Paired teaching for administrators

The impact of paired teaching

UBC Science’s paired teaching pilot demonstrated that paired teaching is an effective way to introduce new faculty to evidence-based teaching strategies (Stang et al., 2017). New faculty continued to use the strategies they learned in the program when later teaching the same course alone, and they also transferred the use of these strategies to new contexts, such as introducing them in courses that were traditionally lecture-based.

Classroom Observation Protocol in Undergraduate STEM (COPUS) results in two consecutive weeks of a pair-taught course. The Experienced instructor teaches using a variety of active learning strategies (in blue shades, left); the New instructor teaches in a similar pattern the following week.

COPUS results for Instructor D teaching the first-year course (Course I): while paired (10 observations), then alone (3 observations). Instructor D continued using active learning strategies while teaching the same course alone the following year.

Benefits to departments, faculty members, and students

Paired teaching aligns well with recommendations for successful change strategies in higher education. It is low-cost, works in different contexts, and is sustainable as new faculty members can return as experienced ones.

Participation in the program can support tenure and promotion packages, complements other professional development opportunities, and provides a deeper and department-specific context.

Students also benefit from learning in a pair-taught classroom.

  • "75% of students reported that having two instructors in the course was a small or large advantage—compared to similar courses with just one instructor." (Stang et al., 2017)
  • "55% of students reported that having two instructors had a positive effect on their understanding of the course material." (Stang et al., 2017)

Program cost

The main cost of a paired teaching program involves arranging coverage for the section that either the new or experienced faculty member would otherwise teach. Relative to other costs for new faculty, however, this is a small, one-time investment that has great potential to positively influence a new faculty member’s teaching strategy.

UBC Science offers departments a 0.5 course release ($5,250) for each new faculty member participating in paired teaching, in addition to the support of a Skylight Science Education Specialist.

Implementing a paired teaching program in your department

To implement a paired teaching program in your department or institution, please download this published article containing recommendations and suggestions.

Application form

Download the Teaching Start-Up application form

Musqueam First Nation land acknowledegement

We honour xwməθkwəy̓ əm (Musqueam) on whose ancestral, unceded territory UBC Vancouver is situated. UBC Science is committed to building meaningful relationships with Indigenous peoples so we can advance Reconciliation and ensure traditional ways of knowing enrich our teaching and research.

Learn more: Musqueam First Nation

Skylight: Science Centre for Learning and Teaching


skylight@science.ubc.ca

Faculty of Science

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