Great teaching is part art, part science. Complement your personal teaching approach with these teaching techniques proven effective through evidence-based research.

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Plan and Refine Your Course

Plan a well-organized, effective course and consider how to improve it.

Course Design

Create an Inclusive and Equitable Course

Keep diversity, equity, inclusion and accessibility (DEIA) in mind while designing your course.

Inclusivity

Design and Grade Course Work

Develop effective course assignments and identify grading policies to support student learning.

Grading

Choose Course Materials

Guidance on copyright, accessibility, and using the library effectively.

Course Materials

Use Student Teams Effectively

Strategies for effective teamwork and descriptions of team-based pedagogies.

Student Teams

Foster an Active Classroom

Challenge students to think, create, discuss and solve problems rather than passively receive knowledge. 

Active Teaching

Deep Dives

Explorations into trending topics in the field of higher education.

teaching in nature

Best Practices in Teaching Observation >>

To capture a full picture of an instructor’s teaching abilities, it takes more than end-of-semester student evaluations. Peer observations can shed light on the quality of interactions between the students and the instructor. Peers can provide formative feedback with an eye toward improving instruction. Self-reflection through journaling, self-observation and the development of a teaching portfolio is the third pillar of teaching observation.

Shawn Miller presenting at the Emerging Pedagogies Symposium: Teaching and Learning in the Age of AI

AI and Teaching at Duke >>

The challenge for instructors is to discover how to incorporate Artificial Intelligence content generators as a tool in their teaching rather than view them solely as a threat. In the past, other technology tools such as multifunction calculators, spelling and grammar checkers, and statistical analysis software shifted the ways we learn and teach. As in those cases, educators will need to help students differentiate when AI can help with learning versus when it is a short cut around learning. 

A DKU professor assists a student on her laptop.

Alternative Strategies for Assessment and Grading >>

Research shows that grades are often not a good reflection of student learning and growth, and that being graded can be stressful for students. In addition, many traditional grading practices can exacerbate existing academic inequalities. We encourage faculty to design assessments that directly support student learning first, with their evaluative role considered secondarily.