After the physics faculty unanimously approved the recommendations of the Paradigms 2.0 committee near the end of spring term in 2016, the hard work began of putting those recommendations into practice. Needing immediate attention was submitting the required forms and information to the registrar to obtain university approval for these changes. Also of immediate concern was preparing for a faculty vote early in the fall on associated modifications to the requirements for the physics major and minor. An on-going process, the upper-division curriculum committee meetings continued engaging the faculty in discussing and developing plans collaboratively. A new process, shadowing, enhanced the preparation of new faculty to teach interactively in the paradigms in physics courses. Faculty involved in implementing the new plan offered the following advice for others implementing similar curricular reforms.
Apply for university approval of changes as soon as feasible
if possible, encourage a committee member to volunteer to take charge of finding out about the institution’s approval process and to oversee submission of required forms
recognize this person’s effort appropriately
try to obtain institution approvals before students start to register for the revised courses
if approval is unlikely to occur before registration, restrict entry so that students must see an advisor before allowed to register for a revised course
Prepare for faculty vote on changes in requirements for the major and minor
discuss the proposed changes with each faculty member informally
prepare a document that clearly describes the proposed changes
provide a one page executive summary
list main questions for each category of changes to be decided
provide a table of contents listing information provided for each change
provide the details for each proposed change
refine the document with feedback from small committee members
discuss the document and proposed changes with head of the department
ask the head of the department to email the document to faculty
schedule a faculty meeting specifically for discussing and voting on the changes
facilitate a discussion of each category of proposed changes and vote on each separately
Continue to engage the faculty in collaboratively discussing and developing plans
schedule regular meetings of faculty teaching the upper division courses, such as every 3 weeks
engage faculty in generating questions about the curriculum they would like to discuss
ask one or more to facilitate a meeting focused on one of those questions
focus some meetings on brainstorming connections among the courses as a whole
focus some meetings on reflections about what happened in individual courses such as what went well, what were the challenges, and what changes might be made
focus some meetings around specific issues needing attention
welcome faculty teaching earlier or later courses to join the conversation
Prepare new faculty for teaching interactively in the reformed courses
assign new faculty to shadow faculty teaching courses to which they will be assigned
recognize extra effort required for the faculty member who is being shadowed
count shadowing as a teaching assignment
make sure shadower understands this is not a break from teaching
have department head specify expectations that shadower:
comes to and participates in every class session
comes to and participates in every meeting preparing for and/or debriefing class sessions
assumes responsibility for preparing for and facilitating some small group activities
assumes responsibility for preparing for and teaching some sessions
coach the shadower in ways to:
use interactive engagement strategies
welcome and work with student ideas likely to emerge during exploration of a topic
facilitate “wrap-up” discussions after activities exploring a topic
plan and teach a session
Redesign the existing courses
require students to see an advisor and get permission to enroll in new and redesigned courses to be sure students are aware of any implications of the approved changes
assign faculty deeply involved in generating the new plan to redesign and teach the revised courses or at least to mentor faculty teaching these courses
start with set of index cards listing main topics to be included in revised course
next focus on what want students to be able to do
explore resources documenting interactive engagement strategies and assignments used in prior versions of the courses
incorporate well-tested activities and homework assignments from prior versions of the courses wherever possible in the revised course
plan questions to ask to facilitate student discussions
keep ‘lecturing’ to a minimum but plan what to write on the board and what to ask and say in preparing for and debriefing activities and assignments
estimate timing for each topic during each session and keep tract of what happens when
write a reflection after each session with notes of actual timing and thoughts about what to keep and what to do differently next time
Coordinate the content of associated courses with redesigned courses
make sure the science content and technical skills developed in associated courses match what is needed and are in the appropriate order for the redesigned courses
make sure needed science and mathematics content in eliminated courses gets included in the new and redesigned courses