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Scholarship of Teaching & Learning: What, Why, & How

About SoTL

What is the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning?

The Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (often abbreviated as SoTL) at its core is the practice of implementing evidence-based teaching practices in your course, exploring the impact by collecting results, and sharing the stories of lessons learned. Similar practices are sometimes labeled as Discipline-Based Education Research, or DBER.

Why Add Scholarship to Your Teaching Practice?

The Scholarship of Teaching and Learning (SoTL) offers instructors of all career stages and disciplines an opportunity to reinvigorate your teaching and develop inquiry methods that can reveal how best to support their students’ learning. Reasons why you might want to integrate scholarly teaching in to your classroom include: 

  • Improve your own teaching
  • Share your ideas and successes with colleagues
  • Disseminate findings through formal publications
  • Career advancement 

How to Get Started in SoTL?

Observe

Use your own teaching to inspire a question– perhaps a puzzling experience happened in your class or a teaching challenge caught you by surprise. One way to frame your SoTL questions is to consider three categories: What is, What works, and What could be (Dewar et al., 2018). What is questions are descriptive and the scholar is seeking to describe a puzzling phenomenon. What works questions are testing a hypothesis or intervention and/or investigating a mechanism that supports learning. What could be questions ask about how teaching and learning might be structured in new ways.

Connect

We encourage you to reach out for a consultation so we can learn how to support your SoTL endeavors. Request a consultation today.

Connect with your colleagues:

Attend a teaching conference:

We encourage you to reach out for a consultation to see how we can support you in your SoTL endeavors. For more information, please contact Christa Wille at cmwille@wisc.edu

Explore

Seek inspiration from existing resources:

Books:

Scholarly journals

Circle made of three parts: Observe, Connect, and Explore

 

 

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