Does Faculty Research Improve UndergraduateTeaching? An Analysis of Existing andPotential Synergies -
Journal of Engineering Education, 96(4), 283-294 (2007)
Academicians have been arguing for decades about whether or not faculty
research supports undergraduate instruction. Those who say it does—a
group that includes most administrators and faculty members—cite many
ways in which research can enrich teaching, while those on the other
side cite numerous studies that have consistently failed to show a
measurable linkage between the two activities. This article proposes
that the two sides are debating different propositions: whether research
can support teaching in principle and whether it has been shown to do
so in practice. The article reviews the literature on the current state
of the research-teaching nexus and then examines three specific
strategies for integrating teaching and scholarship: bringing research
into the classroom, involving undergraduates in research projects, and
broadening the definition of scholarship beyond frontier disciplinary
research. Finally, ways are suggested to better realize the potential
synergies between faculty research and undergraduate education.