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An essential companion for university faculty interested in conducting scholarly inquiry into their classroom teaching, this practical guide presents a formal model for making visible the careful, difficult, and intentional scholarly work entailed in exploring a teaching question. As a how-to guide, this is an invaluable resource for planning and conducting classroom research—formulating questions and hypotheses, defining a data collection methodology, collecting data, measuring the impact, and documenting the results.Inquiry Into the College Classroom is filled with richly illustrative examples that highlight how university faculty from a range of academic disciplines have performed scholarly inquiries into their teaching and leads faculty on a journey that includes: Developing a formal model for structuring the exploration of a classroom inquiry questionProviding a practical and useful guide for faculty interested in exploring teaching and learning challengesDetailing faculty experiences in measuring specific changes in student learning or perspectivesDemonstrating how to document classroom inquiry in a form to be shared, used, and reviewed by other facultySharing useful and practical suggestions forgetting started with a classroom inquiryHighlighting different models for disseminating classroom inquiry workLinking classroom inquiry to larger conversations about the scholarship of teaching and learning
Paul Savory is the author of Inquiry into the College Classroom: A Journey Toward Scholarly Teaching , published by Wiley. Amy Nelson Burnett is Professor of History at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln. She is the author of multiple books.
List of Exhibits viiAbout the Authors xAcknowledgments xiiA Guide for Scholarly Inquiry into Teaching 1The Basic Structure of Classroom Inquiry 31Incorporating Additional Forms of Data Collection 44Using Classroom Inquiry to Answer Multiple Questions 59Overcoming Challenges With Data Collection 78Linking Classroom Inquiry With Disciplinary Research 93Obtaining Useful Inquiry Results, but More Data Is Needed 107Using Classroom Inquiry to Evaluate New Assessment Measures 122Classroom Inquiry for Measuring Feedback on Student Learning and Aptitudes 138Classroom Inquiry and Scholarly Teaching 156Beginning Your Scholarly Journey 174Lessons Concerning Classroom InquiryPractical Advice forConducting Your InquiryFrom Scholarly Teaching to the Scholarship of Teaching and LearningModels for Disseminating Your Inquiry WorkResources for Learning MoreAn Invitation to Set Out on Your Scholarly JourneyBibliography 189Index 191