TILT Higher Ed Examples and Resources

The following resources from the Transparency in Learning and Teaching project (TILT Higher Ed) can help faculty, educational developers and administrators to apply the Transparency Framework (of purpose/task/criteria) in contexts including assignments, curricula, assessment and strategic initiatives, all toward the goal of enhancing student success equitably. If you have developed TILT-focused tools or publications you would like to share, please contact wink@tilthighered.com.

Talking about TILT: Video and Podcast Interviews
Example Assignments (more and less transparent)

Example A: Sociology

Example B: Science 101

Example C: Psychology

Example D: Communications

Authors of Examples A-D describe the outcomes of their assignment revisions

Example E: Biology

Discussion Questions (about Examples A-E)

Example F: Library research Assignment

Example G: Criminal Justice In-Class activity

Example H: Criminal Justice Assignment

Example I: Political Science Assignment

Example J: Criteria for Math Writing

Example K - Environmental History

Example L - Calculus

Example M - Algebra

Example N - Finance

Example N: Building Support & Community

Example O: Geographical Info Systems

Example: Kinesiology Postural Distortion and discussion.

Example: Data Visualizations

Example: Peer Reviewed Nursing Articles

Example: Writing 121

Example: Library Instruction on Sources (asynchronous)

Example: Annotated Bibliography

Example: Types of Sources

Example: Searching Pubmed (#2 of 3: “Instructions”)

Frequently Asked Questions

Workshop Videos and Materials

Impact

Hundreds of publications by educators and advisors on six continents have emerged in the last decade to explain how TILT practices can enhance institutional and instructional efficacy and student achievement. These include books, special journal issues, curated collections, peer-reviewed articles, interviews, videos, blogs, podcasts, and educational materials like assignments and syllabi (listed on the TILT Examples & Resources webpage).

For institutions, results can include increased student retention and completion rates, efficiency of strategic planning, collaboration among instructors and student-facing staff, and more transparent communication with stakeholders within and outside the institution.

For teachers, benefits include greater instructional efficacy, increased satisfaction, improved communication with students, increased engagement by students in class activities, and more time-efficient grading and feedback on students' work.

Students will benefit from increased confidence, belonging, persistence, skills, performance, and metacognitive awareness of skill development (Winkelmes, 2013; Winkelmes, 2015; Winkelmes et al., 2015; Winkelmes et al., 2016; Gianoutsos and Winkelmes, 2016; Calkins and Winkelmes, 2018; Winkelmes et al., 2019; 2023).

Support
Publications

The growing scholarship of teaching and learning (SoTL) that focuses on transparency in learning and teaching (TILT) comprises peer-reviewed publications by authors on six continents. To add your scholarly publications about TILT to this growing bibliography, please contact Mary-Ann Winkelmes at wink@tilthighered.com.

Downloadable Bibliography of TILT-focused Peer-reviewed Publications

News
Awards
Institutional Review Board Documentation

University of Illinois

University of Nevada, Las Vegas

Brandeis University