Teaching Tips: Texas Teach-Up & the Power of Peer Observation

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Published:
February 5, 2025
Happy February from the Provost’s Teaching Fellows! 

This month’s Teaching Tips revolve around the upcoming Texas Teach-Up  and peer observation of teaching. Many academic units have various requirements surrounding teaching observations. Peer teaching observations are often tied to promotion and tenure processes and can induce stress rather than provide insight or growth. However, peer observation has proven benefits for both the observer and the observed, especially when evaluations and heightened stakes are removed. Texas Teach-Up is an opportunity to observe instructors from every corner of the University and gain insight into their pedagogical practices, and is a great example of non-evaluative observations that focus primarily on reflection.
 
Considerations for how to incorporate Peer Observation into your pedagogy:
 
Observing your fellow instructors is a great way to refresh some of your teaching practices. Sometimes observing other instructors is the best way to inject new life into some of your teaching practices. Seeing how other instructors connect with students, approach material, and utilize the classroom setting can be more valuable than any single observation on your own course. Texas Teach-Up has the added benefit of offering courses from nearly every college and school, which means you can observe instructors from outside your discipline—which can be even more impactful than observing peers you know.
Asking someone to observe you in a non-evaluative manner is helpful for generating personal reflection. Decrease the anxiety surrounding your required observations by asking a trusted colleague to give a teaching observation outside of required contexts. Another way to do this is to sign-up for Texas Teach-Up when it’s offered! You’ll get a variety of instructors excited to observe and help you workshop any ideas for the classroom. 

Workshop with trusted/reliable students about what’s working and not working in a course. Getting student input can be so helpful for instructors. Students often have great ideas about what might be useful – and they’ve had contact with a variety of teaching styles and tools during college; they might have a great option for making content accessible, making your job (and theirs!) a little easier. You can utilize Canvas or Qualtrics for feedback options. Mid-semester is a great time to get this feedback and start incorporating it into your pedagogical practices.

While inviting observation can be nerve-wracking, it’s often a great way to quickly refresh and improve our teaching.  Rarely do our practices need a complete overhaul, but these opportunities for growth can give the change we need to impact our students and our own relationship to our instruction ideologies.

Hook ‘em! 
 
Natalie Czimskey
Chair-Elect, Provost’s Teaching Fellows
 

Upcoming Events and Opportunities

Sign-ups for this year’s Texas Teach-Up are now open! Texas Teach-Up brings instructors from all colleges and schools together to celebrate and reflect upon their teaching practices. During this annual event, instructors are invited into the classrooms of their peers for a non-evaluative, reflective class observation. Mark your calendars —and make sure you sign up by Feb. 20 for your favorite courses before they fill up! Learn more and RSVP here.
PTF Think Tank: AI and Teaching in the Year of Little Dragon, February 11. AI can be both amazing and annoying, powerful and perplexing. This PTF Think Tank will discuss the up-to-date challenges and opportunities of teaching with AI in higher education.  We will review the potentials and the pitfalls of the most widely used AI tools such as ChatGPT, CoPilot, Consensus, and Google Notebook for teaching preparation, classroom activities, and research. This Think Tank will be facilitated by Wenhong Chen (Journalism and Media/Sociology). All instructors are welcome! RSVP here.
 
ImprovED: Creatively Expanding Your Teaching Toolkit, March 7. At ImprovED, you'll observe colleagues apply new teaching strategies in real time and then brainstorm how to incorporate them into your own lesson plans. By the end of the session, participants will leave with a toolkit of varied teaching strategies transferable across disciplines and course sizes, levels, and modalities to support deeper student learning and engagement. Join us for an afternoon of curiosity, exploration, and connection! RSVP here.
 

Introducing: Early Career Teaching Connections
Early Career Teaching Connections are designed specifically for faculty in their first five years of teaching at UT. If you are unsure if this applies to you, please reach out for more information. 
Artful Engagement as Teaching Practice at the Blanton Museum, March 14. Studies show that viewing art with others has beneficial impacts on our brains and on our mental health—and can also help students learn valuable and relevant skills for the classroom. In this session, participants will take part in two interactive activities that will engage you with some of the works in the Blanton’s collections, spark ideas for using the Museum in your teaching practice, and invite reflection on your experiences as an educator at UT so far. RSVP here for an afternoon of joyful, awe-inspiring encounter with one of the Gems of our university, followed by a picnic reception on the Blanton lawn.