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PUBLICATIONS
Inside
Illinois
Vol.
25, No. 11, Dec 1, 2005

Two
Distinguished Teacher/Scholars recognized
Honorees help other faculty members engage students
By
Sharita Forrest, Assistant Editor
217-244-1072; slforres@illinois.edu
Finding creative methods for engaging students in learning with the
help of technology is a goal shared by faculty members Gail Hawisher,
a professor of English and director of the Center for Writing Studies
in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, and Cleo D’Arcy,
a professor of crop sciences and assistant dean of academic programs
in the College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental Sciences.
In addition to their involvement with the Center for Writing Studies,
Hawisher and D’Arcy have yet another thing in common: The Teaching
Advancement Board recently selected them as Distinguished Teacher/Scholars
for the 2005-2006 academic year. They will be honored at the Annual
Faculty Retreat for Active Learning on Feb. 10.
The annual Distinguished Teacher/Scholar program recognizes outstanding
faculty members who actively enhance teaching and learning on campus
and supports innovative projects that recipients develop as part of
the selection process. Award recipients serve as consultants and mentors
to other faculty members and departments seeking to explore new instructional
methods and revitalize their teaching programs.(See
full list of Distinguished Teacher/Scholars.)
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by L. Brian Stauffer |
| Teaching
honors
Distinguished Teacher/Scholar for 2005-2006 is just
one of numerous teaching awards garnered by Cleo D’Arcy
during her 27-year career as a professor of crop sciences
in the College of Agricultural, Consumer and Environmental
Sciences. |
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On the first day
of class each semester, D’Arcy likes to show students an old issue
of Science magazine with a cover picture of the Red Queen from the book
“Alice in Wonderland” and the queen’s philosophy:
“It takes all the running you can do to keep in the same place.”
“I tell my students that’s what it’s like fighting
plant diseases: You’re constantly coming up with new ways to try
to manage them, so they aren’t causing huge losses and subsequent
problems for people,” D’Arcy said. “Some diseases
have been around for hundreds, or even thousands, of years and are even
referenced in the Bible. It’s not like you solve them. You win
for a while and then go back and start again.”
While some people might find that a Sisyphean endeavor, that’s
exactly what D’Arcy finds exhilarating about her chosen field.
When D’Arcy joined the ACES faculty in 1978, she taught graduate-level
courses for the first 15 years, but then decided that she wanted to
try teaching undergraduate students and developed a General Education
course with an enrollment of 75 – students who encompassed an
array of academic majors, levels of motivation and learning styles,
some of whom had limited exposure to science or perceived it as arcane
and obscure. To connect with undergraduate students in that course,
D’Arcy said she had to change her teaching style: figure out how
to spark students’ interest in science, employ a variety of formats
and media in order to reach different students and demonstrate that
science had relevance to their everyday lives.
D’Arcy and her colleagues’ research into learning styles
and the effects of various media has included testing IClickers, remote
control-like devices that students use to electronically answer questions,
which the faculty members employed to increase student participation
in large lecture classes. They also have developed a Web site, called
Plants, Pathogens and People, that allows students to perform simulated
lab or field activities.
“They can see how environmental conditions affect a plant disease,
or they can plant a whole forest of elm trees and watch them die from
Dutch elm disease,” D’Arcy said. “They can cause an
epidemic and try to manage it.”
With an infectious laugh, lively sense of humor and love for storytelling,
D’Arcy has appeared consistently on the Incomplete List of Teachers
Ranked as Excellent by Their Students and has garnered national teaching
awards as well, such as the National Association of Colleges and Teachers
of Agriculture Regional Outstanding Teacher Award in 2002 and the USDA/NASULGC
Food and Agriculture Sciences Excellence in College and University Teaching
Award in 2001.
A member of the College of ACES Academy of Teaching Excellence since
1997, D’Arcy led workshops in the colleges of ACES and Business
this semester in which she and faculty members from each college shared
their work and experiences related to scholarly teaching and the scholarship
of teaching and learning; she plans to lead at least two more workshops
in other colleges during the spring.
“Part of what I want to do as a Distinguished Teacher/Scholar
is tell people that we need to get to the point where we’re scholarly
teachers: It’s our professional responsibility. And it can happen
in a little way – people don’t have to give up all of their
research in their discipline to do it,” D’Arcy said. “I
was really excited to win the Distinguished Teacher/Scholar Award because
I view the program as a positive step on the part of campus to recognize
the teaching excellence that exists here. There are many excellent teachers
on campus who put a lot of time and effort into it.”
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by L. Brian Stauffer |
Teaching
with technology
As a Distinguished Teacher/Scholar for 2005-2006,
Gail Hawisher, a professor of English and director
of the Center for Writing Studies in the College of
Liberal Arts and Sciences, plans to help faculty members
explore new ways of teaching with technology media,
such as blogs, wikis, and Podcasting. |
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Hawisher has spent
her career studying the ways that computers have revolutionized writing
and learning and the ways in which people have responded to the new
technologies. Since she came to the UI in 1990, Hawisher also has been
interested in helping students improve their writing and helping faculty
members find new ways of using writing to enhance students’ learning.
“Encouraging students to write effectively is among many departments’
goals, but what it means to communicate well has expanded: It’s
more than talking and writing,” Hawisher said, because students
today also use presentation software, create Web sites and even make
videos as part of their writing projects.
Hawisher became intrigued by the “Writing with Video” (Art
199) course developed by Joseph Squier, a professor of narrative media,
and graduate student Maria Lovett, in the College of Art and Design.
The course allows students to explore video as a rhetorical medium using
writing to conceptualize, solve problems and process what they learn
as they create documentaries and other video productions.
After observing the class this summer and fall, and seeing how engaged
students became with their projects, Hawisher formed a media group with
several faculty members and graduate students from LAS, art and design,
the department of English and the Center for Writing Studies, who met
weekly to discuss successful strategies for teaching a “Writing
With Video” course. The course was approved this month as a new
advanced composition offering.
As a Distinguished Teacher/Scholar for 2005-2006, Hawisher plans to
continue to work with the media group, as well as other faculty members
to explore new ways of teaching with technology, such as blogs, Web
logs that can be updated daily; wikis, collaborative software for creating
Web content; and Podcasting, the distribution of audio and video programs
over the Internet. During the spring semester, she plans to host a series
of meetings in which these innovative instructors will share information
about their high-tech teaching strategies with their colleagues from
around campus.
Hawisher has written or edited numerous books, book chapters and articles
and has given a lengthy list of presentations on the intersection of
literacy and computers. She is co-editor of Computers and Composition:
An International Journal and also co-edits the book series “New
Dimensions in Computers and Composition Studies.”
In 2004, LAS recognized Hawisher’s work by awarding her the Lynn
M. Martin Distinguished Award for Women Faculty and the Campus Award
for Undergraduate Teaching. Among the numerous honors and awards Hawisher
has received are the Outstanding Technology Innovator Award, conferred
by the Conference on College Composition and Communication (2000), and
the Robert Schneider Award for Outstanding Teaching Service (2000),
from the department of English.
“Not only is she a quality classroom teacher in her own right,
the impact of her teaching is magnified campuswide by her very active
role in “Writing Across the Curriculum,” training faculty
members and graduate students and spreading good teaching practices,”
said Martin Camargo, head of the department of English.
“I was just delighted,” Hawisher said about being named
a Distinguished Teacher/Scholar for 2005-2006, “especially since
I was chosen by a faculty committee. After having worked with so many
excellent faculty members on this campus through the Center for Writing
Studies, I was extraordinarily proud that the committee saw fit to honor
me with this award.”
Distinguished
Teacher/Scholars
The Distinguished Teacher/Scholar Program, sponsored by the Teaching
Advancement Board and the Office of the Provost, honors and supports
outstanding instructors who take an active role in promoting learning
on campus. Although the Distinguished Teacher/ Scholar appointment lasts
one year, honorees carry the designation with them throughout their
UI careers. The honorees since the program’s inception in 1999:
- Philip Buriak,
agricultural engineering
- O. Vernon Burton,
history
- Cleo D’Arcy,
crop sciences*
- Paul F. Diehl,
political science
- James A. Gentry,
finance
- Gail E. Hawisher,
English*
- Steve Helle,
journalism
- Paul Kelter,
chemistry
- J. Bruce Litchfield,
engineering
- Michael C. Loui,
electrical and computer engineering
- Lenny Pitt, computer
science
- Shelly J. Schmidt,
food chemistry
- Thomas Schwandt,
educational psychology
- Linda C. Smith,
library and information science
- Joseph C. Squier,
art and design
- Arlette Willis,
curriculum and instruction
*Appointed this year
Mark
your calendar
Faculty retreat will be Feb. 10
The spring 2006 All-Campus Faculty Retreat will be Feb. 10 in the Illini
Union. The plenary speaker will be Ken Bain, director of the New York
University Center for Teaching Excellence. Bain’s talk will be
based on his recent award-winning book, “What the Best College
Teachers Do.”
This year’s 2005-2006 Distinguished Teacher/Scholars, Cleo D’Arcy
and Gail Hawisher, will be co-presenters of one of the five concurrent
sessions at the retreat.
Information about the retreat and how to register will be available
soon.
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