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Volume 41

Number 1

August 28, 2008 |
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On Teaching: 6 award-winning psych profs share their thoughts
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Teachers often talk about how gratifying teaching can be when its done well, said Pitt psychology professor Martin Greenberg in a recent University Times roundtable discussion.
Thats the carrot. But I would not minimize the stick: the pride that we have in our teaching, Greenberg said. When you have a bad class, that stays with you. When you come back the next time, you really want to be good. Its the worst thing in the world to screw up a class.
I take it youve never had kidney stones, departmental colleague Frank Colavita quipped. Greenberg and Colavita are part of what might be a departmental record here. Six psychology professors have won Chancellors Distinguished Teaching Awards, among a departmental faculty of about 40. The other winners are E. Bruce Goldstein, William Klein, Richard Moreland and Mark Strauss.
Four of the faculty members have contiguous offices on the third floor of Sennott Square, a veritable hall of fame for teachers.
The six award-winning psychology professors recently came together to share their thoughts on teaching, facilitated by University Times staff writer Peter Hart. Following is part 1 of that discussion; part 2 will be published in the Sept. 11 issue.
University Times: What makes a good teacher?
Dick Moreland: I think good teaching is partly a knack, a personality characteristic or a set of skills that you bring with you to the classroom. Some people have those things and some people dont. Frank is a good example of somebody who has the knack for teaching.
University Times: So good teachers are born?
Dick Moreland: Partly, but a big part of it is hard work, deciding its a priority for you to run a good class and make things interesting for the students. Our faculty work hard at just about everything they do. Thats why theyre successful individually and why were a good department: Theyre obsessive-compulsive, they pour themselves into whatever activity theyre doing, so they spend a lot of time and think hard about their research, but they also do that for their teaching.
For those who dont have the knack, you can make up for that to a great extent by working at it, going the extra mile.
A lot of times when Im teaching and Im pressed for time, I say, Do I want to take an extra hour to make the next class turn out well, or just kind of wing it and hope for the best? I often force myself to put in the extra time.
Martin Greenberg: One of the unique features about psychology is that the subject matter is something that many students are interested in in terms of their own personal lives, and that certainly helps us in terms of how we lecture and in their involvement.
Involvement is a critical factor in any teaching, and critical to the students enjoyment, and theyre involved.
Dick Moreland: But that cuts both ways, Martin. Students in psych classes believe they already have some expertise in the topic. You know: Theyve lived life, they know these things.
We try to teach them that nothing is true unless its been proven through research. Even things that seem like common sense at first shouldnt be taken at face value. We should investigate it. Thats a hard message to get across.
Bruce Goldstein: To me, what good teachers have in common is a passion for the subject and transferring that to the students. In fact, when you look at studies of good teaching, one of the major things is if students get a good feel that their professor is enthralled about the subject. It can be any subject, although, of course, psychology happens to be very interesting.
My favorite feedback on my teaching evaluations is what Ive gotten in a course called Sensation and Perception, which has lots of stuff about neurons with a biological emphasis: Made a boring subject interesting.
I would also like to throw in something from my guru, Frank here, who said once at a meeting of graduate students, Youre going to have to teach and so you might as well have fun. I think thats a pretty good lesson.
Frank Colavita: Good teaching is more fun than bad teaching.
Bruce Goldstein: Right. And what Dick said about putting in the extra hour. Well, if you dont put in the extra hour and you go up there and just bomb out, its not fun.
Bill Klein: On the other hand, I think Ive learned more about teaching from bad teachers than from good ones. I can remember times saying to myself, Im not going to do that when I teach. I tell [graduate] students, Dont just go to Frank Colavitas classes or Dick Morelands classes, go to some other courses with the professors that dont have the same reputation, and you might find things you like and things you dont like that you can incorporate into your own teaching.
Dick Moreland: I agree. In terms of technique I think there are lots of ways to be a good teacher, and so thats why its valuable to see different examples.
I always hated professors who would grade a paper, which is a subjective thing, and were totally closed to discussing the grade they gave. Sometimes I got a grade that I didnt think was warranted, and Id say to the professor, Can we talk about this? and hear back, No, I dont discuss grades. That just pissed me off.
So I have a procedure where students can come and talk about grades theyre unhappy with, and I do change grades sometimes if Im convinced that its justified. Its a little like parenting: You remember things you hated about the way you were raised. The danger is going overboard too much in the other direction.
University Times: Why have so many of you in the psychology department won this award?
Dick Moreland: Just hearing that there is such an award, and that so few people win it, makes it seem very ambitious to even try for it, but if you know somebody who has succeeded, you think: Maybe I can try for it, too.
Martin helped me with advice, and Martin and I helped Bill in terms of preparing material.
Bill Klein: Dicks right, it was very helpful to have people whod done it before, to see their dossiers and how they approached applying. Its a lot of work, actually, to prepare a big binder of stuff.
Mark Strauss: I can give two possibilities: One is, all of us have to teach large classes, which takes a lot of thought and effort, so I think thats forced all of us into really thinking about how to teach.
Which isnt to say that upper-level, smaller classes arent difficult, its just that in those classes youve got a weeding out of students, so that youve got a small motivated group usually. On the other hand, if youre teaching introductory or developmental or the large social psychology course, it forces you to really think about how you make it interesting and how you do that when you have a class of 400.
The second thing: This is bragging a bit, but were a very high-quality department. If you look at percentage rankings of departments here, we are always within the top 15 percent and we compete against hundreds of departments.
Were an extremely productive department, we have a lot of research going on all of that translates into quality people who take that research and that enthusiasm and that knowledge of being at the cutting edge of their field into the classroom. Thats the part that I dont think is accidental.
Bruce Goldstein: I think it works the other way. I think its surprising, given what a high-quality department that we have, which is totally true, that we do have so many people who are really committed to teaching. The reason its a high-quality department is not because were good teachers, its because we have a very good research record and grant record.
The pressures are to do your research and excel in that area. Nobody minds if youre a good teacher, but you dont really get rewarded for it in terms of getting promoted or anything like that. So to me it makes it even more amazing.
Frank Colavita: When I came in 1966, the chairman was a man named Bob Patton.
Bill Klein: I was born in 1966. (laughter)
Mark Strauss: Dont worry, things havent changed much.
Frank Colavita: Anyway, Bob and I had a long talk and he said, Good teaching will not be held against you. But what matters is what you do in the laboratory. What I think happens is that people who come here want to do a good job in all aspects of academia.
Plus, psychologists are very verbal and generally we like people there are exceptions, no doubt and we have a little of that caretaker thing and all that contributes to good teaching.
University Times: Is part of your responsibility to train students to be good teachers?
Bill Klein: Yes, very much so. In our department, we have a system in place to train graduate students to learn how to teach, and thats not necessarily the case in other departments or other psychology departments.
Graduate students are required to take the Teaching Psychology that Frank developed or the Universitys teaching course before they can teach their own course, and all of them are required to teach their own course in our department.
We have lots of other opportunities for the graduate students: They can come to seminars, panel discussions, they can come to our classes, we sit in on their classes and give feedback. So there is a value system here: If youre going to teach graduate students how to teach and how to enjoy it, you have to give them the skills to do so, and expose them to models of good or bad teaching.
Now weve actually added a second course that will start next year. It will be a follow-up to this one. Its more of a support course where students who are currently teaching can come to a group once a week where they can express their concerns.
Bruce Goldstein: What they have to do in my version of the [Teaching Psychology] course is give presentations and critique each other.
One of the things I harp on a lot is my philosophy on PowerPoint, for example, which is that less is more. The reason these people are coming to class is not to see the PowerPoint slides, but to see you. Youre a real person, you have something to tell them, you have your enthusiasm. But a lot of teachers get carried away and its just one big wall of PowerPoint slides.
Dick Moreland: I emphasize PowerPoint in my classes, but I dont think Martin or Frank use it at all.
Frank Colavita: No, I dont use any technology. My trick is to hook them with my enthusiasm. I dont use notes. I havent used lecture notes in 30 years. I want to make eye contact. Sometimes I run my mouth a lot and that has consequences. Ill be at a social gathering and someone will say: I recognize you. My boyfriend was going to go med school until he took your course and now hes a psych major, and its your fault! (laughter)
Martin Greenberg: I paint word pictures. You can play upon students imagination. You can describe a scenario, whether it be real or hypothetical, and I know theyre following it when I can see there are little bubbles of interest floating above their heads.
Bruce Goldstein: I tried to figure out what is good teaching. When I first started here, I started a project where I was videotaping people who won teaching awards, to try to figure out what it was all about. And I just gave up the project, because there was such a wide variety that I couldnt pinpoint anything.
Dick Moreland: I find that comforting.
Bruce Goldstein: Yes. You had people who stood behind the podium and gave a very formal lecture who were considered great and you had people who jumped around a lot. But what Martin was talking about with word pictures when I teach I try to tell a story. You can tell a story about neurons. Or a story about some of the people who worked on neurons and how they discovered stuff. You can tell a story about anything, really. And I think that makes it come alive for students when you do that. That fits in with my basic philosophy.
Dick Moreland: Theres research in cognitive psychology that says that peoples brains are set up to understand and process stories more readily than the same amount of information presented in some other format. I agree with the story idea. A bad lecture often is one where a whole sequence of semi-related facts is transmitted and the students dont necessarily see what the relationship is among these things.
Martin Greenberg: Talking about the narrative and the story, the thing that stands out in evaluations of me that students like is examples. They love examples of a concept. You can give them the concept, the theory, the model, but until they can tie it down concretely, theyre not satisfied.
Dick Moreland: They like, especially, personal examples. Its that voyeuristic quality. I often use my poor wife as an example when I teach Personality. Several times shes run into somebody during her business career who took my class and they ask her semi-inappropriate questions, like, Still wearing that nightgown? Still make a big stink when Dick wants to do this or that? (laughter)
Mark Strauss: Were talking as though we won this award only for our OMET (Office of Measurement and Evaluation of Teaching) scores. Im sure we all have good scores or we wouldnt get the award, but lots of people have good OMET scores the award process looks at things more broadly.
The last several years Ive been on the Bellet [Arts and Sciences teaching] award committee and so Ive been looking at this process. First of all, part of our being active researchers, we typically have a lot of directed research study students working in our labs. I typically have five to seven. Thats a large part of what I talked about [in applying for the chancellors award], and I know that some of the students whove worked in my lab wrote in support of me, many of whom Ive had continued contact with 20 years later.
When you teach the large classes its hard to get to know the students, and particularly the quality students. When you work with them in your lab, thats where you have the personal experience. It really gives you the opportunity to have an impact on their lives. You have lab meetings with undergraduate students and graduate students, and theyre integrated in a completely different type of learning experience: Its hands-on, the undergraduates have the role models of the graduate students, theres more dialogue. Its a very different experience. In a sense, it allows you to have a small-college atmosphere within the large university. For us, its part of the zeitgeist of what we do here. What could be more important than when you take students and really change the direction of their lives, the way theyre thinking, often what they end up doing as a career? This is where the real gratification is. Its not the amorphous 400 students.
I think that also is why I didnt get this award for over 25 years, because it took a maturity to feel comfortable doing that. You almost develop a sort of fatherly or, now for me, grandfatherly, attitude toward developing students.
Bruce Goldstein: I should say that Im an example of a person who doesnt do much research. I write textbooks, which is a facet of teaching and I think that this goes back to what Martin was saying about how bad it feels to hold a bad class there is certainly a very nice feeling that you get when youve done something to change students lives. You often dont find out about that till years later.
But theres also a certain performance component to teaching. They say good actors are the most insecure people because they have to make people love them by acting. Dick Moreland: Teaching is a kind of acting. I think if you had acting experience when you were younger, it would be valuable.
University Times: The difference is its your own words youre using, not an authors.
Bill Klein: Well, yes and no. Theres another piece of this, which is were often teaching these big classes, and maybe one-half of one of the lectures covers our own research. And the rest of it is work done by our colleagues at the University and other places. I sometimes feel, in this context, that I am an actor: Im taking this script that is given to me by the field or by my colleagues, and Im working it out in a way that makes it interesting and thats consistent with the way I see it. So its somewhere in between.
Dick Moreland: Mark brought up the pleasure of working with the best students and I certainly agree with that. But many of us spend time outside of class with not-so-good students who are struggling with the material and trying to do better. I think theres some pleasure to be found there, too. In some ways, I admire a student who struggles to learn something and succeeds more than a student who takes it in easily. Its very gratifying to work with students who started out failing exams and get them up to speed, so that now they understand the material, maybe they changed their study habits, or whatever it is that youve done to help them. Theyre not going to go on and be psychologists and have PhDs, but youve changed them in a way that may affect how they do in their other courses, or even in ways that change their everyday lives.
University Times: In large classes, isnt there some pressure on the teacher to teach to both ends of aptitude? Mark Strauss: Thats the hardest part.
Dick Moreland: That is difficult. The danger is watering down your course. The students who fail are angry and upset. One way to solve that problem is to make everything easier, but if youre not careful you find yourself teaching a baby course.
You cant save every student. That was a hard lesson for me to learn. You start out thinking, If I just work hard enough, I can make every single one of these students learn the material and get an A. I had to give up on that vision at some point and recognize that there are some students I just couldnt reach. You try to salvage as many as you can of the ones who are having trouble.
University Times: How have students changed over the years?
Mark Strauss: When many of us came here, Pitt was still pretty much drawing local students. I remember one point early in my career the percentage of students coming here who were first-time college students in their families was very high. I actually found it quite enjoyable that we were taking these students who didnt have parents who were professionals and college educated and so on, and opening up a whole new world for them. And they were very motivated.
At the time the University was pushing hard to up its research quality, when we were trying to think of how we could become the Harvard of western Pennsylvania. Many of us were thinking, you know, we have a really good mission here of taking these students and changing their worlds. Forget about the Harvard routine. In the last 30 years that has changed. Now were getting a very different type of student.
Dick Moreland: Mark, are you saying also that the quality of students has improved? Because I think thats the case.
Mark Strauss: The quality has improved, but we also have a lot of heterogeneity, which is what makes it difficult: We have a lot of these really good students, the ones I talked about earlier who are in the labs who can go on and compete with anyone, but we still have quite a bit of heterogeneity. So when you teach, particularly an intro class, thats really a struggle. Almost by definition youre failing 15-20 percent.
Martin Greenberg: Students in the early 70s wanted to hear more not less. What Ive seen of late, students are saying, You go into too much depth, you talk too much about this topic. What theyre really saying is they want more sound bites.
Mark Strauss: And they dont want to have to read about it.
Bruce Goldstein: This is anecdotal, but I used to teach this course that was considered rather far out, called The Psychology of Art and Multimedia. It was like a film production course, although we talked about psychological principles, and the students had to create stuff in that course.
In the first few years were talking about the 70s I had students who just totally knocked me out with some of the stuff they created. Some of them actually became filmmakers.
I think of it as a golden age or maybe its because we were all younger and we turned the students on more. They were just so into creating and excited about stuff, and I dont see that much any more.
Mark Strauss: Thats where I see the discord with the greater heterogeneity. The good students are creative, they do read, theyre intellectually motivated, but theres a much larger group who have not read, and they dont want to read.
Its the TV, the web. When you give assignments its a struggle to get them to not just use a web site as their source of information. I gave one assignment where I hadnt stressed that a whole lot and probably more than half the class all had the same web site because it was obviously the first or second site on Google. It turned out to be some little report that a first-year graduate student somewhere had gotten posted. And theyre all citing this, so I had to read them the riot act.
University Times: Do you find youre communicating with students much more via email?
Mark Strauss: Yes, and theres good and bad in that. The good is that it allows a lot of students who wouldnt personally contact you to write to you. The negative is you get emails about things you never would be personally approached about.
Martin Greenberg: Stuff thats on the syllabus. Or, When is the final exam? What room is it in?
Bruce Goldstein: I put something on my syllabus called email etiquette, which is exactly what youre talking about. Im happy to answer your legitimate questions, but do not send me an email about when the exam is. It seems to help a little bit.
Mark Strauss: I did something like that this year in my intro course. I tried to separate: important things, Im always happy to see you, or have you email me. But I dont want 400 emails asking what times the class. And I got a bunch of evaluations that said, Hes pompous on the first day.
Martin Greenberg: What Ive noticed in the last couple of years, when it comes to exams, students want to know: What do I have to study for? They seem more obsessed with structure: Do I have to read everything? Do I have to know all of this? This was not the case in the 70s or even the 80s. This is in the last few years. They want to know more and more what are the key terms. I see it reflected in textbooks, too.
Bruce Goldstein: Thats an interesting point. When I was going to teach Cognitive Psychology for the first time, I sat in on a course of a colleague who was considered a good teacher, because I thought it would help.
Then I decided I am going to take the first exam. There was a review session, and I didnt care at all about the topic, all I wanted to know was what was going to be on the exam, what should I study? I became one of them! (laughter)
Dick Moreland: Some psychologists have argued that if we emphasize grades and deadlines and external factors, we weaken the intrinsic motivation students have to learn the material. They start out wanting to know something about what theyre studying, but then they get forced into this situation where they have to study and take exams and get grades and have things turned in by a certain time and they get confused about why theyre taking the course. Am I taking this course to meet the deadlines and get high grades, or am I taking the course because Im really interested in this material?
University Times: How do you all feel about the importance of grades?
Dick Moreland: Well, Im old-fashioned, so I dont care. I emphasize the external, like tests. Im sold on tests. When I teach graduate seminars I sometimes will just tell people on day one that Im going to give everybody an A. The first time I did that, I was nervous. I thought, Somebodys going to stop coming to class or not put in any effort. But it never has happened. Apparently, theyre interested enough anyway that the grades arent necessary.
Mark Strauss: I feel a little like that. In my upper-class courses, I only use take-home assignments and exams. They have the questions and they can talk to each other. In fact, I tell them that thats part of the intellectual experience. I make sure that my questions are tough questions and require creative thinking. But I tell them: If you want to talk to each other, and discuss the issues and try to figure out what Im after, thats fine. But I expect all of you to write your own individual answers. Thats a hard line, and I read very closely to make sure Im not reading duplicates.
I tell them, I would love to give all of you As and I will if you write creatively. And some terms I give out a lot of As.
Bill Klein: I agree with Mark that students should not think that theyre being forced into some kind of distribution, where a certain percentage are going to get Cs. There are some places that do that, and I think there are some reasonably good arguments for doing that. But I would rather foster a more collegial environment where students are working together. I dont have take-home exams, but I do tell them they can study together and encourage them to do that and give them the resources to do it.
Otherwise what Im asking my students to do is very similar to what Mark is asking: They learn together, they do projects together, sometimes I assign them to work together in small groups. Thats part of the learning experience.
I would say that one of the costs to this approach, which I have found very difficult to deal with, is that you come across then as really caring about their progress, and youve suggested that they can all earn As, that its quite possible, and then when you give them the first exam and half of them do get Cs and Ds, theyre completely shocked.
One of the negative comments I get on my course evaluations is, Wow, he made us feel so comfortable in the classroom, and then wham! he hit us over the head with that first exam and I never saw it coming.
I keep trying to refine my teaching methods so that Im a little more hard line and I warn them its going to be hard, and Ive not yet succeeded in figuring out how to do that.
Dick Moreland: I have the same problem. The first exam I give in my class, a lot of students find difficult and theyre surprised by it, especially if they form an impression of me from the lectures that Im going to be easygoing about grading. Ive tried everything to avoid this problem. Ive tried warning them; Ive tried showing them the grade distribution from a previous semester on the first exam; Ive tried giving them a practice exam. They have this optimistic illusion that everythings going to be easy.
Mark Strauss: Part of the answer is what was said before about giving them adequate feedback. So, for example, with a take-home, particularly for my midterm, I put comments on their papers, but I tell them if you really think the grade doesnt reflect your knowledge, write a little note to that effect, give the paper back to me, I will read it again and give you more extensive feedback. A few students who are really concerned might do that. Sometimes I actually change my mind and decide I was too harsh. You have to give them that feedback.
The negative of teaching that way is, if you have a class of 50 students and youre reading 15- to 20-page papers and having to give feedback, you just have to decide that this is important enough for you to do, because there certainly isnt a reward system to do that. Its much easier just to give multiple-choice exams. *
Part 2 of the teachers roundtable will be published Sept. 11. The professors discuss Pitts commitment to undergraduate education, the interrelationship of teaching and research and the use of technology in the classroom.
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