Understanding Undergraduates

Regular price €142.99
A01=Celia Popovic
A01=David A. Green
academic stereotypes
Author_Celia Popovic
Author_David A. Green
birmingham
BME Student
British Degree Programmes
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Category=JNM
challenging teacher assumptions
city
Classroom Incivility
Common Language
demographic impact learning
diff
educational equity
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erence
GPA
Grade Point Average
growth
High School GPA
higher education research
Iced
Identified Threshold Concepts
Institutional Review Board
ndings
Novice University Teacher
pedagogical misconceptions
SAT Reasoning Test
Skill UK
Staffordshire Bull Terrier
student performance analysis
students
successful
teacher
UK Counterpart
UK Degree
UK Interviewee
UK Student
UK System
UK Teacher
UK Undergraduate Degree
UK University
UK's Staff
UK’s Staff
university
Writing Centre
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415667548
  • Weight: 680g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Mar 2012
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Most university teachers have ideas about the typical good or not-so-good student in their classes, but rarely do they share these thoughts with others. By keeping quiet about the preconceptions – or stereotypes – they harbour, teachers put themselves at risk of missing key evidence to help them revise their beliefs; more importantly, they may fail to notice students in real need of their support and encouragement.

In this unique work, the authors explore UK and US university teachers’ beliefs about their students’ performance and reveal which beliefs are well-founded, which are mistaken, which mask other underlying factors, and what they can do about them. So is it true, for instance, that British Asian students find medicine more difficult than their white counterparts, or that American students with sports scholarships take their studies less seriously? Is it the case that students who sit at the front of the lecture hall get better grades than those who sit at the back?

By comparing students’ demographic data and their actual performance with their teachers’ expectations, the authors expose a complex picture of multiple factors affecting performance. They also contrast students’ comments about their own study habits with their views on what makes a good learner. For each preconception, they offer clear advice on how university teachers can redesign their courses, introduce new activities and assignments and communicate effective learning strategies that students will be able to put into practice. Finally, the authors explore the ramifications of teachers’ beliefs and suggest actions that can be taken at the level of the institution, department or programme and in educational development events, designed to level the playing field so that students have a more equitable chance of success.

Ideal for both educational developers and university teachers, this book:

  • reveals general tendencies and findings that will inform developers’ own work with university teachers,
  • provides practical guidance and solutions for university teachers to be able to identify and address students’ actual – rather than assumed – needs,
  • explores means of addressing and challenging people’s natural tendency to rely on preconceived ideas and stereotypes, and
  • explains an action research method that educational developers can use on their own campuses to unravel some of the local preconceptions that may be hampering student success.

Celia Popovic was Head of Educational Development at Birmingham City University, and is now an educational developer at York University, Toronto, Canada. She is book review editor of Innovations in Education and Teaching International.

David A. Green is Director of the Center for Excellence in Teaching and Learning at Seattle University, USA, having previously been Head of Educational and Staff Development at Birmingham City University in his native UK. He is co-editor of the International Journal for Academic Development.