with a few people and time is an issue but we created
a culture in that people felt comfortable and I could
ask, “do you mind if I sit in today…?”…seeing what
someone else does causes you to reect on your own
teaching (Centre for Teaching Support & Innovation,
p. 54).
Participants in the mentoring study (Centre for Teaching
Support & Innovation, 2016) also expressed a keen
interest in documenting in-class observations to include
in their tenure or promotion teaching dossiers as a
means of demonstrating their eorts to become more
eective instructors. However, such documentation is
not always a feature of peer observation. When engaging
in peer observation, participants discuss how an in-class
observation might be documented in order to eectively
capture instructor-student interaction in a class, as well
as showcase eorts to innovate and take risks in their
teaching. Observation checklists, of which we provide
samples in this guide, can provide guidance ahead of
observation sessions and can serve as a debrieng tool in
the post-observation consultation. Strategies for moving
forward can emerge from such discussions and could be
included in teaching summaries for a participant’s tenure
or promotion dossier (Centre for Teaching Support &
Innovation, p. 54).
Peer-supported in-class observations can help create a
supportive environment for new faculty who are seeking
to enhance their teaching eectiveness. The Teaching
Squares model, described in detail later in this guide,
oers a supportive space to create small communities of
faculty guided through a series of in-class observations
that expose them to other instructors at their experience
level and in a formative environment.
Online Observation: An Emerging Context
As online and hybrid teaching becomes more common,
instructors and divisions have sought ways in which
to get feedback and reect on online teaching. The
online teaching context provides a valuable arena for
the application of peer observation of teaching models,
outside of those widely applicable to the process
enumerated previously. In a study conducted by Bennett
and Barp (2008) on the ecacy of peer observation
online, participants reported “added value through the
unique opportunity not only to debate and discuss
online experiences, but to focus on the online processes
themselves within the context of implementation, to
reect on them, model best practices and observe
them in colleagues.” This is corroborated in the work of
Harper and Nicolson (2011), who found that for many
instructors new to the online context, who have not
themselves been online learners, peer observation oers
them the chance to share practice and build community.
Instructors benet by gaining insight into how their
colleagues teach online, gleaning information on how to
adapt pedagogy and enhance their own practice.
Although many learner-centred pedagogical strategies
can be applied to the online context with great success,
teaching online necessarily requires dierent types of
interactions with students and course materials. The
use of learning management systems, also a feature in
many face-to-face classrooms, allows observers to readily
access a full archive of course material. Online learning
in both its synchronous and asynchronous forms can
provide observers with a perspective on a wider breadth
of teaching skills, including how instructors structure
assignments, deal with formative assessment, and
respond to individual students. As Kell (2005) describes,
online observation oers the opportunity to extend
the reach of peer observation “from ‘content/stand-
up performance’ and instead embrace the breadth of
the ‘teaching’ role and its impact on the total learning
environment” (p. 8). Indeed, as Harper and Nicolson
(2013) state, as ‘eective practice’ is currently “less than
fully established in online teaching, practitioners from
the very inexperienced to those deemed ‘expert’ can
learn from each other” (p. 273).
Bennett and Sandy (2009) comment on how the
‘archived’ nature of online learning “opens up possibilities
for online tutors to work together in ways (relating to
time and place) that have not been possible in the past”
(p. 404). Together the observer and observee can learn
about new modes of instruction, how to eectively adapt
to new contexts and technologies, and how to develop
new, adaptable teaching strategies. Because of the
‘newness’ of online teaching, there are huge amounts of
gains that can be made in terms of teacher development
[ONLINE OBSERVATION OFFERS THE OPPORTUNITY TO] BROADEN THE REMIT OF
PEER OBSERVATION AWAY FROM ‘FROM CONTENT/STAND-UP PERFORMANCE’
AND INSTEAD EMBRACE THE BREADTH OF THE ‘TEACHING’ ROLE AND ITS IMPACT
“
ON THE TOTAL LEARNING ENVIRONMENT.”
(Kell, 2005, p. 8)
4.