Tag: Faculty Development

Capturing Success for Faculty In Dallas Texas

Capturing Success for Faculty In Dallas Texas

Dr King Speaking to FacultyMarch 23, 2018 TWU faculty gained new ground in their writing and publishing quests because The Center for Faculty Excellence at Texas Women’s University (http://www.twu.edu/cfe), partnered with Textbook and Academic Authors (TAA) to host Dr. Kathleen P. King’s dynamic workshop.

“Discovering How to Deliver What Editors and Publishers Need” is the advanced three hour writing workshop she facilitated. Faculty responses to the working sessions included:

  • “Dr King is authentic and speaks to the real needs of faculty with confidence, authority and humor.”
  • “What fun! Dr. King incorporates participant questions and stays on track  all the while illustrating her points with fun stories.”
  • “I am re-energized and have specific steps to work on my next several publishing projects.”
  • “Thank you again Dr. King for working with us and giving us valuable information and advice. We are excited about making goals and holding each other accountable to finish our publications. In fact, we have already jumped in and are making progress in forming goals.”

Dr. King can work with your faculty! Learn more about how TAA assists higher education institutions  in hosting faculty events to overcome writing roadblocks and realize publishing potential.

  • “She is one of a kind. I have never experienced a presenter effectively connect with faculty needs like Dr King”
  • “You know she really cares about us and has been in our situation. Dr. King knows how to be successful in writing and the tenure track race.”
3 Faculty Introducing TAA Association
Introducing TAA workshop

For more information about these workshops

http://bit.ly/KingWriting

Dr. King Heads to Texas- March 2018

Dr. King Heads to Texas- March 2018

Dr King photo
Dr. Kathleen P. King

Dr. King has teamed up with Textbook and Academic Authors  (www.TAAonline.net) to provide faculty writing workshops in USA colleges and universities.

Having been to Rochester Institute of Technology and Florida Gulf Coast University in 2017, she heads towards the West again to Texas Women’s University in March 2018.

At TWU , Dr. King will be facilitating an advanced workshop entitled,  “Discovering How to Deliver What Editors and Publishers Need: Demystifying the Academic Writing and Publishing Process.”

In this session, she pulls back the curtain on the sometimes mystifying process of publishing. Dr. King provides a practical, dynamic, and interactive workshop focused on improving faculty writing and publication rates.

“Kathy” is uniquely qualified to reveal the key strategies needed due to her 15+ years as a journal and book editor, faculty coach, faculty development expert, and professor of doctoral students. This revelation-packed workshop not only includes specific insights, strategies, and approaches, but also guides participants to address their productivity needs with new understanding and goals.

For more details and to learn about this opportunity which TAA provides for subsidized , exceptional faculty workshops at TAA workshops.

Screen shot from TAAonline,net website

Dr. King can also be contacted directly through her consulting team, Transformation Education LLC for special keynote events and workshops on a variety of topics.

Faculty Workshop in New York

Faculty Workshop in New York

In October 2017, Dr. Kathy King will conduct an extended 3  hour faculty writing workshop in Rochester NY.

Photo of person with computer

If specific conditions are fulfilled, funding to reduce the costs to your college or university to support such workshops may be available from an outside source.

This interactive and practical workshop introduces Dr. Kathleen P. King’s proven and powerful strategies to infuse new approaches and success into faculty’s writing skills and publishing records. Gleaned from over 15 years of coaching and teaching faculty and doctoral students, this motivating and informative workshop includes specific techniques, strategies and templates to accelerate faculty writing productivity. In this workshop, we will re-examine and transform key writing practices as well as chart a personalized, focused publishing agenda and plan.

The session meets the needs of faculty across a wide range of skills and expertise. “Kathy” works with the faculty to develop a foundation for ramping up academic writing productivity, improving manuscript acceptance rates, tapping the power of technology tools to improve writing and editing, and maximize the benefits of writing with others, near and far.

Contact TELLC to discuss hosting one of Dr. King’s many workshops on your campus and funding options.

 

Click here for flyer

 

Grant Supports Faculty Writing Workshops

Grant Supports Faculty Writing Workshops

Textbook and Academic Authors Association has funded several of Dr. King’s faculty writing and publishing workshops through a special grant. Recent workshops have included Florida Gulfcoast University, Fort Meyers, FL, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, NV, and others.

Popular title: Advance Your Academic Writing Skills and Publishing Record: Tips, Tricks and the Secret Sauce 

These 3 hour workshops are specifically crafted to guide faculty in overcoming the challenges they face and utilize King’s well-honed strategies for publishing success.

The Textbook & Academic Authors Association (TAA) provides professional development resources, events, and networking opportunities for textbook authors and authors of scholarly journal articles and books. Established in 1987 by math author Mike Keedy, TAA is the only national, nonprofit membership association dedicated solely to assisting textbook and academic authors. TAA’s name was changed from “Text and Academic Authors Association” to “Textbook & Academic Authors Association” in 2016 to offer a clearer identity for TAA in light of the new meaning of “texting” on smart devices today.

TAA offers a wide array of resources and benefits to help you navigate your path to writing success. These benefits include publication grants, webinars, a monthly print newsletter, and a variety of networking opportunities available through CONNECT, TAA’s online member community.

For more details about the workshops and grant funding click here

Watch for additional announcements as new workshops from Dr. King and TAA will be available later in the fall of 2017.

 

Transforming Education, Educators and Students With Technology

Transforming Education, Educators and Students With Technology

 

Article published in Inside Fordham 9/1//2006

By Peter Catapano

“Theory is wonderful, but if it remains by itself it becomes stale. It gathers its lifeblood in research and practice.” — Kathleen King

If back in the day, say 1995, you were unreasonably distraught when you were forced to trade your Smith Corona for Microsoft Word, or maybe pulled your hair out trying to figure out how to use e-mail, you probably could have used the advice and support of Kathleen P. King, Ed.D., professor of education at Fordham University.

As former director of the University’s Regional Educational Technology Center for Professional Dr King 2008Development (RETC), and recent director of the Graduate School of Education’s program of Adult Education and Human Resource Development, King has made it her mission to help educators cope with rapid change, technological and otherwise. Her core work, founded in the principles of a theory called “transformative learning,” of which she is a major proponent, seeks to turn challenges—or “disorienting dilemmas”—into opportunities for both learning and personal growth. Transformative learning, as King puts it, “describes how people react when they come across difficult points in their life, how they cope and what they learn from it.”

And, as she is quick to emphasize, “Teachers are learners, too.”

King’s approach to adult education takes in several disciplines, most notably technology. She is a techie by nature, well versed in computing and at ease with the general onslaught of technological innovations that have changed the way we live and work in the past 15 years. The resources available at RETC reflect that: podcasts for teachers, computing testing and certification, online education, and a host of other resources devoted to helping teachers and other adults to innovate, teach, and learn. It is a source of knowledge she believes educators sorely need.

As an educator, King said, “technology will throw you into these conflicts,” posing challenges, and sometimes crises. “In the ‘70s,” she says, learning about new technologies was, “a nice thing to do. Today, it’s survival.”

King has a book out this year, Harnessing Innovative Technology in Higher Education: Access, Equity, Policy, and Instruction (Atwood, 2006), edited with Joan K. Griggs. In its conclusion, written with Susan Biro, Ed.D., associate director of RETC, King says, “In the process, we learn that the pathway [to integrating technology into higher education] is not linear, and that as we are learning about technology along the way, we are also learning about our learners, our organizations, and ourselves.” An insight that might have been gleaned from King’s own non-linear career.

There is a spiritual component to King’s work. Before she began her academic life in the early 1990s, King served as a nondenominational missionary in New England. In her research, she is keen to draw lessons from the religious and ethical traditions of many cultures. A recent article she authored looks at transformative learning from the viewpoint of Confucianism.

Her record of accomplishment since she came to Fordham in 1997 is sort of disorienting itself: she has secured, and now oversees, more than 20 grants, several million dollars worth, for the University; she has received several awards for her work in the field; she has authored dozen of articles for journals; and edited, contributed or authored dozens of books, many on technology and learning. Her latest, written with Victor Wang, Ed.D., California State University, Long Beach, Comparative Adult Education Around the Globe, includes observations of educators from Asia and the Middle East, and will be published in both Germany and China in a few weeks.

The idea of transformative learning, she said, “has been dominated by Western interpretation. We need to open it up to our colleagues around the world.”

King—who has a bachelor’s degree in biochemistry, a master’s in theology, and a master’s and doctorate in education—sees adult education as a perfect fit for someone like herself, naturally drawn to and inspired by a number of different ideas and disciplines. “The theme running through all these interests,” she said, “is how adults learn and change their lives.”

She also believes she ended up at the right university to undertake this work. “Fordham is a very good fit for me. They value theory and research, but also put great value on people and practice.”

Though King’s unconventional ideas have often forced her to take a radical stand with her colleagues, she remains committed to the idea of helping others learn and change for the better.

“I am not to here to promote my political view,” King said. “We are trying to provide a platform where people can step forward into their voice. Transformative learning is about opening up opportunities.”

Fordham logo=

Skip to content