The OEA recognises outstanding achievements in teaching, including instruction, educational design, assessment and feedback, as well as wider adoption of good practices in these areas through leadership and support of other colleagues.
The purpose of the award is to promote university teaching. The award seeks to recognise NUS colleagues who have made exceptional contributions to students’ learning and a broader culture that values teaching, as evidenced by sustained achievements in teaching and educational leadership.
Teachers can and do achieve excellence in different ways. In the context of this award, ‘excellence’ is understood as achieving, and sustaining over time, high levels of positive educational impact. In the case of this award, outstanding educators are characterised by exemplary teaching that has a significant impact on students, and by significant leadership, that sustains educational influence over time.
The award will carry a monetary value of $3,000 and a $15,000 teaching grant, which will enable the awardee to engage in activities that will support and enhance his/her role as an educator, and further contribute to teaching/learning at NUS. Recipients will be recognised at a university-wide Teaching Awards Ceremony to share and celebrate their achievements with the NUS community.
Nominations will be evaluated with reference to evidence of strength in and positive impact through one or more of the following. It is not necessary to meet all the criteria, but applicants would make a more compelling case by providing evidence of strengths in more than one area. Sustained, in-depth contribution in the particular areas of strength is essential, with significant evidence of educational leadership (Criterion 6).
A successful case will depend on evidence from multiple and convergent sources, for example:
Documentation needs to be focused on specifically addressing the relevant criteria above.
Applicants will submit a teaching portfolio consisting of the following:
Table of Contents | List of sections with page numbers |
Curriculum Vitae | Details of qualifications, positions, and experience |
Preface (maximum 300 words) | The preface makes the case for your promotion/ award/other purpose. This should be a highly distilled summary of your key contributions to student learning and educational leadership (where applicable), guided by your teaching philosophy. |
Teaching Statement (maximum 3,000 words) | Consists of a teaching philosophy and two to three impact narratives, which should make a case for your educational contributions, standing and reputation in your discipline in relation to your teaching practice and leadership. It could include documents on research (where applicable) and service contributions. Teaching philosophy (approx. 600 words) Self-reflective statement about your teaching philosophy: values, beliefs, goals, and strategies. Impact narratives (approx. 700 words each) As a whole, the impact narratives should provide evidence of a range of educational activities and accomplishments in relation to:
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Optional Supplementary Dossier (maximum 30 pages) | Appendices that compile sufficient evidence of teaching achievement (e.g. student feedback data, raw data from personal survey, samples of selected students’ work) |
Submission should be made using the University Teaching Awards Portal (UTAP) and must be made by the applicant using his/her login NUS User ID, within the Applicant Submission Period determined by the applicant’s FTEC.
FTECs should prepare and submit a citation (1,000 words) for each nomination that makes a case for the applicant’s impact with reference to the award criteria.
FTEC submission of nominated applications to UTEC should be made using the University Teaching Awards Portal (UTAP) before the FTEC submission closing date.