Issue
25(2)
The
Chicago handbook for teachers: A practical guide to the college
classroom. (1999). Alan Brinkley, Betty Dessants,
Michael Flamm, Cynthia Fleming, Charles Forcey, and Eric Rothschild.
Chicago, IL: The University of Chicago Press, 195 pp. Price $10.00.
ISBN # 0-226-07512-5.
Review
By: Jennifer
R. Radecki
Academic
Advisor, Department of Engineering Education
Purdue
University
Effective advisors gracefully balance
the roles of interpreter and enforcer of institutional policy,
mentor, counselor, conscience, and educator. Therefore, it seems
like a natural extension of an advisor's cultivated gifts to move
from the office into the classroom. While many make this transition,
unfortunately they often do so with little educational background,
mentoring, or support. Consequently, they may not know how to
begin planning classes and they find themselves making frustrating
mistakes as they progress through the term.
The authors of The Chicago Handbook
for Teachers offer assistance by providing a concise, jargon-free,
reference manual for the beginning college teacher. This text
mentors rather than directs the reader, combining thought-provoking
questions with practical insights into common classroom concerns.
There are interesting discussions about course preparation, lecturing
and discussion methods, and instructor assessment. Advisors may
also appreciate the chapters covering technology integration,
inclusive classroom development, and exam creation.
The intended audience for this reference
manual, new college instructors and graduate teaching assistants,
guides the text. This underlying assumption is especially prominent
within the chapter addressing student writing and research where
it is assumed that readers have extensive research skills and
are experts in the literature of their chosen field. Advisors
without this background may feel slightly intimidated by some
of the authors' suggestions. However most tips and advice can
be easily implemented and do not require an extensive research
background.
While The
Chicago Handbook for Teachers lays an excellent framework,
it should not be an aspiring instructor's only resource. The authors
provide a strong list of supplemental readings that, surprisingly,
lack resources dealing with student psychosocial and cognitive
development theory. This is a slight disappointment especially
when the inclusion of this information throughout the text would
have improved the authors' discussion of classroom dynamics and
student-teacher interaction. Nevertheless, the beginning instructor-advisor
will find this a well-written and organized pocketbook mentor
that can be a great help in planning and implementing successful
courses.