This paper presents an evaluation of a pilot Master Graduate Teaching Fellows (MGTF)
program at a public flagship research university. The MGTF program was part of a broader
MSP called Vertically Integrated Partnerships K-16 (or VIP K-16). The MGTF program sought
to enhance the capacity for teaching excellence in graduate students in the sciences
through the provision of intensive professional development and peer mentoring. The pilot
involved 6 graduate fellows ("MGTFs") who worked with approximately 30 graduate teaching
assistants (TAs). MGTFs were assigned to lower-level science courses which traditionally
enroll large numbers of first-year undergraduate students and employ large numbers of TAs.
In addition to their own professional development and teaching responsibilities, MGTFs
were responsible for mentoring new TAs, providing direct support to struggling TAs,
administering mid-term and end-of-term TA evaluations, running weekly TA meetings,
revising lab manuals and other instructional materials for their courses, and delivering
professional development workshops for TAs. Fellows received 12-months of funding at
current departmental stipend levels, including tuition and fees.
The ability to
compete globally requires that our nation recruit STEM (science, teaching, engineering,
and mathematics) professionals, and while the need to produce them in ever greater numbers
cannot be over-emphasized, our educational system has long failed to do
so.1 This need has a cascading effect. The training of
professionals qualified to do STEM research begins early in life, so well-qualified
elementary and secondary STEM teachers are in high demand. Both the training of
scientists themselves and the training of elementary and secondary science teachers
culminates with their postsecondary education, creating a demand for faculty in
postsecondary institutions with both expertise in the art of teaching and commitment to
the recruitment of students to STEM disciplines. The production of faculty members
who possess these teaching skills (along with the ability to do quality research and the
willingness to offer service to the institution and community) poses both the mandate and
the challenge to institutions of higher education to provide for the professional
development of STEM graduate students whose career plans include a faculty position.
In Preparing Future Faculty in the Sciences and Mathematics: A Guide for
Change, Pruitt-Logan, Gaff, and Jentoft (2002) noted the well-known "mismatch" that
exists across disciplines between graduate student expectations, training practices
employed by academic departments, and actual career opportunities. While graduate students
are predominantly trained for careers in research universities, such faculty positions are
in short supply. Students often do not have a clear idea of other career paths that exist,
nor are they well trained for the faculty positions they seek, insofar as their training
in good teaching practices is minimal or lacking altogether.2 The authors
point out that this institution-wide problem is particularly relevant in STEM disciplines,
where many of the undergraduate students with whom TAs interact "lack adequate background,
fear their own inadequacies, and seek to avoid these subjects altogether."3
Pruitt-Logan. et al, reported that research in the professional development of
graduate students indicates that these students benefit from multiple mentoring
relationships with faculty, both in their own institution and in others where emphases and
practices differ. Future faculty also require training in pedagogy, particularly in the
areas of experiential learning, the use of educational technology, and techniques to
address the diverse needs of individual learners. To add to the complexity of the dynamics
of such professional development, experiences cannot demand more of the student than his
or her schedule can accommodate, taking into account the need to complete coursework and
engage in research that is often emphasized by academic advisors at the expense of
attention to teaching.4 Likewise, Henry (et al., 2007) claimed that programs
designed to train future faculty in teaching suffer from a particular drawback-the
difficulty of assessing the impact of mentoring on the actual classroom performance of
TAs. In fact, this has been seen as a problem general to all teacher reform and
improvement programs, as there are no evaluation instruments available ready-made that
address all the possible techniques and practices focused on in the training
sessions. Yet development of a valid and effective assessment instrument that is
tailor-made can be quite time consuming and impractical. Because of these
considerations, such programs often rely on self-reports, with all of the deficiencies
inherent in that method of assessment.5
1 U.S. Department of Education. (2000). Before it's too late: A report to the nation from the National Commission on Mathematics and Science Teaching for the 21st Century. p. 9. See also Business-Higher Education Forum. (2007). A commitment to America's future: Responding to the crisis in mathematics and science education.
2 Pruitt-Logan, A.S., Gaff, J.G., & Jentoft, J.E. (2002). Preparing future faculty in the sciences and mathematics: A guide for change. Washington, DC: Council of Graduate Schools & Association of American Colleges and Universities. p. vi. See also Hardr-, P.L. (2005). Instructional design as a professional development tool-of-choice for graduate teaching assistants, Innovative Higher Education, 30(3).
3 Ibid, p. 15.
4 Ibid, pp. 18-19. See also Hardr-, 2005.
5 Henry, M.A., Murray, K.S., & Phillips, K.A. (2007). Meeting the challenge of STEM classroom observation in evaluating teacher development projects: A comparison of two widely-used instruments. Click Here to view PDF.