In Chronicle Essay, Hollins Dean Asserts Teacher-Scholars’ Crucial Role

In Chronicle Essay, Hollins Dean Asserts Teacher-Scholars’ Crucial Role

Academics, Faculty

August 8, 2017

In Chronicle Essay, Hollins Dean Asserts Teacher-Scholars’ Crucial Role Michael Gettings

In his commentary published August 7 in The Chronicle of Higher Education, “How Teacher-Scholars Prepare Students for an Evolving World,” Associate Professor of Philosophy and Dean of Academic Services Michael Gettings argues, “As faculty, our research informs our teaching and benefits our students. One is not a teacher and a scholar, one is a teacher-scholar. Through scholarship, teachers model good learning and offer special opportunities for students. The benefits of this model for both teacher and student are maximized in the liberal-arts setting where students can build strong relationships with faculty.”

Gettings goes on to state that teacher-scholars help students develop the skills identified by developmental psychologists Roberta Michnick Golinkoff and Kathryn Hirsh-Pasek as essential for the workplace of the future (“the six C’s”): collaboration, communication, content, critical thinking, creativity, and confidence.