Challenges and opportunities for early-career Teaching-Focussed academics in the biosciences

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Challenges and opportunities for early-career Teaching-Focussed academics in the biosciences. / Hubbard, Katharine; Gretton, Sarah; Jones, Katherine et al.
Yn: F1000Research, Cyfrol 4, 03.2015.

Allbwn ymchwil: Cyfraniad at gyfnodolynErthygladolygiad gan gymheiriaid

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Hubbard K, Gretton S, Jones K, Tallents L. Challenges and opportunities for early-career Teaching-Focussed academics in the biosciences. F1000Research. 2015 Maw;4. doi: 10.12688/f1000research.6227.2

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Hubbard, Katharine ; Gretton, Sarah ; Jones, Katherine et al. / Challenges and opportunities for early-career Teaching-Focussed academics in the biosciences. Yn: F1000Research. 2015 ; Cyfrol 4.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Challenges and opportunities for early-career Teaching-Focussed academics in the biosciences

AU - Hubbard, Katharine

AU - Gretton, Sarah

AU - Jones, Katherine

AU - Tallents, Lucy

PY - 2015/3

Y1 - 2015/3

N2 - Twenty-seven percent of academics in UK Higher Education (HE) are in Teaching-Focussed positions, making major contributions to undergraduate programmes in an era of high student expectations when it comes to teaching quality. However, institutional support for Teaching-Focussed academics is often limited, both in terms of peer networking and opportunities for career development. As four early-career stage Teaching-Focussed academics working in a variety of institutions, we explore what motivated our choices to make teaching our primary academic activity, and the challenges that we have faced in doing so. In addition to highlighting the need for universities to fully recognise the achievements of teaching staff, we discuss the role that the various biosciences learned societies have in supporting Teaching-Focussed academics. We identify that there is a need for the learned societies to come together and pool their expertise in this area. The fragmented nature of the Teaching-Focussed academic community means that clear sources of national support are needed in order to best enable the next generation of bioscience educators to reach their full potential.

AB - Twenty-seven percent of academics in UK Higher Education (HE) are in Teaching-Focussed positions, making major contributions to undergraduate programmes in an era of high student expectations when it comes to teaching quality. However, institutional support for Teaching-Focussed academics is often limited, both in terms of peer networking and opportunities for career development. As four early-career stage Teaching-Focussed academics working in a variety of institutions, we explore what motivated our choices to make teaching our primary academic activity, and the challenges that we have faced in doing so. In addition to highlighting the need for universities to fully recognise the achievements of teaching staff, we discuss the role that the various biosciences learned societies have in supporting Teaching-Focussed academics. We identify that there is a need for the learned societies to come together and pool their expertise in this area. The fragmented nature of the Teaching-Focussed academic community means that clear sources of national support are needed in order to best enable the next generation of bioscience educators to reach their full potential.

U2 - 10.12688/f1000research.6227.2

DO - 10.12688/f1000research.6227.2

M3 - Article

VL - 4

JO - F1000Research

JF - F1000Research

SN - 2046-1402

ER -