ISU's Involvement in the CASTL Campus Program
Barriers to the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
Barriers to the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning at Illinois State University include:
- Lack of sufficient publication outlets.
- SoTL in teaching refereed publications would not count at all or be devalued compared to disciplinary research
in evaluation processes. It might be more valued if connected to the discipline.
- The Annual Salary, Promotion, and Tenure (ASPT) system is a barrier. “SoTL is nice, but it won’t
get you anything.” “Some colleagues don’t consider pedagogical research to be as rigorous
as disciplinary research.” “If you read the ASPT document, it says balance of teaching and research
is valued, but it’s not.” “It’s because the audience is teaching practitioners, not
other researchers.” It could depend on the committee and the department and college.
- Good teaching is assumed, but not sufficiently rewarded. People would do more SoTL if it were adequately
rewarded. Faculty at ISU care about teaching.
- Teaching performance at Illinois State needs to be evaluated in more varied and better ways.
- The University Research Grant program, perhaps with the exception of College of Education, does not value
proposals related to pedagogy.
- Time is a huge barrier. “Who has time when just teaching, putting out fires, doing research, and service
are key?” “SoTL can only be done with release time/reduced teaching loads. We try to be like big
research universities, but we aren’t given reduced teaching loads and other help.” “We are
in competition with land grant universities.” “We have a split identity—we want to be known
for teaching and research.”
- The values of the academic community are on research. The thought is that “institutions get prestige
from research, not from teaching.”
- “There needs to be a top down commitment, like there has been with diversity.” “Administration
should provide funding, then people will do SoTL.”
- “Faculty must do SoTL because they want to do it. There are few rewards.”
- “I don’t have time to reflect on teaching. I have to financially support myself for three months
out of the year by working outside of the university.”