Issue 26(2)
The
Advancement of Learning: Building the teaching commons.
(2005). Mary Taylor
Huber, Pat Hutchings, Indianapolis, IN: John Wiley & Sons.
208 pp., $35.00 (hardback) ISBN # 0-7879-8115-X.
Review
by: Geri Salinitri
Faculty
of Education
University
of Windsor
Based
on the work of the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement
of Teaching and Learning (CASTL), launched in
1998, The Advancement of Learning proposes the building
of a Teaching Commons, the infrastructure needed to improve
the quality of learning in higher education. Huber and Hutchings
challenge campus leaders to bring the scholarship of teaching
and learning to the forefront signaling institutional commitments
to learning, accountability, and providing authentic learning-based
evidence to meet new accreditation standards.
In
response to a changing culture of teaching, Huber and Hutchings
explore the movement across campuses and the challenges that
are faced in creating a teaching commons. Although,
primarily written for faculty across a full range of disciplines,
academic advisors will see their niche in advancing the teaching
commons by examining the context and place where teaching, learning
and advising merge.
Beginning
with the historical perspective on the scholarship of teaching,
the authors realized the daunting mission of moving teaching
from "private to community property"(p.14) and that building
a large scale commons would require all of the "intelligence,
commitment and imagination that the academic community can bring
to bear"(p.14). Further, they effectively and clearly expanded
on the defining features or elements of the scholarship of teaching
and learning. The authors bring concrete examples and survey
results, to articulate the importance of questioning, gathering
and exploring evidence, trying out and refining new insights
and going public to develop the possibilities of the scholarship
- "disciplines can engage in active trading of ideas about pedagogy"
(p. 32).
Describing
the work of mathematicians Bennett and Dewar, English professor
Mariolina Salvitori, and biologist Maura Flannery, best practices
in the teaching commons are brilliantly unfolded providing evidence
for the evolution of the scholarship of teaching. In "Mapping
the Commons" (Chapter 4) the authors illustrate the process
of mapping "as more scholars, with different interests and lines
of work, enter the commons and give it shape" (p. 55). The commons
becomes a space where people can have access to each other's
work. "(I)ts vibrancy lies in the number, variety and distinctiveness
of its neighbourhood" (p.71) - the bridge or space faculty and
advisors can meet.
As
a result of their intense conversations across campuses, the
authors are able to bring affirmations to the value of teaching
and learning as an institutional priority of a "campus of commons"
(p77). Metaphorically, they represent higher education as a
fleet of small boats, rowing toward some common destination
like the teaching commons (p90).
Huber
and Hutchings offer ample testimony of the power of the scholarship
of teaching and learning to affect change in classrooms, to
revitalize teaching and to improve student learning. A common
thread travels through the chapters as the audience is reminded
of the work of those experts in the field from various disciplines
as knowledge and examples add to the conviction for the need
for a teaching commons.
With
the addition of electronic communications and repositories,
the authors ensure the ease of knowledge building and exchange.
Accordingly " an act of intelligence or of artistic creation
becomes scholarship when it ..becomes public; it becomes an
object of critical review and evaluation by members of one's
community; and members ..begin to use, build upon, and develop
those acts of mind and creation" (p.93). Further they provide
a valuable summary of the standards of practice for the scholarship
of teaching.
As
they enter their final chapter, the authors revisit scholars
and look to the future as predicted by CASTL Scholars. The work
of these scholars, and authors, will help attract readers and
committed people to this volume as it has pushed inquiry in
new directions. With committed authors like, Huber and Hutchings,
the scholarship of teaching will rise to the level of all scholarship
and improve the learning environment in higher education.
By far the
most impressive part of the journey in the Advancement of
Learning, was feeling the passion of the authors as they
explored the many campuses and met with the various scholars
of teaching. It is a thorough, convincing, well researched book.
I would especially recommend it to faculty, new and veteran
as they examine their teaching portfolio and move toward making
best practices public. As for academic advisors, whether they
are faculty or not, they will gain insight into how to reach
other faculty and students in creating a "learning commons".
Definitely this is a good resource book.