Intergenerational relations that guide educational planning: Perspectives on the university course experience
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
10-12-2023
Abstract
The university faculty instructor is a curiously stealth yet dynamic pilar of academia. With the threefold expectations of teaching, research, and service responsibilities, one may imagine that the instruction may be less important than the other contractual obligations. As reflected through this study's findings, such assumptions would be far afield from the reality of hard work, focused effort, and time allocation that each faculty member focuses upon their instructional efforts. The findings respond to four areas of instructional impact: assessment, instructor-sustained emotional engagement, instructional shifts in expertise and generational intermixing, as well as potential recognition of a noble academic growing into their professorial strengths while the students retain their traditional as well as non-traditional age range in the classroom experience. Equally impactful is the university student perspective that encompasses a thoughtfully articulate and analytic stance.
Recommended Citation
Crawford, Caroline M.; Bromer, Billi L.; Moffett, Noran L.; Andrews, Sharon K.; Dickenson, Virginia; Newsum, Janice Moore; Young Wallace, Jennifer K.; and Dillard, James, "Intergenerational relations that guide educational planning: Perspectives on the university course experience" (2023). College of Education. 48.
https://digitalcommons.uncfsu.edu/college_education/48