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Contemporary induction to teaching in Australian universities
journal contribution
posted on 2020-05-04, 00:00 authored by K Fraser, Y Ryan, S Bolt, P Copeman, C Cottman, MB Fisher, Julie FlemingJulie Fleming, A LuzeckyjAustralia has 42 universities. In 2015/16, 30 of 40 universities reviewed provided one or more days of teaching induction for their staff, while 10 did not. Twenty-six of the 30 teaching induction program directors were surveyed and 24 of those were interviewed to provide a snapshot of professional development for new teaching staff in Australian universities. The key findings of that research showed that almost two thirds of universities did not pay sessional staff to attend a teaching induction program; just over half the programs included peer observation of teaching; only one in five programs offered mentoring opportunities; three quarters of programs included assessment; and approximately a third of programs provided credit towards an award course. We conclude that all universities need to provide new teaching staff with a longer teaching induction program, which will support them to develop student-centred, scholarly behaviours and attitudes. © 2019, © 2019 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
History
Volume
24Issue
3Start Page
286End Page
300Number of Pages
15eISSN
1470-1324ISSN
1360-144XPublisher
RoutledgePublisher DOI
Peer Reviewed
- Yes
Open Access
- No
Acceptance Date
2019-02-05External Author Affiliations
Flinders University; Australian Catholic University; University of the Sunshine Coast; Queensland University of Technology; Swinburne University of Technology; University of Liverpool, UK;Era Eligible
- Yes
Journal
International Journal for Academic DevelopmentUsage metrics
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