My name is Doug Branch and I am
currently an assistant professor at Union College in Barbourville, KY. I am a certified athletic trainer with over
15 years of experience. After the birth
of my two children, I decided I wanted to be home more and have a more
consistent schedule. I felt moving to
the academic side of athletic training would be a better move for me and my
family. In the past, I had done some
adjunct teaching and really enjoyed the students and teaching them the trade I
had done for over 10 years. An
opportunity presented itself to teach full-time and to be able to be at home
with my wife and young family.
I
applied for the new position, interviewed, and was offered the position. My wife and I were very excited because this
was the beginning of a new chapter in our lives and gave me the freedom to be
home at night and weekends. I quickly
learned that this position was going to be more difficult than expected. The original plan was for me to work
part-time for the college as an instructor and part-time for the local
hospital. This position swiftly turned
into me working two full-time jobs and being pulled in two directions. To make things even worse, the athletic
training program was up for re-accreditation the following year and I was in
charge of collecting paperwork for the programs portfolio. I had no experience with this process but was
told I would be guided through the processes with instructions on what needed
to be done for accreditation. In my
opinion, I was not properly guided through this process. The entire year was not a good experience. I felt that I had no mentor in regards to my
teaching and felt that I was told to “sink or swim.” At the end of the year my contract was not renewed
but was fortunate enough to go back to my old job.
The reason I am telling this story
is because I would like to give some recommendations to people who want to
transition from the clinical field to an academic position. I am currently in a position that I really
enjoy and I am surrounded by people that want to help me become a better
educator. I have some great mentors and
currently serve as a mentor for new faculty members. I have included some recommendations for
people who think they would like to transition setting. I currently starting my second year of
full-time teaching and have learned new teaching techniques that I have
incorporated into my class. I am in no
way the best instructor on campus, but I believed that I have improved and strive
to become better a better educator.
My first recommendation would be to
request a mentor or see if the educational institution offers mentors for new
faculty members. It is not uncommon for
new teachers at any level of education to feel isolated from their fellow
faculty member. Socialization and
acclimatization to a new teaching environment should be encouraged by the
mentoring process (Womack-Wynne et al., 2011). Having a mentor will give the new faculty
member a person to ask questions about professional culture of the school. Mentors can benefit from this process as well
and is believed the may experience professional and personal growth in the time
they participated in mentor training and mentoring activities (Womack-Wynne et al., 2011).
Secondly, recommendation that I
would have would be to use your “practice knowledge” in the classroom. Use the knowledge that you have gained
throughout your years of practice to your advantage. The ability to relate information to their
personal and professional lives enabled students to understand how they could
retain and apply new information (Hill, 2014). Students value a teacher with clinical
experience and can provide current information in the classroom. Students have said to me on many occasions
that they learn from my clinical stories just as much as they learn from my
lectures.
Have you ever had an academic position that did not turn out
the way you thought it might? How would
you handle the situation different next time?
Doug Branch
References
Hill,
Lilian H. (2014). Graduate Students' Perspectives on Effective Teaching. Adult Learning, 25(2), 57-65. doi:
10.1177/1045159514522433
Womack-Wynne,
Carly, Dees, Elizabeth, Leech, Donald, LaPlant, James, Brockmeier, Lantry,
& Gibson, Nicole. (2011). Teacher's Perceptions of the First-Year
Experience and Mentoring. International
Journal of Educational Leadership Preparation, 6(4).
So, I'm going to go ahead and complete the trifecta. I think mentors for new instructors are a great idea. I had a mentor for a month in my current position. The person who I replaced went on a sabbatical to the Middle East (great timing) to help set up a healthcare program in Beirut. She was able to stay and show me how the program went. I definitely teach at a non-traditional school as we have two campuses, one in Oregon and one in Washington, that run different programs. The Washington program does the anatomy labs at a rural firehouse and all of the equipment needs to be taken there before labs start. Had I needed to do this on my own, I would have been hopelessly lost! I was able to make a much easier transition into the school's program because of the mentor I had.
ReplyDeleteDon Jay
Thanks for the reply Don Jay. I think my experience would have gone much smoother if I had some guidance throughout the year. I feel that some people learn by the sink or swim method and so they believe that others should learn that way as well. I disagree even if that person has taught before. I have received so much help with my teaching since I have been at this institution which has made it such a great experience. I actually enjoy getting up and going to my job. Thanks for the response.
ReplyDeleteDoug