Presented as a series of suggestions for improving teaching, this compendium describes more than 200 teaching techniques that faculty members have found to be effective in their courses at the University of California, Berkeley. Taken together, these suggestions cover the major aspects of college and university teaching from planning and preparing courses to presenting material and motivating students to giving and getting feedback on learning.
The compendium is designed to be a reference tool to help you improve certain aspects of your own teaching; it is not a narrative discourse on teaching meant to be read in a linear fashion. Therefore, it is recommended that you begin by reading the initial menu and skimming the Index in order to locate those sections or particular suggestions of greatest interest to you.
After you have become generally familiar with the contents of the compendium, five steps are recommended for its most effective use as a reference tool for improving teaching.
First, fill out the 23 item self evaluation form in Appendix B to help identify those aspects of teaching which you may wish to improve. Second, review data from prior student evaluations of your teaching to identify additional areas for improvement. Third, use the menus to locate those sections of greatest interest to you and read the suggestions within each of those sections, noting whether the particular suggestion could be adapted to your class. Fourth, use the Index to locate additional suggestions of interest. Many of the suggestions affect more than one aspect of teaching; these are cross-referenced in the Index. In addition, suggestions relating to very specific teaching techniques (e.g., simulations or guest lecturers) can be readily found in the Index. Fifth, once you have found suggestions that you want to try in your own teaching, be sure to make a note of them in or alongside your lecture notes so that you do not forget to employ the suggestions at appropriate points in your class.Copyright 1983 by the Regents of the University of California