ISU's Involvement in the CASTL Campus Program
Progress Report
CASTL PROGRAM in SoTL at ILLINOIS STATE UNIVERSITY:
HISTORY and UPDATES
August 2003
Carnegie Academy for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
Our involvement in the Carnegie Academy for the Scholarship of Teaching
and Learning (CASTL) campus program began in early 1998. Over the course
of our first 1-2 years in CASTL, we have been involved in the following:
a discussion group created a definition of SoTL ("systematic reflection on
teaching and learning made public"), discussed barriers and supports for
SoTL on campus, and selected a campus research project topic-student engagement
at ISU. In the next 1-2 years, supported by the Illinois State University
Foundation and the Center for the Advancement of Teaching, we have/are conducting
four research projects related to the topic of student engagement:
- Jack Chizmar (Economics) and Doug Turco (Health, Physical Education and
Recreation) are analyzing their data in a quasi-experiment looking at the
impact of graded vs. ungraded homework on participation (one measure of
engagement), course grade, and other measures. Dr. Chizmar is in the process
of submitting an article for publication.
- Val Farmer-Dougan (Psychology) and psychology student David James conducted
a Web questionnaire study of Illinois State University students' engagement
and the correlates of engagement. A brief article on the results of this
study appeared in the October 2000 issue of the CAT newsletter, the CATalyst.
- Sociology professor Tom Gershick and Sociology graduate student Lana
Berardi are in the process of conducting qualitative interviews with about
20 Illinois State University instructors and faculty members investigating
their perceptions of student engagement and how engagement can be enhanced
to improve teaching and learning. Ms. Berardi will be using the data for
her Masters Thesis. The will also be presenting their research in April
2001 at the Midwest Sociological Society annual meetings.
- Finally, Wendy Troxel and Jamie Young (UAO) are looking at data (secondary
analysis) from our students who participated in the National Survey on
Student Engagement. They have made local presentations thus far.
In 2001, the Director of the Center for the Advancement of Teaching, with
the assistance of two faculty members, received a $5,000 "Going Public" small
grant from the American Association of Higher Education. This grant helped
us to disseminate knowledge obtained from our research on student engagement
for the CASTL Campus Program. The October
2000 and October
2001 issues of the CATalyst focused on student engagement and CASTL work.
This was distributed on-campus to over 2,000 people and to teaching centers
around the nation via a newsletter exchange, and posted on our Web site.
- We our held a full-day conference on the topic open to faculty and staff
from ISU and other institutions. This occurred on July 18, 2001. Registration
was limited to 60 people; 24 of these were from other Illinois institutions
of higher education.
- We created a poster about our CASTL and Going Public work. Dr. Turco
presented this at AAHE in March 2000 and Kathleen McKinney presented this
at a Sociology conference in April 2000. Dr. McKinney has also submitted
a proposal to the AAHE 2002 meetings (March) to present our student engagement
research.
- We held (for about a year) a Web Board discussion on student engagement
research open to anyone on- and off-campus.
- We have also posted updates on our campus program as well as our detailed
response to the self-assessment "mapping exercise" to the AAHE
CASTL Web Center.
- The CAT director was asked to write an update on our CASTL etc. work
to appear in the November or December 2001 issue of the AAHE Bulletin.
- We routinely conduct internal presentations or workshops on our CASTL
work, student engagement, classroom assessment, and SoTL more broadly as
part of regular programming, university teaching workshops, and our annual
Teaching-Learning Symposium.
In 2002, the Cross Chair in the Scholarship of Teaching
and Learning was established.
In 2002, we attended the AAHE Summer Academy.
Our institutional change project was "Enhancing Student Learning and Intellectual
Community by Promoting the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning.
In 2003, we applied and were selected, along with 11 other institutions
to serve as a SoTL Cluster
Leader, the latest phase of a joint AAHE-Carnegie Foundation effort to
advance SoTL around the world.