Current Search: Community colleges--Faculty (x)
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- Title
- A STUDY OF THE EFFECTS OF THE STAFF DEVELOPMENT CENTER AT VALENCIA COMMUNITY COLLEGE ON FACULTY AWARENESS AND USE OF EDUCATIONAL CONCEPTS, MEDIA MATERIALS, AND TESTING STRATEGIES.
- Creator
- NICKEL, DONNA ARLENE., Florida Atlantic University
- Abstract/Description
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The Curriculum and Instructional Development Center at Valencia Community College was established through funding under the Advanced Institutional Development Program-Title III from 1977 to 1981. This study measures the awareness and use of educational concepts, media materials, and testing strategies among the full-time faculty who were teaching at the college in 1977. Those faculty members who participated in the Curriculum and Instructional Development Center completed the Survey a second...
Show moreThe Curriculum and Instructional Development Center at Valencia Community College was established through funding under the Advanced Institutional Development Program-Title III from 1977 to 1981. This study measures the awareness and use of educational concepts, media materials, and testing strategies among the full-time faculty who were teaching at the college in 1977. Those faculty members who participated in the Curriculum and Instructional Development Center completed the Survey a second time at the beginning of the year's experience in January and again at the end of the year's experience in December. In January 1982, at the completion of the project, only those full-time faculty members who had been full-time faculty members in 1977, who were still at the college and who chose not to participate in this Curriculum and Instructional Development Center completed the questionnaire. The effects of the year's experience on those who chose to participate is compared with the growth and change among nonparticipants.
Show less - Date Issued
- 1984
- PURL
- http://purl.flvc.org/fcla/dt/11848
- Subject Headings
- Continuing education centers, Community colleges--Faculty, Community college teachers
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- Time Orientation and the Ability to Envision the Distant Future of Higher Education in a Community College.
- Creator
- Diaz, Gisela M., Bryan, Valerie, Florida Atlantic University, College of Education, Department of Educational Leadership and Research Methodology
- Abstract/Description
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Although temporal issues affecting organizations and leaders have been researched, time orientation (preference for one or more of the present, past, and future time frames) and visioning ability of change agents within organizations remain open for additional investigation. This exploratory survey study compared self-reported time orientation (TO) and visioning ability ratings of administrators and faculty at a community college. The research added to the extant literature by contextualizing...
Show moreAlthough temporal issues affecting organizations and leaders have been researched, time orientation (preference for one or more of the present, past, and future time frames) and visioning ability of change agents within organizations remain open for additional investigation. This exploratory survey study compared self-reported time orientation (TO) and visioning ability ratings of administrators and faculty at a community college. The research added to the extant literature by contextualizing the measures of the key constructs and extending the research to a novel setting. Scores for all three time frames were assessed in contrast to studies that emphasize future orientation. In addition, TO measures were obtained using an instrument constructed specifically for organizations (Fortunato & Furey, 2009). An adapted version of a visioning ability by Thoms and Blasko (1999) was constructed to address a specified time depth (the distant future) and domains relevant to higher education. Administrators reported significantly higher ratings than faculty on Future TO and visioning ability measures. Future TO scores for faculty were lower in relation to scores on the other two TO scales, but no within-group TO differences were found for administrators. A multiple regression model indicated that Future TO was the best predictor of visioning ability. Faculty teaching in the Associate of Science areas had higher Present TO scores than those teaching in the Associate of Arts programs. TO and visioning ability did not change as a function of gender, age, culture, and years of experience in higher education. The interpretation of the findings was limited by the lack of benchmarks that allow for meaningful comparisons across organizations, and by a continued need to establish construct and predictive validity for the key measures. The research has implications for hiring decisions, for staff development, and for temporal profiling in organizations interested in envisioning the distant future.
Show less - Date Issued
- 2017
- PURL
- http://purl.flvc.org/fau/fd/FA00005927
- Subject Headings
- Dissertations, Academic -- Florida Atlantic University, Education, Higher, Community colleges--Faculty., Community colleges--Administration., Time perspective., Organizational change.
- Format
- Document (PDF)
- Title
- STAFF DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMS IN COMMUNITY COLLEGES IN ILLINOIS: AN ASSESSMENT.
- Creator
- JENKINS, ROLLIN EDWARD., Florida Atlantic University
- Abstract/Description
-
Statement of the problem: Within a ten-year period, the community college system of Illinois quadrupled in students and doubled the number of campuses. The number of professional staff members grew simultaneously. The physical impossibility of the state universities pretraining the number of new professional staff needed for community colleges meant that alternative methods of staff development had to be utilized. The responsibility fell to the local community college to promote professional...
Show moreStatement of the problem: Within a ten-year period, the community college system of Illinois quadrupled in students and doubled the number of campuses. The number of professional staff members grew simultaneously. The physical impossibility of the state universities pretraining the number of new professional staff needed for community colleges meant that alternative methods of staff development had to be utilized. The responsibility fell to the local community college to promote professional staff development related to the unique concept of the community college. This study was undertaken: 1. To determine whether the present offerings are meeting the needs of of the professional staff members. 2. To determine what is being done in Illinois. 3. To determine the relationship of the staff members' tenure status, years of community college experience, professional role, sex, and/or education level on the staff members' participation and perceived value of various development activities. 4. To determine the degree of understanding of the development programs between those responsible for and those benefiting from the activities. 5. To determine those activities which were most/least valuable to the professional staff. Results and Conclusions: The data lead to the following conclusions: 1. There is considerable uniformity in staff development activities offered and staffs' perceptions of program usefulness throughout the state. 2. The knowledge as to the availability of activities is readily available to all. 3. The professional staffs are generally satisfied with the programs that are offered, and participation is at a relatively high level. 4. There is little evidence that the years of experience at the community college level or the education level have any influence on one's perception of usefulness of staff development activities. 5. Women are more optimistic than men concerning what the staff development activities can do for them. 6. No modification of development program is warranted on the basis of tenure status. 7. Staff meetings dealing with human relations, philosophy and goals of the community college, improvement of professional skills, and orientation are not meeting the needs of the instructional staff. Among the activities of considerable value are: formal evaluation by students and self, formal coursework, professional journals, readily accessible library facilities, workshops, visitation, and facilitation of professional organization activities. Among those activities of little value are: off-campus library and meetings for the entire staff.
Show less - Date Issued
- 1975
- PURL
- http://purl.flvc.org/fcla/dt/11660
- Subject Headings
- Community college teachers--In-service training--Illinois, Community colleges--Faculty--In-service training--Illinois
- Format
- Document (PDF)