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Teaching Award

The Valparaiso University Excellence in Teaching Award, administered by the Committee to Enhance Learning and Teaching (CELT) and funded by the Office of the Provost, recognizes outstanding undergraduate faculty and academic units for their commitment to and effectiveness in teaching.

About the Teaching Award

The award recognizes general teaching excellence, with particular excellence in one or more of three areas:

  • Course Development
  • Pedagogy
  • Mentoring/Advising

Each year, a monetary award of $3,000 may be given either to an individual faculty member or to an academic unit. In the case of academic unit winners, the award will be given to the academic unit to use at their discretion

All full-time faculty with at least three years of full-time service to the University may be nominated for the award. Any academic unit may be nominated for the award. This award is not to be confused with the Valparaiso University Alumni Association’s Distinguished Teaching Award. Previous award winners are not disqualified from nomination or winning again.

Teaching Award Guidelines

The campus community will be informed about the award and nomination process via an article in the Campus Chronicle, a campuswide email, or the Torch.

Individual faculty members or academic units may be nominated. Nominations may be made by any member of the University community (students, faculty, staff, or administrators) by notifying the dean of the appropriate college by January 24, 2025. Note: Self-nominations are encouraged. Nominators should submit a one-page nomination letter, maximum 300 words, citing the area of particular excellence (course development, pedagogy, or mentoring/advising) and concisely arguing for the faculty member’s or academic unit’s selection.

  • The dean of each college contacts the nominees and requests that they submit a one-page (front only), pedagogically-oriented CV, a recommendation letter, a narrative supporting their finalist status, and attachments of up to six pages (one-sided) of supporting evidence. In the case of academic unit finalists, no CV is necessary.
  • The pedagogically-oriented CV should include articles published, presentations given, workshops attended, etc. that are related to teaching and learning. This is not necessary in the case an academic unit is a finalist.
  • The recommendation letter can be written by anyone who is familiar with the nominee’s teaching. This could be a colleague, department chair, or dean. The recommendation letter is distinct from the nomination letter, and the nominee can choose the author of the recommendation letter.
  • The narrative, maximum 1,000 words, should address one or more of the following areas of achievement. The nominee may focus on one area or may include examples of achievement in multiple aspects of teaching and learning without preference for either approach. The nominee could include aspects of one or more of these relevant questions:
    • Course Development – What is your image of an excellent course and how is it reflected in your teaching? How is your image of course development supported by the literature on teaching and learning?
    • Pedagogy – What is your image of excellent teaching and how is it reflected in your teaching? How is your image of excellent teaching supported by the literature on teaching and learning?
    • Mentoring/Advising – What is your image of an excellent mentor or advisor? How is your image of mentoring/advising supported by the literature on teaching and learning?
  • The narrative should indicate what makes the nominee unique and should describe how the work is supported by the scholarship of teaching and learning. The narrative should also provide concrete evidence to support the nominee’s case. The narrative could include evidence from, for example: syllabi, course assignments, course assessments, student correspondence, student evaluations, and literature on teaching and learning. The narrative should also address the criteria on the relevant rubric (PDF) and any relevant University-wide student learning objectives. Nominees should describe the formative process used to improve his or her teaching.
  • The attachments (no more than six pages, one-sided) should include supporting evidence such as syllabi, course assignments, course assessments, student correspondence, student evaluations, etc. When including syllabi or student evaluations, be selective and only include those parts that are relevant to the application. The nominee may submit one video no more than five minutes in length in a format easily viewed by the committee.

Please note: If more than six pages are submitted, only the first six pages will be read by the committee, and there should be connections between what is written in the narrative and what is included in the attachments. The nominee should describe how the evidence in the attachments supports the statements in the narrative.

The dean of each college chooses, after consultation with the relevant screening committee, a finalist or finalists (in the case of Arts and Sciences). One finalist will be submitted from the colleges of Business, Christ College, Engineering, and Nursing and Health Professions. The College of Arts and Sciences may submit up to six finalists.

Each screening committee will be composed of three full-time faculty members and two student members. The faculty-student committee selection process is not defined by the Committee to Enhance Learning and Teaching. Colleges with small faculty numbers may elect to request faculty who serve an adjunct role within that unit to serve as members of the screening committee.

The names and nomination packet of the finalist or finalists are forwarded to the Office of the Provost by the deadline. The nomination letter (which is usually not seen by the nominee) and the recommendation letter (written by a person chosen by the nominee) must both be included in the nomination packet along with the other required documentation listed above. The Committee to Enhance Learning and Teaching will select the award recipient from the list of finalists.

Each college screening committee may choose to have the finalist(s) not selected to receive the award for teaching excellence, automatically resubmitted as a finalist during the next two successive years. After that time, however, the committee must reconsider this candidate(s) along with other new nominations.

Teaching Award Deadlines

  • November 5, 2024 – Solicit nominations for the award
  • January 24, 2025 – Last day to submit nominations to nominee’s college dean
  • March 10, 2025 – College deans forward finalists’ narratives and attachments to the Office of the Provost (KRE 105) for distribution to CELT members
  • March 25, 2025 – CELT selects finalist(s) and forwards name(s) of award recipient(s) to the Office of the Provost for notification and publication
  • TBD – Reception honors all finalists and announces award recipient(s)
  • TBD – Award(s) presented to recipient(s)

Valparaiso University Excellence in Teaching Award Recipients

YearAward Recipient(s)Category of ExcellenceAcademic Unit
2024-2025Daniel MaguireMentoring/AdvisingElectrical & Computer Engineering
2023-2024Jay GrossmanMentoring/AdvisingCivil & Environmental Engineering
2022-2023Luke VenstromPedagogyMechanical Engineering
2022-2023Ken LutherCourse DevelopmentMathematics & Statistics
2021-2022Lara PudwellMentoring/AdvisingMathematics & Statistics
2021-2022Jeff DoeblerMentoring/AdvisingMusic
2021-2022Sara GundersenCourse DevelopmentEconomics
2020-2021Carlos Miguel-PueyoPedagogyWorld Languages & Cultures
2020-2021Salena AndersonCourse DevelopmentEnglish
2019-2020Tiffany KolbaCourse DevelopmentMathematics & Statistics
2019-2020Sami KhorbotlyMentoring/AdvisingElectrical & Computer Engineering
2018-2019Colleen SeguinPedagogyHistory
2018-2019Jennifer BjornstadPedagogyForeign Languages & Literatures
2017-2018Danielle Lavin-LoucksMentoring/AdvisingSociology/Criminology
2017-2018Kevin OstoyichCourse DevelopmentHistory
2017-2018Zuhdi AljobehMentoring/AdvisingCivil Engineering
2016-2017Sandra BlezaCourse DevelopmentNursing
2016-2017George PatiMentoring/AdvisingTheology
2016-2017Robert ClarkMentoring/AdvisingChemistry
2015-2016Douglas TougawCourse DevelopmentElectrical & Computer Engineering
2015-2016Stacy MaugansMentoring/AdvisingMusic
2014-2015Shahin NudehiMentoring/AdvisingMechanical Engineering
2014-2015Jan WestrickPedagogyEducation
2014-2015Mark BudnikMentoring/AdvisingElectrical & Computer Engineering
2013-2014Kevin JantziPedagogyChemistry
2013-2014Lissa YoganCourse DevelopmentSociology/Criminology

Caterpillar Award for Excellence in Teaching Recipients

YearAward RecipientAcademic Unit
2012-2013Linda FergusonMusic
2011-2012Scott DuncanMechanical Engineering
2010-2011Sandra StrasserInformation and Decision Sciences
2009-2010Jaishankar RamanEconomics
2008-2009Kevin HoffmanChrist College
2007-2008Kristen MaukNursing
2006-2007Mark FarmerClassics
2004-2005Mary ChristAccounting
2003-2004Shirvel StanislausPhysics and Astronomy
2002-2003John RuffEnglish
2001-2002Elise AlversonNursing
2000-2001Bart WolfGeography and Meteorology
1999-2000Daniel HartElectrical and Computer Engineering
1998-1999Janet BrownNursing
1997-1998Paul ContinoChrist College
1996-1997Fred NiednerTheology
1995-1996Kenneth KleinPhilosophy

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