5th Edition
A Handbook for Teaching and Learning in Higher Education Enhancing Academic Practice
Focused on developing professional academic skills for supporting and supervising student learning and effective teaching, the fifth edition of A Handbook for Teaching and Learning in Higher Education recognises the complex demands of teaching, research, scholarship and academic management in higher education institutions.
Fully updated to reflect changes in practice and policy, this new edition has been written to enhance excellence in teaching and learning design and support all involved in facilitating a world-class inclusive education. Offering plentiful and rich practical advice, this rigorous and sound introduction to the basics of teaching and learning in higher education draws together a large number of expert authors and a range of global case studies. A definitive guide for anyone working in higher education, this edition:
- Offers new chapters covering an inclusive curriculum, the importance of student well-being and the scholarship of teaching and learning
- Considers the impact of technological changes on policy and practice
- Discusses the use of digital learning environments
- Explores how best to engage students in their disciplines and embed skills for employability
The ultimate guide to support all those involved in providing student learning of the highest quality, A Handbook for Teaching and Learning in Higher Education is essential reading for all new lecturers. It will be particularly useful for anyone taking an accredited course in teaching and learning in higher education, as well as more experienced lecturers who wish to improve their teaching practice.
List of illustrations
List of case studies
List of contributors and case study authors
Acknowledgements
Foreword by Patrick Deane
A user’s guide
Part 1 The current world of teaching and learning in higher education
- Global perspectives on teaching and learning in HE
- National approaches to teaching and learning in HE
- Success as a university lecturer
- Lectures, seminars and academic advising
- Assessment: new developments in design, marking and feedback
- Assessment: understanding the basics
- Student-staff partnerships in teaching and learning
- Blended learning
- The inclusive curriculum
- Embedding skills development into the curriculum
- Supervising undergraduate dissertations
- Maximising student learning gain
- Student well-being
- The Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (SoTL)
- The experimental sciences
- Learning and teaching in chemistry
- Mathematics and statistics
- The new engineering
- The performing arts: dance, drama and music
- Best practice and innovations in economics education
- Psychology
- Teaching business, management and accountancy
- Law
- Quantitative methods in the social sciences
- History
- Health and social care professions
Stephanie Marshall
Stephanie Marshall
Stephanie Marshall
Part 2 Education, assessment and student support
Phil Race
Geoffrey Crisp
Sam Elkington
Cherie Woolmer, Elizabeth Marquis, Erin Aspenlieder and Lori Goff
Colin Lumsden, Lucie Byrne-Davies and Karen Scott
Nona McDuff, Annie Hughes and Sonya Sharma
Cecilia Ka Yuk Chan
Malcolm J. Todd and Karen Smith
Camille B. Kandiko Howson
Ruth Caleb
Marian McCarthy
Part 3 Teaching and learning in the disciplines
Ian Turner
Tina Overton
Paola Iannone and Adrian Simpson
Peter Goodhew
Paul Kleiman and Celia Duffy
Parama Chaudhury
Julie Hulme
Dominique A. Greer, Abby Cathcart and Larry Neale
Jessica Guth
Jonathan Parker
Sarah Richardson
Julie Williams, Andrew Kirk and Toni Bewley
Glossary
Index
Biography
Stephanie Marshall, Vice Principal (Education), Queen Mary University of London, UK.
This fifth edition of A Handbook for Teaching and Learning in Higher Education is a thoroughly updated version of this popular and influential work. As always, the book provides not only a firm foundation in the field required by those new to the profession; it also offers thought-provoking materials that are of interest to teachers more established in higher education. Drawing upon multiple disciplinary, institutional, national and cultural perspectives, and written in a very open and user-friendly way, this book serves as the perfect pre-service and in-service companion to those involved in teaching and learning in higher education.
Grahame T Bilbow, Director, Centre for the Enhancement of Teaching and Learning, The University of Hong Kong