Instructor Roles and Orientation
Welcome!
As a new College in the Schools (CIS) instructor, you have been appointed as a University of Minnesota (U of M) Teaching Specialist to teach a U of M course. The department offering the course on campus and the College of Continuing and Professional Studies (CCAPS), the CIS administrative home, have approved your partnership appointment.
The annual CIS Instructor Orientation and these instructor modules will provide an overview of and guide you through the initial logistical steps of prepping to teach the University course, participate with the CIS academic community, and engage each term in discipline specific professional development.
Start below and if you have any questions, please contact us.
University Perks for CIS Instructors
University of Minnesota faculty and staff enjoy unique discounts and opportunities as employees.
Explore:
M Tech in the Bookstore offers special savings to University employees on computers, laptops, and tablets.
The University of Minnesota provides discounted or no-cost software to students, faculty, and staff for work-related and personal use.
Instructor Roles and Orientation Checklist
Before You Begin Teaching
1. Claim your University Internet Account and Email, and set up Duo
Follow the New Instructors: Set-up Guide to claim your University internet account and set up your email and Duo.
Using your U of M email is the primary communication method for faculty and staff.
2. Prepare for the Partnership
Order U of M Textbooks and Course Materials
Advise, Review, and Approve CIS Student Enrollment
Arrange for Technology and Media Updates
Order U of M Textbooks and Course Materials
Schools are responsible for ensuring that students have access to required textbooks, course materials, lab equipment and supplies. CIS requires high schools to use the same textbook(s) as are used in the course taught on the U of M campus; a few courses allow the use of different textbooks, but in these cases the textbooks must be approved in advance by the U of M faculty coordinator for the course. Textbooks are replaced periodically.
Information about required books and materials are found on individual Course pages on the CIS website.
Talk with CIS staff or your faculty coordinator about questions and course requirement variations and place textbook and materials orders prior to the start of the term.
Advise, Review, and Approve CIS Student Enrollment
CIS and high school partners provide equitable access to information and support regarding course choice, student criteria, U of M class sizes. The Quick Guide to Course Requirements and Related Policies has current criteria.
We ask CIS Instructors to ensure all students in the class have a reasonable expectation of course success.
75% or greater must be registered for U credit and there may be excellent reasons a student might chose not to register for U credit. We have found that most rise to the occasion and do well.
If students need to withdraw for any reason, that option is available to them as long as they withdraw prior to the end of class or prior to a final. They may earn high school credit even if they withdraw from the U section. See CIS Student Website page for processes.
Arrange for Technology and Media Updates
Many University courses require additional technology support to provide access to Canvas, the use of electronic textbooks, and/or special applications. Arrange for student and instructor use at your high school by providing: bandwidth, access, software, and computer systems.
3. Prior to teaching, participate in three required Professional Development Workshops
Discipline-Specific Course Orientation for Instructors
CIS Instructor Orientation
Ongoing Professional Development Workshops
As a CIS partner school your administration has agreed to provide a substitute so you may fully participate in CIS professional development each term. During the summers we highly encourage high school administration to provide professional development funding and support for your participation.
Discipline-Specific Course Orientation for Instructors
These small-group or one-one sessions with your faculty coordinator help you to increase your understanding of the content, pedagogy and assessment of the course you will be teaching and to develop your U of M syllabus.
If you are working on a professional development plan (noted in your acceptance letter), arrange to meet with your faculty coordinator to discuss the options and have them approved. Report your progress to your faculty coordinator.
CIS Instructor Orientation
This workshop provides an overview of landscape of teaching in partnership with U of M Twin Cities College in the Schools (CIS) program. We will introduce CIS instructors to the concurrent enrollment context, U of M policies and resources, roles in the academic community, CIS instructor support for University processes such as student registration and course evaluation, U of M faculty access, and considerations for teaching and building University climates for first year college learners. Instructors also receive information on how to facilitate entering grades in the U of M system, and introduce students to research and use of the U of M library.
Discipline-Specific Professional Development Workshops (Ongoing)
These required faculty-led events are provided by CIS each term to support ongoing development for all the instructors in your cohort. Course and discipline expanding events that address content, pedagogies, assessments, and impactful changes to explore. Learn and interrogate updates in the field, address curricular and cultural development of the U course, share best practices, and, for example, develop rubrics or exams. There are options to develop your interests and leadership in the cohort and the field.
In most cases, you will attend one of each of these events the summer prior to the year you begin to teach through CIS and your administration has agreed to provide a substitute for these workshops and student field day dates that occur during the academic year.
4. Review Instructor Roles & Responsibilities
CIS Roles & Responsibilities
Your CIS faculty coordinator will provide mentoring and support for your participation in CIS. The intellectual community of other high school instructors and University faculty teaching the same U of M course will also be invaluable if you have questions about content, pedagogy, assessment, or grading.
The CIS program staff provides administrative support. Each time you teach a U of M class through CIS, our staff works with you to enter your course in the University database, guides you in facilitating your students’ registration, and answers your questions about grade submission. We also assist with your students’ course evaluations and track your school’s billing agreements. The CIS program staff are committed to responding to your questions and helping you resolve administrative problems promptly.
Your school/district provides additional support for offering U of M courses in your high school, including payment of program fees, providing required textbooks and other course materials, approving release time and substitute teachers when you participate in CIS professional development workshops and student field days, and paying for transportation for students participating in field days.
CIS Instructor Responsibilities
Note: Details are explored in corresponding modules
Excerpted from University Administrative Policy: Instructor Responsibilities*; edited for application to CIS.
Instruction & Course Management
Teach the U of M course (and participate in all CIS orientation and discipline-specific professional development as noted above).
*As noted..."Instructors have a responsibility to establish and maintain a civil, productive, inclusive, and stimulating learning environment. Both instructors and students have a fundamental obligation to respect the instructional setting as a place for civil, courteous discourse. Instructors have a responsibility to accommodate students with documented disabilities (and neurodiversities) are encouraged to invite students to talk or communicate with them about such circumstances."
Read and comply with University and CIS policies outlined in these modules and current Quick Guide to Course Requirements and Related Policies.
Teach the students in your class how to register, make changes to their registration, and assist with these processes each term.
Make arrangements at the school for field day and professional development attendance, including substitute teachers and buses or other transportation.
Obtain approval from your faculty coordinator for appropriate contributions a student teacher might make to a U of M course. Student teachers are not allowed to teach the U of M course.
Cooperate with CIS office regarding U of M processes:
Submit class section information to CIS office.
Submit updated syllabus to CIS office each term.
Administer student ratings of teaching (SRT).
Submit student grades within three business days at the end of the course.
Report student academic misconduct to CIS staff, faculty coordinator, and the Office for Community Standards (OCS).
Monitor U of M email account for U of M announcements.
Observe U of M and CIS administrative timelines.
Participate in required program evaluations.
Optionally, take advantage of the leadership and/or scholarship opportunities available through your cohort, such as serving on the Course Advisory Committee.
Participate in faculty grading, trainings, and CIS program evaluation surveys each term. Some CIS cohorts may have added PD or required participation on a regular or periodic basis during times of curricular development or unique criteria required of teaching particular courses.
Student Support & Advising
Advise students:
Review the Students section of the CIS website with students.
Review the U of M course syllabus, including assignments and policy requirements.
Assist with course registration and withdrawal processes.
Send midterm alerts to students at risk of receiving a D or F grade.
Confirm that students meet CIS student eligibility criteria.
Prepare students for and participate in CIS Student Field Days.
CIS Student Field Days are required for Introductory Animal Science (ANSC 1101) and Writing Studio (WRIT 1201). CIS Instructors may participate in planning, leading and implementing at these events. Oversight of your students and bringing additional chaperones may be necessary depending upon the nature of the event. School participation in CIS student field days is optional but highly encouraged for all other courses.
CIS Advocacy
CIS Instructors are often placed in the position of supporting the University coursework at the high school. CIS staff are open and available to support you with materials, statistics, research and personnel in these endeavors.
We welcome your questions as they arise!
5. Review Orientation Materials (Hosted August 10 and September 14, 2023)
CIS Instructor Orientation Materials
Orientation Agenda and Presentation Links
Transparency in Teaching: Working with First Year College Learners
To prepare for the orientation, review these resources:
The first two videos collected in the document “On Effortful, College-Level Learning”
The collection of short Overview videos in the document “Creating Transparent Assignments"
Presentation Materials
CIS Context with Emily Hanson
Mastermind: Examples from the Field
University Libraries & Research Orientation
Libraries & Research Orientation (Slides)
We want students (and teachers) using the libraries! Visit lib.umn.edu for millions of online sources and 24/7 chat with a librarian. Students can even meet with a peer research consultant for help!
You can use any articles/online books/book chapters, streaming video, etc. in your courses.
Students will need to initiate their account and set up Duo (two-factor authentication) visit it.umn.edu for help.
Check out our CIS Library Guide or contact Phil Dudas (duda0014@umn.edu) to create a guide specific to your class!
Watch/share these videos for a recap/more tips: UMN Libraries for CIS Students, UMN Libraries for CIS Teachers.
You made it!
Jump to the next modules to prepare for the start of class:
Learn about how to assist students with registering and getting access to University resources
Get handouts for the first day of class (these will also be sent to you in an email near the start of class)
Take the recommended 15-minute training on FERPA
Work with your faculty coordinator to create your syllabus
Developing Student Belonging and Academic Community
Review student resources