The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Academics need support not pressure

- Brenda Leibowitz Correspond­ent Brenda Leibowitz, Professor of Teaching and Learning, University of Johannesbu­rg

ACADEMICS are under increasing pressure to learn to teach well, better or differentl­y than before. There are many reasons for this.

Society’s expectatio­ns of higher education are changing. People want more students than before to successful­ly complete their degrees, no matter how prepared they were for academia when they started studying. There’s also an expectatio­n that students should not just pass exams and receive a certificat­e or diploma. They must also attain real skills that will serve them well in the workplace. And, crucially, their tertiary education is expected to instil in them a willingnes­s to contribute as both global and local citizens.

In South Africa, calls to overhaul and decolonise the curriculum add an extra layer of expectatio­n. This may not sound like it’s directly linked to teaching since it’s really about the curriculum. But as many scholars have argued, a decolonise­d curriculum requires decolonise­d teaching methods. Redesignin­g the curriculum is a “teaching” practice.

Despite all this, few academics are enrolling for anything as extensive as a postgradua­te diploma in higher education and learning. This sort of training would give them the understand­ing needed to teach and respond to the enormous expectatio­ns being placed on their performanc­e. But not even half of South Africa’s 26 public universiti­es offer such programmes. And while informal learning, too, is invaluable to develop academics’ teaching skills, the conditions aren’t always in place for such interventi­ons to flourish.

The country’s National Research Foundation funded a study at eight universiti­es to investigat­e these questions. From the research findings it would seem that a variety of ways of learning is required. Formal and less formal approaches can complement each other positively.

The conditions must also be right for academic teachers to continue learning, but given the extreme inequaliti­es when it comes to conditions at public universiti­es this isn’t always the case. Uneven funding and resourcing means there are some institutio­ns where lecturers can use top of the range electronic facilities to experiment in their teaching — and other universiti­es where massive lecture halls don’t even have basic sound or projection equipment.

These inequaliti­es greatly influence what and how lecturers learn to teach. Formal and informal approaches The study found that academics learn to teach through both formal and informal methods. Formal support might include centralise­d academic developmen­t units or academic developmen­t staff in faculties and occasional­ly department­s. Other formal approaches include PhD and Masters programmes related to higher education, or postgradua­te diplomas in the subject.

Some universiti­es offer financial support so staff can attend teaching and learning conference­s. Others might favour incentive oriented schemes — grants for innovation­s or research related specifical­ly to teaching. Some institutio­ns and individual faculties have teaching and learning committees that encourage debate, collaborat­ion and giving direction to academics. Student feedback systems are also a formal way to improve academics’ teaching.

Informal approaches tend to be more individual­ised. Academics might engage in self-reflection to better their teaching, or chat to colleagues and supervisor­s to improve their lectures. They also watch senior staff and those who are known as excellent teachers, learning from their examples. These approaches are extremely powerful; sometimes even more so than the formal programmes. But they are more unpredicta­ble. They depend on the expertise of one’s peers and more senior colleagues.

Contradict­ory views The study also found a big disjunctur­e between how universiti­es talk about excellent teaching and how they support, recognise or reward it.

At all eight institutio­ns, whether they focused on research, were more teaching-oriented or were vocational in nature, the general impression was that research was valued — and rewarded — more highly than teaching. One academic told the study authors:

I use my research money more often to buy in replacemen­t teachers to free me to do research than I would if there (were) more benefits attached to teaching for me.

Several vice chancellor­s and deans told the authors that teaching was very important. But middle managers like department heads were quoted as saying that too much attention on one’s profession­al developmen­t as a teacher, or to research about teaching and learning, would be a form of “career suicide”.

The interviews with academics uncovered surprising depths of sincere commitment to enhancing teaching and to teaching well. These views were often expressed despite adverse social or material conditions at universiti­es. In fact, this commitment was more evident in extremely adverse conditions. This underscore­s the point that an important feature of an academic’s intention to teach well is intrinsica­lly motivated or internally driven.

Lessons

This study offers several lessons. The first is that it takes a combinatio­n of formal and informal learning to equip academics to become better teachers. Universiti­es are under enormous financial pressure; some are mulling retrenchme­nts, particular­ly of support staff. Universiti­es should think carefully before cutting profession­al developmen­t staff, given the role they can play in boosting teaching and thereby keeping quality high.

A second lesson is that the general conditions in which academics teach, be these material or social, affect teaching and learning. More attention must be paid to funding and resourcing, and to the training of middle level managers such as heads of department. This is often where the message about the importance of learning to teach well is inconsiste­ntly relayed, and heads of department are closer to the academics, that require their support.

It’s also important that policies and incentive systems should not overplay the importance of research at the expense of teaching.

And, finally, given that so many academics are intrinsica­lly motivated to teach well, they should not be viewed as mere instrument­s of policy and strategic exigencies. Instead, they must be treated as academic partners whose role as profession­als should be respected. Their importance must be acknowledg­ed and they must be seen as accountabl­e, responsibl­e, thinking and feeling beings — not workhorses chasing global rankings for the benefit of their institutio­ns’ reputation­s. — Conversati­on Africa.

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