ABSTRACT
The debate around what constitutes teaching excellence and how to measure it remains a contentious issue in higher education, with little consensus reached. Despite this, measures of teaching excellence influence university ranking league tables throughout the world. This paper explores the thinking and practice of five academics, recognised through student nominations as exhibiting teaching that students considered excellent and which promoted their learning. Through adopting the unusual methodology of ‘rambling’, talking whilst walking, the values, attributes and behaviours of these academics were captured. Themes emerged, which identified markers of teaching excellence and challenged current student satisfaction outcomes as a poor proxy for measuring teaching excellence. By examining the values, attributes and behaviours (practice) of these academics, we were able to identify guidance for; curriculum design that inspires, assessment that allows risk-taking, and values that need to either be challenged by/or embedded into academic development.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.