your ideas for more ways to help students see the way your class will unfold during the semester.
Good luck and best wishes for a GREAT term ahead!
UPDATE:
I had a few emails about the class bingo idea. Here's what the bingo sheet looks like (used this week for a class). I hand it out and then the students wander around meeting one another and initialing the box that matches their "unique fact" -- it is fun as I award 3-5 "bingo prizes" so there is a fun sense of urgency and competition and it only takes a few moments! Let me know if you give it a try and how you found it to work. Thanks for all of the interest!
Thursday, August 18, 2011
New semester perks: A few sites to explore
One way to build up energy for a new semester is to try something new. Whether inside the classroom or not, this little technique of simply trying something new can add a spark of excitement to the pre-semester preparations. Here are a few sites and ideas that might help you perk up with new possibilities:
In-class options:
1. Wordle. I love this tool for my classes and even club activities on campus. Create a word cloud to help students explore word choice, meaning, power of words, appropriateness to audience, or to just have fun analyzing different texts. More frequently used words are made larger, bolder, and less frequently used words are minimized -- pictorially interesting, my students love doing this. Here's a wordle created using the words from the Communication & Higher Education blog:
2. Bubbl.us allows you to detail how mind mapping can work. This is great for classes requiring students to brainstorm and constructively organize any topic for a larger project. It is fairly intuitive to use and students can learn about coordinating and subordinating ideas easily. Here is a sample:
3. Using audio or video feedback for students. I prefer Audacity for my audio comments. It is intuitive to use and free. Simply use a microphone (built in to most laptops or buy an external mic) and record messages for your students. I love doing this for my online course announcements periodically throughout the semester and it always gets rave reviews in the end-of-semester evaluations. (Read my earlier discussion of Audacity). This works for student projects, wikis, etc. too. They love incorporating their own voices.
4. Usher in the Social Media. Not a surprise for those who regularly read this blog, the use of Social Media in class activities can really help engage students. Use a class wiki (our LMS, BlackBoard has a tool built right in for this, but you can also use WikiSpaces or other free options). Send them on a Twitter-hunt or have students analyze media messages from different companies/organizations/celebrities/politicians or explore "trending" topics for discussion in class. Engage their understanding of characters by developing mock Facebook or LinkedIn pages, use Skype to meet up with guest speakers or for online students, have submissions of assignments shared via YouTube or set up and use a Vimeo group. Have students craft and share a Diigo site housing information on a project. Use GoogleSites to help students craft portfolio pages. Enhance group or individual presentations with Prezi. Consider options for easy communication tools so students find you accessible and your work-load is easy to manage (I use Yahoo IM as a virtual option for office hours). Here's the best part: Most of these are FREE.
What next? Here's the process I use. Look at your assignments--really look at them. Can they be updated or enhanced by adding something new? (Remember, don't just add it to add it...make sure any addition is purposeful and enhances the pedagogy). My activity for "topic analysis" in the basic public speaking course may include a link to Bubbl.us, my assignment on "ethos" will involve a Twitter exploration of students' favorite musicians, actors, politicians and examples of how that person may create and lose ethos with a diverse audience by analyzing Tweets, my study session will have an option to IM or Tweet any questions, my exploration of persuasive fallacies will have video examples from movies and politicians, my class wiki project will require us of audio and video components. Ask others for input (and ask your students!) if you get stuck in a rut with activities.
General options to perk up your energy (outside of the classroom):
1. Google help: Explore cleaning up email and planning for its effective use, YouTube, and general daily use of Google-related items in this article.
2. Scan and save documents on an external hard drive (keep in a secure location) and then shred/toss old files. This is a great tip for those feeling overwhelmed by papers, or piles of files.
3. Organize it! I use a daily task list and calendar that helps me to prioritize my tasks and work through big projects. Lately, this means I check in with large projects regularly and update the tasks to stay on time. This keeps me from feeling overwhelmed. I create a project chart (in excel) to help me each semester. Here is my grid from this past Spring semester:
After a semester ends (and periodically throughout the semester), I work on the next term's grid of activities to constantly keep forward motion and see balance of research/teaching/grants so I know what I need to emphasize in future terms. This also helps me to realize which projects I tend to push on the "back burner" and which ones rise to the front. I notice I plan better each semester and each semester I learn something about myself. My calendar and task list are drawn from this grid so large projects (should) get tackled on time. This doesn't always work (as you can see, our SACS visit and QEP requirements (I served on several committees related to these endeavors that involved extensive meetings and time), derailed a few projects in Spring. Those items were moved to Summer and/or Fall and the process begins again.
Hopefully, your semester is an exciting one. If you are feeling the energy depleting, though, consider a few tools and techniques to help both in and out of the classroom.
In-class options:
1. Wordle. I love this tool for my classes and even club activities on campus. Create a word cloud to help students explore word choice, meaning, power of words, appropriateness to audience, or to just have fun analyzing different texts. More frequently used words are made larger, bolder, and less frequently used words are minimized -- pictorially interesting, my students love doing this. Here's a wordle created using the words from the Communication & Higher Education blog:
2. Bubbl.us allows you to detail how mind mapping can work. This is great for classes requiring students to brainstorm and constructively organize any topic for a larger project. It is fairly intuitive to use and students can learn about coordinating and subordinating ideas easily. Here is a sample:
3. Using audio or video feedback for students. I prefer Audacity for my audio comments. It is intuitive to use and free. Simply use a microphone (built in to most laptops or buy an external mic) and record messages for your students. I love doing this for my online course announcements periodically throughout the semester and it always gets rave reviews in the end-of-semester evaluations. (Read my earlier discussion of Audacity). This works for student projects, wikis, etc. too. They love incorporating their own voices.
4. Usher in the Social Media. Not a surprise for those who regularly read this blog, the use of Social Media in class activities can really help engage students. Use a class wiki (our LMS, BlackBoard has a tool built right in for this, but you can also use WikiSpaces or other free options). Send them on a Twitter-hunt or have students analyze media messages from different companies/organizations/celebrities/politicians or explore "trending" topics for discussion in class. Engage their understanding of characters by developing mock Facebook or LinkedIn pages, use Skype to meet up with guest speakers or for online students, have submissions of assignments shared via YouTube or set up and use a Vimeo group. Have students craft and share a Diigo site housing information on a project. Use GoogleSites to help students craft portfolio pages. Enhance group or individual presentations with Prezi. Consider options for easy communication tools so students find you accessible and your work-load is easy to manage (I use Yahoo IM as a virtual option for office hours). Here's the best part: Most of these are FREE.
What next? Here's the process I use. Look at your assignments--really look at them. Can they be updated or enhanced by adding something new? (Remember, don't just add it to add it...make sure any addition is purposeful and enhances the pedagogy). My activity for "topic analysis" in the basic public speaking course may include a link to Bubbl.us, my assignment on "ethos" will involve a Twitter exploration of students' favorite musicians, actors, politicians and examples of how that person may create and lose ethos with a diverse audience by analyzing Tweets, my study session will have an option to IM or Tweet any questions, my exploration of persuasive fallacies will have video examples from movies and politicians, my class wiki project will require us of audio and video components. Ask others for input (and ask your students!) if you get stuck in a rut with activities.
General options to perk up your energy (outside of the classroom):
1. Google help: Explore cleaning up email and planning for its effective use, YouTube, and general daily use of Google-related items in this article.
2. Scan and save documents on an external hard drive (keep in a secure location) and then shred/toss old files. This is a great tip for those feeling overwhelmed by papers, or piles of files.
3. Organize it! I use a daily task list and calendar that helps me to prioritize my tasks and work through big projects. Lately, this means I check in with large projects regularly and update the tasks to stay on time. This keeps me from feeling overwhelmed. I create a project chart (in excel) to help me each semester. Here is my grid from this past Spring semester:
![]() |
My "semester grid" that focuses my work and goals |
After a semester ends (and periodically throughout the semester), I work on the next term's grid of activities to constantly keep forward motion and see balance of research/teaching/grants so I know what I need to emphasize in future terms. This also helps me to realize which projects I tend to push on the "back burner" and which ones rise to the front. I notice I plan better each semester and each semester I learn something about myself. My calendar and task list are drawn from this grid so large projects (should) get tackled on time. This doesn't always work (as you can see, our SACS visit and QEP requirements (I served on several committees related to these endeavors that involved extensive meetings and time), derailed a few projects in Spring. Those items were moved to Summer and/or Fall and the process begins again.
Hopefully, your semester is an exciting one. If you are feeling the energy depleting, though, consider a few tools and techniques to help both in and out of the classroom.
Tuesday, August 16, 2011
Bright eyed, bushy tailed
Last year, I wrote about the excitement I have for the first week of a new semester (see Fall Frenzy from August 2010). Year after year, I leave a hectic summer of teaching with no energy. I often find myself reviewing the Fall publication/research/grant/course preparation items (neatly located on an excel spreadsheet chronologically organized, of course) with an inner groan. "I only had two weeks--and they were spent doing XYZ item!" I internally bemoan my inability to "get ahead" before another term begins. I feel under-prepared to start and wonder if I can "get it all together" in time.
But then, equally regular in its yearly ritual, a glorious thing happens every semester...none of those feelings matter! They simply fade away as I see the first students in line at registration, meet former students milling about on campus, and watch as campus comes alive. My grandmother would say I was "bright eyed and bushy tailed" again. You know what I mean, that revitalization, that renewed energy, that sparkle in your eye and zest in your step that cannot be held down. It is a beautiful surge of emotion and it can serve as the driving fuel for my semester. Just like those bright eyed, bushy tailed squirrels running around, I become increasingly active. I pop my head in on colleagues, check up on policies and issues on campus, scamper around turning in paperwork and picking up items, shake a zillion hands and, my favorite, answer questions for first-time students wandering around campus. I begin my pre-semester rituals. I solicit advice on new activities for tough class topics. I find myself imagining the dynamics of each new class ("I wonder if such-and-such class will be like last semester? Will there be a class prankster? A challenging student? A 'lingering student' (see previous post Lingering Student)? Will we easily develop that classroom camaraderie?").
The new semester is an exciting time. And, no matter how often we experience it from the faculty standpoint we should remember the newness of it for our students. Despite the wearying summer term, the veritable mountain of tasks, and the stress of another academic semester beginning (with a new text book leading to massive class revisions...), it will be hard to keep the spring out of this squirrel's...oops! I mean...girl's step!
Best wishes for a productive and successful Fall 2011 semester!
But then, equally regular in its yearly ritual, a glorious thing happens every semester...none of those feelings matter! They simply fade away as I see the first students in line at registration, meet former students milling about on campus, and watch as campus comes alive. My grandmother would say I was "bright eyed and bushy tailed" again. You know what I mean, that revitalization, that renewed energy, that sparkle in your eye and zest in your step that cannot be held down. It is a beautiful surge of emotion and it can serve as the driving fuel for my semester. Just like those bright eyed, bushy tailed squirrels running around, I become increasingly active. I pop my head in on colleagues, check up on policies and issues on campus, scamper around turning in paperwork and picking up items, shake a zillion hands and, my favorite, answer questions for first-time students wandering around campus. I begin my pre-semester rituals. I solicit advice on new activities for tough class topics. I find myself imagining the dynamics of each new class ("I wonder if such-and-such class will be like last semester? Will there be a class prankster? A challenging student? A 'lingering student' (see previous post Lingering Student)? Will we easily develop that classroom camaraderie?").
The new semester is an exciting time. And, no matter how often we experience it from the faculty standpoint we should remember the newness of it for our students. Despite the wearying summer term, the veritable mountain of tasks, and the stress of another academic semester beginning (with a new text book leading to massive class revisions...), it will be hard to keep the spring out of this squirrel's...oops! I mean...girl's step!
Best wishes for a productive and successful Fall 2011 semester!
Wednesday, August 10, 2011
Faculty life follow-up
After posting about the benefits of self-reflection and the struggles of balancing faculty life (see previous entry #FacultyLife below), I wanted to link readers to the recent Wall Street Journal article on the challenges of academic careers. Additionally, we can extend the discussion of "balance" by exploring university resources, such as Virginia Tech's page to promote "Faculty work/life balance" with links to guide faculty through resources.
It is important to note that many people and many professions struggle with work/life balance. The issues of work/life balance isn't limited to academia, it isn't limited to only tenure track, it isn't limited to those with children, and it isn't limited to just women. It is an issue for everyone in our society. Much of the literature I explore is, of course, rooted in academia. It also deals with women along the tenure track as I am personally invested in this topic and it shares my research interests considering communication and higher education culture. But there are many resources out there--and I encourage everyone to avail themselves of the resources offered by your organization and those similar to your organizations.
So many of us struggle with this issue. If you're undertaking personal reflection on work/life and that precarious (unattainable?) balancing act, you may want to consider these additional resources:
It is important to note that many people and many professions struggle with work/life balance. The issues of work/life balance isn't limited to academia, it isn't limited to only tenure track, it isn't limited to those with children, and it isn't limited to just women. It is an issue for everyone in our society. Much of the literature I explore is, of course, rooted in academia. It also deals with women along the tenure track as I am personally invested in this topic and it shares my research interests considering communication and higher education culture. But there are many resources out there--and I encourage everyone to avail themselves of the resources offered by your organization and those similar to your organizations.
So many of us struggle with this issue. If you're undertaking personal reflection on work/life and that precarious (unattainable?) balancing act, you may want to consider these additional resources:
- Baker, B. (2011). Having a life in science. BioScience, 61(6), 429-433.
- Beauregard, T. A., & Henry, L. C. (2008). Managing the link between work-life balance practices and organizational performance. Human Resource Management Review, 19(1), 9-22.
- Caproni, P. J. (2004). Work/life balance: You can't get there from here. Journal of Applied Behavioral Science, 40(2), 208-218.
- Gappa, J. M., & Austin, A. E. (2010). Rethinking academic traditions for twenty-first century faculty. AAUP Journal of Academic Freedom, 1, 1-20.
- Gappa, J. M., Austin, A. E., & Trice, A. G. (2007). Rethinking Faculty Work: Higher Education’s Strategic Imperative. San Francisco: John Wiley and Sons.
- Lang, J. M. (2005). Life on the tenure-track: Lessons from the first year. Baltimore, MD: John Hopkins' University Press.
- Lang, J. M. (n.d.). Surviving the fourth dimension. Retrieved August 10, 2011 from Successful Academic site http://www.successfulacademic.com/articles/James_Lang_Collegiality.htm.
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