Preparing to Write a Teaching Statement

As you prepare to write your statement, reflect on your goals for teaching in your discipline or area of expertise. In determining your goals, consider not only your content objectives but also the ways of thinking or the intellectual skills you want your students to learn. (In fact, students learn facts and arguments by using or reasoning about them, integrating them into larger structures of knowledge.) You may also want to acknowledge the expansive habits of mind or being you want them to adopt.

In his guide to writing a teaching statement, Lee Haugan advises writers to consider their methods for meeting those objectives. How do you run your classes? What variety of in-class activities and assignments do you design and what do they ask students to do? Haugan also advises writers to consider their effectiveness as teachers. What evidence do you have of your students learning from their work?

As you respond to these questions, we encourage you not to lose sight of the disciplinary context of your teaching. This may mean illustrating your statement with specific examples, or even a critical incident, from your teaching. You want to take into account pedagogical debates about what and how to teach in your field. You may also want to think about the following questions, prompted by the research on what facilitates and impedes learning:

Formatting the Statement

Teaching statements are normally 1-2 page narratives written in the first-person, present-tense. Thus they're not comprehensive documents. But they can serve as the basis -- the thesis statement, if you will -- of a longer teaching or course portfolio. We'd be happy to guide you in the preparing of such a portfolio.

If you’re including your teaching statement in your dossier, keep in mind that the usual guidelines for job materials apply. Demonstrate knowledge without relying on jargon. Be persuasive but not dogmatic. Be sincere. You may want to ask your adviser or mentor to read your statement not only to verify disciplinary conventions but also, perhaps, to initiate a conversation about teaching and learning.

Gail Goodyear and Douglass Allchin assert that a teaching statement can help provide a guide or focus for your teaching. When shared with colleagues -- or potential colleagues -- "the statement can serve as an occasion for professional dialogue, growth, and development.” Thus it may also contribute to the valuation of teaching as a scholarly activity: public and available for review.

References and Resources:

Bain, Ken. What the Best College Teachers Do. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 1994.

Bransford, John D. et al. How People Learn. Washington, DC: National Academy Press, 2000.

Goodyear, Gail and Douglass Allchin. “Statements of Teaching Philosophy.” The Center for Effective Teaching and Learning at the University of Texas at El Paso.

Haugan, Lee. “Writing a Teaching Philosophy Statement.” Center for Teaching Excellence, Iowa State University. March 1998.