TY - JOUR
T1 - Let the students be heard–student voices on teaching excellence awards
AU - Gulko, Nadia
AU - Barber, Kieron
AU - Bouten, Lies
AU - Churyk, Natalie Tatiana
AU - Everaert, Patricia
AU - Gordon, Elizabeth A.
AU - Kawor, Seyram
AU - Lento, Camillo
AU - McGuigan, Nicholas
AU - Middelberg, Susanna L.
AU - Mintah, Enoch Opare
AU - Muthaiyah, Saravanan
AU - Sahoo, Suresh Kumar
AU - Sarwar, Madiha
AU - Uwuigbe, Olubukunola R.
AU - Withanage, Nadeeka
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Globally, academics are encouraged to facilitate teaching excellence. Many business schools use teaching excellence awards to recognize exceptional efforts toward students’ learning, foster pedagogical innovation, and improve faculty motivation. However, prior literature has noted that many business schools lack clear and transparent criteria for TE awards, which can hinder the process and potentially reduce the motivational effects. Research has yet to fully incorporate student voices across a global setting into the evaluation criterion. As a result, this study seeks to identify universal criteria for TE awards based on a large-scale survey of 2,775 business students across eleven countries and five continents intending to capture global student perspectives. First, we reveal whether the possession of a TE award for an educator has any importance from students’ perspectives. Second, we find that students across the globe have a general agreement regarding the criteria for awarding an excellent educator by identifying 30 criteria for TE awards students noted across our global sample. Third, we reveal 15 criteria that are specific to some countries but not globally. Lastly, we explore the differences in TE award criteria across different study levels. Overall, our study makes a significant contribution by identifying global criteria based on student voice to inform the development of teaching excellence award criteria in business education or by higher education providers and professional bodies.
AB - Globally, academics are encouraged to facilitate teaching excellence. Many business schools use teaching excellence awards to recognize exceptional efforts toward students’ learning, foster pedagogical innovation, and improve faculty motivation. However, prior literature has noted that many business schools lack clear and transparent criteria for TE awards, which can hinder the process and potentially reduce the motivational effects. Research has yet to fully incorporate student voices across a global setting into the evaluation criterion. As a result, this study seeks to identify universal criteria for TE awards based on a large-scale survey of 2,775 business students across eleven countries and five continents intending to capture global student perspectives. First, we reveal whether the possession of a TE award for an educator has any importance from students’ perspectives. Second, we find that students across the globe have a general agreement regarding the criteria for awarding an excellent educator by identifying 30 criteria for TE awards students noted across our global sample. Third, we reveal 15 criteria that are specific to some countries but not globally. Lastly, we explore the differences in TE award criteria across different study levels. Overall, our study makes a significant contribution by identifying global criteria based on student voice to inform the development of teaching excellence award criteria in business education or by higher education providers and professional bodies.
KW - business students
KW - global student voice
KW - higher education
KW - teaching awards criteria
KW - Teaching excellence
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85203329773&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/03075079.2024.2396453
DO - 10.1080/03075079.2024.2396453
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85203329773
SN - 0307-5079
JO - Studies in Higher Education
JF - Studies in Higher Education
ER -