12. Supporting Teachers and Instructors in a Digital Age

12.1. Are You a Super - Hero?

Image: © Simon Bates/eCampus Ontario

Figure 33, developed by Simon Bates, Associate Provost, Teaching and Learning at UBC (2016), encapsulates well the role of a teacher or instructor in a digital age. At this point in the book, you might be forgiven for thinking that this is all too much, especially if you are a university professor whose passion is the discipline in which you are an expert, and whose priority is to extend the boundaries of knowledge in that subject through research or other scholarly work. Where earth will you find the time to become expert in teaching if this means completely changing the teaching model you have become comfortable with? You are not alone in thinking this. Martha Cleveland-Innes (2013) writes:

It is unrealistic to expect higher education faculty to have sound, current, content expertise, a productive research program, an active service commitment AND be expert online teachers. The biggest lie in the academy is that the role of faculty, and its rewards and responsibilities, is made up of a seemingly balanced set of activities around teaching, research and service (Atkinson, 2001). With some variation across the type of institution, research is the most valued work and most notably rewarded.   While this reality has not changed “…classroom teaching and course materials (have become) more sophisticated and complex in ways that translate into new forms of faculty work. ….. such new forms are not replacing old ones, but instead are layered on top of them, making for more work.” (Rhoades, 2000, p, 38). It is time to clarify this reality and consider how, if, at all, changes in teaching are, or maybe, integrated into the role of the faculty member.

How changes may be integrated into the role of the faculty member, instructor or classroom teacher in a digital age is what this lesson is about. It is not realistic to expect all teachers to be super-heroes (even if you are the exception), but it is realistic to expect all teachers to be competent and professional in a digital age.

The good news though is that if you have read your way through all the lessons in this book, you will have done what you need to do to be competent and professional for teaching in a digital age, and will certainly be ahead of 99 percentage of your colleagues on this (at least until they have also read this book). At the same time, there is much your employing organisation and senior administrators can do to help you with this lesson.