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The scholarship of teaching and learning (SOTL or SoTL) is often defined as systematic inquiry into student learning which advances the practice of teaching in higher education by making inquiry findings public. Building on this definition, Peter Felten identified 5 principles for good practice in SOTL: (1) inquiry focused on student learning, (2) grounded in context, (3) methodologically sound, (4) conducted in partnership with students, (5) appropriately public. SOTL necessarily builds on many past traditions in higher education, including classroom and program assessment, action research, the reflective practice movement, peer review of teaching, traditional educational research, and faculty development efforts to enhance teaching and learning. As such, SOTL encompasses aspects of professional development or faculty development, such as how teachers can not only improve their expertise in their fields, but also develop their pedagogical expertise, i.e., how to better teach novice students in the field or enable their learning. It also encompasses the study and implementation of more modern teaching methods, such as active learning, cooperative learning, problem based learning, and others. SOTL scholars come from various backgrounds, such as those in educational psychology and other education related fields, as well as specialists in various disciplines who are interested in improving teaching and learning in their respective fields. Some scholars are educational researchers or consultants affiliated with teaching and learning centers at universities. Inquiry methods in SOTL include reflection and analysis, interviews and focus groups, questionnaires and surveys, content analysis of text, secondary analysis of existing data, quasi-experiments (comparison of two sections of the same course), observational research, and case studies, among others. As with all scholarly study, evidence depends not only upon the methods chosen but the relevant disciplinary standards. Dissemination for impact among scholarly teachers may be local within the academic department, college or university, or may be in published, peer-reviewed form. A few journals exclusively publish SOTL outputs, and numerous disciplinary publications disseminate such inquiry outputs (e.g., J. Chem. Educ., J. Natural Resour. Life Sci. Educ., Research in the Teaching of English, College English, J. Economic Education), as well as a number of core SoTL journals and newsletters. Source: Wikipedia (en)
Works about scholarship of teaching and learning 18
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Exploring the reason for the high withdrawal rate of distance education students enrolled in first level accounting
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A comparative analysis of introductory accounting papers at New Zealand polytechnics offering the National Diploma in Accounting
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From prototype to a model : entrepreneurship in secondary school teacher education (ESSTE) in Papua New Guinea
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The development and evaluation of computer generated material for 43.220 Information and Communications
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Development of flexible education systems for technology students
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Factors contributing to effective language laboratory use in New Zealand tertiary institutes
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Why study psychology at Massey University?
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Granular approach to adaptivity in problem-based learning
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What is the potential of distance education for learning and practice development in critical care nursing in the South Island of New Zealand?
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Hospitality degrees in New Zealand : exploratory research
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Applying knowledge management in education : teaching database normalization
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Work-role transition : from staff nurse to clinical nurse educator
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Mentoring-- how does it address nurses' learning needs?
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An assessment of the United Nations Principles for Responsible Management Education (PRME)
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Exploring business students' ability to think in an economic way : a study in an introductory economics course at one New Zealand tertiary institution
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Learning Spanish online : emotions and identity in role-play settings
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Evaluating the effects of self-practice/self-reflection on cognitive flexibility, empathy, insight, self-compassion, self-monitoring, and stress in postgraduate cognitive behaviour therapy trainees
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Japanese students' reflections on high school preparation for university English classes
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