National teaching awards and the pursuit of teaching excellence

Mark Israel and Dawn Bennett examine national teaching awards implemented in the UK, Australia, New Zealand and Canada. They question how much influence such awards have in terms of acting as agents of institutional change, and go further to suggest that institutions themselves do not really value,...

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Main Authors: Israel, M., Bennett, Dawn
Format: Book Chapter
Published: Routledge 2018
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/73268
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author Israel, M.
Bennett, Dawn
author_facet Israel, M.
Bennett, Dawn
author_sort Israel, M.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
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description Mark Israel and Dawn Bennett examine national teaching awards implemented in the UK, Australia, New Zealand and Canada. They question how much influence such awards have in terms of acting as agents of institutional change, and go further to suggest that institutions themselves do not really value, or take seriously, such schemes. Indeed, there is limited evidence to suggest they have much impact on awardees, teaching quality or students’ learning. In concluding, Israel and Bennett assert that in order for national teaching awards to impact purposefully on excellence, they need to support awardees to work alongside others, encourage organizational alignment with institutional missions, and give awarding bodies the authority to empower awardees to make a significant contribution to the sector.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-732682019-09-10T06:25:43Z National teaching awards and the pursuit of teaching excellence Israel, M. Bennett, Dawn Mark Israel and Dawn Bennett examine national teaching awards implemented in the UK, Australia, New Zealand and Canada. They question how much influence such awards have in terms of acting as agents of institutional change, and go further to suggest that institutions themselves do not really value, or take seriously, such schemes. Indeed, there is limited evidence to suggest they have much impact on awardees, teaching quality or students’ learning. In concluding, Israel and Bennett assert that in order for national teaching awards to impact purposefully on excellence, they need to support awardees to work alongside others, encourage organizational alignment with institutional missions, and give awarding bodies the authority to empower awardees to make a significant contribution to the sector. 2018 Book Chapter http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/73268 Routledge restricted
spellingShingle Israel, M.
Bennett, Dawn
National teaching awards and the pursuit of teaching excellence
title National teaching awards and the pursuit of teaching excellence
title_full National teaching awards and the pursuit of teaching excellence
title_fullStr National teaching awards and the pursuit of teaching excellence
title_full_unstemmed National teaching awards and the pursuit of teaching excellence
title_short National teaching awards and the pursuit of teaching excellence
title_sort national teaching awards and the pursuit of teaching excellence
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/73268