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Writing an Effective Teaching Philosophy Statement

September 24 @ 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm CDT

Learn what a teaching philosophy statement is and how they are used in the academic job hunt, and explore your own teaching philosophy in a writing group of peers in this interactive, two-part online workshop. We will discuss elements of teaching statements, evidence of effective teaching tailored for different academic jobs, and strategies to get started or polish existing teaching statements. Participants from all disciplines will become better equipped and prepared to communicate their teaching practice through this workshop’s small group writing and feedback process. By the end of this workshop, participants will be able to:

  • Understand common components of a teaching philosophy statement
  • Identify their own teaching accomplishments, beliefs, and goals
  • Draft a teaching philosophy statement
  • Refine their work through peer review feedback

Instructors

Rique Campa, Michigan State University
Brian Rybarczyk, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Workshop Schedule

This workshop meets in Zoom on Tuesday, September 17 and 24 at 11pm-12:30am Gulf / 4-5:30pm Atlantic / 3-4:30pm Eastern / 2-3:30pm Central / 1-2:30pm Mountain / 12-1:30pm Pacific.

Audience

This workshop is designed first and foremost for graduate students and postdoctoral researchers in STEM/SBE disciplines, but generally relevant to anyone looking to develop or refine their teaching statement.

Registration & Enrollment

** At capacity and closed for registration as of Wednesday, September 4. **

Cap: 50. Registration opens Tuesday, September 3rd and closes when capacity is reached. Enrollment will be processed on a first-come, first-served basis; registrants who are from CIRTL member institutions or CIRTL alumni will receive priority.

Accessibility

If you have access needs, please let us know what they are. Contact Zoe Zuleger (zmzuleger@wisc.edu), who is supporting this workshop, to let us know how we can help you have a successful experience. In addition to meeting individualized needs, we will also take measures throughout the workshop to support accessibility for all our students:

  • Using alt-text on images in reading materials
  • Sending pre-session reminders with upcoming assignments to all students
  • Sharing materials for synchronous sessions with students (slides, activity instructions, etc.)
  • Enabling live captioning in synchronous sessions
  • Incorporating multiple modes of interaction into synchronous sessions

Learning Outcomes

All CIRTL Network programming is designed to help participants achieve familiarity with our Core Ideas. This workshop is designed around the following learning outcomes.

Associate: Evidence-Based Teaching

  • Describe and recognize the value of realistic well-defined, achievable, measurable and student-centered learning goals.

Associate: Learning Community

  • Recognize the value of and participate in local professionally-focused learning communities associated with teaching and learning.

Associate: Learning-through-Diversity

  • Describe and recognize the value of drawing on diversity in the development of teaching plans (including content, teaching practices and assessments) to foster learning.
  • Describe several learning-through-diversity (LtD) techniques and strategies.