Thanks, Jim -
 
This is good inspiration -
 
Paul 

	-----Original Message----- 
	From: Greenberg, James 
	Sent: Fri 2/7/2003 8:02 AM 
	To: [log in to unmask] 
	Cc: 
	Subject: THE SEVEN HABITS OF HIGHLY SUCCESSFUL PROFESSORS
	
	

	Below is a document some of you may have already seen.  If you can't read this whole thing here are its major points: 

	Successful professors: 

	1) Take the initiative to meet and talk with students... their relationship with you is one of the leading factors in their retention (and more importantly) their success. 

	2) Give students richer assessment and let them see examples of what you expect early on.  

	3) Don't waste class time.  Know in detail exactly what you want to cover.. pick the important stuff... for each class.  

	4) Like I learned in Scout training, give positive feedback in public, be critical in private.  Try to foster an environment that is win/win not one that is they can lose. 

	5) Listen to your students and provide ways they can "talk" to you.  Find out what they understand and don't understand first and then go from there.   I'll add one of my own here... constantly probe students for misconceptions... every class... 

	6) Get students to work together in class and outside of class.  Remember knowledge is socially constructed, so get them constructing. 

	7) This is the one the TLTC is all about: Sharpen The Saw... that is take the time to modify and rethink your course and to think of ways you can get the concepts to your students.  Technology can help sometimes but so can I walk in the woods.  Another way is to attend Teaching Breakfasts, or chat with colleagues about what they do.  



		Mr. James B. Greenberg 
		Director Teaching, Learning and Technology Center 
		Milne Library 
		SUNY College at Oneonta 
		Oneonta, New York 13820 

		email: [log in to unmask] 
		phone: 607-436-2701 

		"Ignorance is curable, stupidity lasts forever" 


	---------- 
	From:   Rick Reis 
	Sent:   Wednesday, February 5, 2003 6:19 PM 
	To:     [log in to unmask] 
	Subject:        TP Msg. #457 THE SEVEN HABITS OF HIGHLY SUCCESSFUL PROFESSORS 


	           THE SEVEN HABITS OF HIGHLY SUCCESSFUL PROFESSORS 

	Written especially for an accountability-minded reader, The 7 Habits 
	of Highly Effective People (Covey, 1989) provides a practical 
	foundation on which to build successful recruiting, retention, 
	completion, and placement strategies. We will leave some of Covey's 
	concepts-such as the "circle of concern, circle of influence" and the 
	"emotional bank account-for you to explore (which you can do by 
	reading the book or by listening to one of the many audiotapes 
	related to it), but we will look closely at the seven habits 
	themselves. 

	Habit 1: Be Proactive 

	Traditionally, professors have built relationships with students 
	slowly-often not until the students' senior year or entry into 
	graduate school. One could logically surmise that in the meantime, 
	many other students had left school because of poor academic 
	performance, family or other personal reasons, or the need or desire 
	to accept full-time employment. Our experience is that many of these 
	challenges can be overcome when a professor provides wise counsel 
	during the student's crisis. Proponents of the accountability 
	movement believe that the retention of students through graduation is 
	in the best interests of students, the employment market, and our 
	larger society. Therefore, it is incumbent on professors to play a 
	more active role in students' success. 

	To be proactive, professors should: 

	*Anticipate challenges students are likely to face and plan for their solution. 
	*Initiate a dialogue with as many students as possible, early in the term. 
	*Gather sufficient information from students in order to meet their needs. 
	*Orchestrate a rich initial class meeting that achieves multiple objectives. 
	*Follow up promptly on student inquiries for information and on absenteeism. 

	Habit 2: Begin with the End in Mind 

	Many in higher education have long believed that the richness of a 
	liberal arts classroom combined with a comprehensive campus 
	experience was sufficient in and of itself to produce an educated 
	person. While there is unquestionably much to value in that paradigm, 
	the student population has changed significantly since that belief 
	was formulated. As we will discuss in more detail in Chapter 3, 
	today's college and university students are far more likely than 
	yesterday's to attend classes part-time while working full-time. They 
	are also more likely to be older and to have family responsibilities 
	(whether in child-rearing or caring for aging parents). These 
	factors, along with the expectations of the stakeholders enumerated 
	in Chapter 1, have heralded a call for more measurable educational 
	outcomes than were common during the height of traditional liberal 
	art education. 

	To begin with the end in mind, professors should integrate the 
	following tactics into their teaching: 

	*Identify specific, up-to-date learning objectives for each course 
	that reflect the consideration of multiple stakeholders. 
	*Develop richer assignments that lead to the achievement of these 
	objectives that are relevant to students' lives. 
	*Provide detailed, eye-appealing syllabi that clearly explain course 
	objectives, strategies, and guidelines. 
	*Develop exams and other assessment tools before course material is addressed. 
	Clarify throughout the term the objectives communicated in the course syllabus. 

	Habit 3: Put First Things First 

	When students were housed in dormitories, sorority and fraternity 
	houses, and other on-campus housing, and when they focused their 
	energies entirely on their college experience, management of class 
	time was not as major an issue as it has now become. Both commuting 
	students and on-campus residents with wide access to support 
	resources (e.g., computer access at home or in the dorm rooms) expect 
	a highly focused and rich course experience. Effective professors 
	manage their class meeting time not only to address the most critical 
	concepts when students are physiologically receptive but also to 
	regularly connect activities and assignments to the core content of 
	the course. 

	To put first things first, the most successful professors will learn 
	to employ the following tactics: 

	*Develop a detailed agenda for each class meeting that includes time 
	parameters. 
	*Address critical learning objectives early in the class meeting 
	while students are most fresh and receptive. 
	*Develop assignments and exams that foster students' mastery of the 
	most critical content of the course. 
	*Dedicate class time to content on which students will be evaluated. 
	*Provide an overview of the following class meeting that enables 
	students to organize their thinking in advance of new instruction. 
	*Communicate regularly with students via e-mail to provide 
	reinforcement and clarification of upcoming classroom events. 

	Habit 4: Think Win/Win 

	In his book, Covey presents "six paradigms of human interactions"-(I) 
	lose/(you wine, lose/lose, win, win/lose, win/win, and win/win or no 
	deal-and states that most highly effective people employ the latter 
	two regularly. Often professors are perceived by students to employ 
	win and win/lose strategies in their interactions. Such interactions 
	commonly lead to outcomes that are increasingly undesirable in 
	today's higher education environment.  For example, has any professor 
	ever really won an argument with a student? Using a win/win approach 
	will allow professors and students to achieve shared instructional 
	success. Students who see the professor as a caring human being truly 
	invested in their well-being will not only extend themselves to meet 
	higher expectations but also internalize high standards for 
	subsequent performance. 

	Sensitized professors who think win/win will regularly employ the 
	following tactics: 

	*Provide positive feedback to students in front of their peers. 
	*Encourage flexibility on assignments to enhance students' mastery of 
	course learning objectives. 
	*Prepare students thoroughly for exams-especially the first on in the course. 
	*Foster students' performance by providing and reviewing the scoring 
	rubric for each assignment as it is being made. 
	*Provide prompt, individualized feedback on scored exams and assignments. 
	*Talk regularly with students-before and after class meetings and via 
	e-mail between classes-about their progress toward their personal 
	learning goals. 

	Habit 5: Seek First to Understand, Then to Be Understood 

	The mind that articulated the instructional phrase "Look to your 
	left, now look to your rightSÝ" seemed to expect listeners to 
	understand the subject material instantly. Being the exploring, 
	experimenting beings they are, however, students seldom grasp complex 
	ideas by hearing a professor talk at them. In The 7 Habits of Highly 
	Effective People, Covey eloquently explains the folly of such an 
	approach to achieve effectiveness within any relationship. When we 
	reflect on it, most of us would admit that those who have had the 
	greatest impact on our lives first listened to us unconditionally or, 
	to use Covey's word, empathically. They took the initiative to truly 
	understand us, before expecting us to embrace their view of the 
	world. Effective professors have learned that they do not "teach a 
	discipline" so much as they teach students-students who have the 
	potential to grow well beyond the multiple challenges they bring with 
	them to the classroom. Such professors will say that the most 
	rewarding aspect of their profession is to see the lights come on ion 
	the eyes of their students. It will always be so. 

	Seeking first to understand and then to be understood is facilitated 
	by employing the following tactics: 

	*Use a student profile form, such as the one in Appendix 5.1. of 
	Chapter 5, to gather useful information on each student. 
	*Employ the form throughout the term to note key points that surface 
	in conferences with students and related critical events. 
	*View students' various characteristics, experiences, and attitudes 
	as potential enriching elements of the classroom environment. 
	*Use vocabulary and examples to which your students can relate. 
	*Solicit "informal" feedback from students throughout the term. 

	Habit 6: Synergize 

	Synergy is typically defined as "an interaction or situation in which 
	the whole is more than the sum of its individual parts." Covey refers 
	to synergy as "creative cooperation." A professor who works toward 
	synergy believes that a particular course should be more than the sum 
	of its assignments, exam results, and classroom dynamics. Each course 
	should truly enrich the lives of students by giving them a foundation 
	on which to build an understanding of subsequent classes, life 
	experiences, and personal insights. As former (and current) students 
	ourselves, we have taken many courses, some of which achieved great 
	synergy and others that did not. Achieving synergy requires embracing 
	the first five habits to draw students in and to make the course an 
	individualized learning event. 

	To synergize, professors can employ the following tactics: 

	*Draw out students' experiences that relate to classroom topics. 
	*Link assignments and discussions to students' real-world lives. 
	*Employ small groups of students to focus on learning goals. 
	*Encourage out-of-class study groups. 
	*Create a community that celebrates the unique nature of learning. 

	Habit 7: Sharpen the Saw 

	Covey relays a number of parables, including one about watching a man 
	working to saw down a tree. The man admits to being at the task for 
	more than five hours. When asked why he didn't stop to sharpen the 
	saw, he exhaustedly exclaims, "I don't have time. I'm too busy 
	sawing." Many professors become frustrated when their once-successful 
	techniques fail with a particular group of students or, even worse, 
	with all of their students. But, like the sawing man, they do not 
	take the time to sharpen their tools. They do not realize that their 
	results will not change until they change the way they approach the 
	work. 

	In the last few years, truly fascinating research has been conducted 
	on human learning. As professionals, we should invest the time to 
	become familiar with at least some of this research and assess its 
	ramifications on teaching and learning methodologies. 

	Continuously developing educators can employ the following tactics to 
	"sharpen the saw": 

	*Establish mentoring relationships with effective veteran instructors. 
	*Mentor a novice professor, regularly discussing effective teaching 
	strategies (Zachary, 2000). 
	*Annually extend beyond a single discipline to read a well-received 
	book on teaching and learning practices. 
	*Make use of on-campus workshops, discussion groups, and related 
	resources-which are often sponsored by one of the growing number of 
	teaching and learning centers. 
	*Access online resources (e.g., www.developfaculty.com). 

	The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People is a comprehensive vehicle 
	for facilitating the integration of accountability principles into 
	your teaching. While we recommend this particular book for its proven 
	track record in our, and others', professional lives, there are 
	unquestionably additional resources available that might help you 
	achieve similar success in yours. Why not invest a small amount of 
	time to develop the foundation that will enable you to achieve 
	greater accountability with you various stakeholders for the 
	remainder of your teaching career?