International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
Volume 2, Number 2, July 2008
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Excerpt
Meaningful Course Revision: Enhancing Academic Engagement Using
Student Learning Data
Catherine Wehlburg
(Jossey-Bass, 2007)
In Meaningful Course Revision: Enhancing Academic Engagement Using
Student Learning Data, Wehlburg persuasively argues that letting evidence
guide change and innovation is perhaps the only way to break the dysfunctional
tradition of what may be termed “teaching as telling” and
“grading to the bell curve.” Throughout the book, Wehlburg
convincingly argues that assessment is not yet another chore that faculty
and administrators are obliged to perform, but an integrated set of
activities that enhances learning and provides the feedback teachers
and institutions need in order to improve learning outcomes and implement
innovations in teaching. In Chapter 1, “Data-based Decision-Making,”
Wehlburg effectively makes the case for data-driven course redesign.
Better yet, in Chapter 2, Wehlburg asserts that many faculty members
are already engaged in performing assessments, they are just not aware
of how to make use of the data to revise their courses.
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Bio
Review by
Gail Rathbun
Indiana University Purdue University Fort Wayne
Fort Wayne, Indiana, USA
rathbun@ipfw.edu
I am currently Director of the Center for the Enhancement of Learning
and Teaching at Indiana University Purdue University Fort Wayne. After
careers in video production and computer graphics I earned a doctorate
in Instructional Systems Technology from Indiana University, Bloomington,
where I worked with faculty for 7 years as a consultant and developer.
I taught for four years at an English language university in Morocco.
My research interest is in design consulting practices as interpreted
by activity theory.
Website: http://www.ipfw.edu/celt
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