Policy Recommendations XII
Virginia Tech Cyberschool
"Teaching Fellows for Distance and Distributed Education"
Len
Hatfield and Timothy W.
Luke
Coordinators,
Cyberschool
January 23, 1998
While the Virginia Tech Cyberschool has confirmed the hopes shared by
many about the flexibility and utility of on-line teaching, the
University is already at the point of maximum mobilization for its
current faculty. As a consequence, we face a shortage of faculty
resources when the University is faced with the need to mount any new
initiatives in the area of distributed education, and we need to
consider new ways to bring more faculty to these new tasks, while
keeping costs low. One solution may present itself from the current
state of the profession in university teaching.
In many disciplines, new Ph.D.s often are quite interested in on-line teaching techniques, but they also find the job market to be a very tough environment where several years might be spent in one-year positions as instructors before tenure-track employment is found. Virginia Tech needs more faculty, and it has made a name for itself with pioneering efforts in the field of on-line teaching. Consequently, we propose that the University establish a new program, as part of its planned Institute for Distance and Distributed Learning, to recruit a group of Teaching Fellows for a two to four year period, which could, in turn, provide a core cadre of on-line teaching faculty for its distance and distributed learning initiatives.
Teaching Fellows essentially would work as instructors, but they also could receive advanced training in the Faculty Development Initiative, real world experience in Cyberschool-style University courses, and a formal course of instruction in the theory and practice of digital culture, discourse, and education. Those who complete all of these parts of the program could be given a certificate of proficiency in digital teaching to legitimize their actual work experience as well as to underscore Virginia Tech's innovative advances in this area. This program should be competitive, like similar teaching fellowships or postdoctoral appointments at the Honors colleges of some of our peer land grant institutions, and it should be a positive, rewarding experience for any new Ph.D., who might include this program in his/her career path.
Teaching Fellows also should engage in new Research, Outreach, or Extension projects as part of their Fellowships. While the main thrust of these appointments would be toward teaching, this program also must promote the interweaving of research, teaching, and service in the digital environment along the lines suggested in the Cyberschool Net.Work policy recommendation. While these appointments would be professional apprenticeships of a particular type, the Fellows should be encouraged to share their skills with Virginia Tech faculty, graduate students, and administrators, as well as with communities near and far, who could use their expertise as teachers or researchers.
Launching such a Teaching Fellows
program would have several benefits, including:
For further discussion of related issues, see the following Cyberschool Policy Recommendation papers:
All of these possibilities point
to a "win/win" situation for all involved, if we can mobilize the
money and support to make this proposal a reality.