Activities, assignments and assessment/Peer review of teaching

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'Walking the Streets' mapping workshop for Guimarães 2012 (photo João Sousa) by tm on Wikimedia Commons

Peer review (including observation) of teaching and curriculum is under-utilised in universities. In many cases, this is because teaching is largely seen as a private activity. Inviting a trusted colleague into your classroom to observe your teaching, can in many cases, affirm your good teaching practices. In other circumstances it can be a way of sensitively identifying weaknesses. Your colleague’s feedback can provide opportunities for you to refresh what you do in the classroom as well.

Observing someone else’s teaching, or having your own observed is not the only way to participate in the peer review of teaching. You might try inviting a colleague to review your Subject Learning Guide, to read over an assessment task and offer you feedback, or to sit with you and review the data from student feedback surveys in order to develop a set of actions. Others seek wider review through publishing and documenting their work on sites such as Wikiversity. All these forms of activity are aspects of the peer review of curriculum.

Resources

This article is issued from Wikiversity - version of the Monday, September 29, 2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.