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National Teaching Excellence Award

Juliet Gerrard | 2004

24 July 2023

Meet Juliet Gerrard from UC's Department of Biological Sciences who received a Sustained Excellence Prize at the Tertiary Teaching Excellence Awards in 2004.

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In June 2004, Dr Juliet Gerrard (Biological Sciences) was presented with a Sustained Excellence Prize at the Tertiary Teaching Excellence Awards at a dinner in Parliament鈥檚 Grand Hall, hosted by the Prime Minister Helen Clark.

Dr Gerrard describes herself as a "learning coach" who likes to challenge and excite her students to the point where they leave their comfort zones.

"I think it's really important that rather than fill students up with information that's in your head, you teach them to gain the information themselves. If you teach them things that are easy for them, they could have done it without you. But if you teach them stuff that's over their head they鈥檙e never going to get it. The important bit is to find the bit for each student where they鈥檙e going to learn the most. I try and engender a sense that each student is part of a scholarly community that asks valid questions and challenges existing paradigms."

The annual Tertiary Teaching Excellence Awards were established by the Government in 2001 to recognise outstanding tertiary teachers from all publicly funded institutions and private training organisations. Organisers say teachers are judged on their commitment, knowledge, enthusiasm and ability to stimulate students.

Dr Gerrard says she considers teaching to be the core function of a university. "The PBRF (Performance-Based Research Fund) has meant everybody's very focused on their research and more particularly their research grade. To actually be recognised for teaching is great."

The Sustained Excellence Prize gives Dr Gerrard $20,000 to fund activities or initiatives to enhance her teaching career and promote best practice. "One of the things I'd quite like to do is learn how to teach students from other cultures. Maybe visit an Asian university and try and find out how to adapt my teaching methods to better suit those different cultures, because my teaching methods are based very much on an English style. The more international students there are in the room the more I鈥檓 struggling to keep everyone on board at the same time. So I get the impression that I need extra techniques to pick out enthusiasms and interactions from different cultures."

Dr Gerrard has been described as one of the most effective teachers in the School of Biological Sciences. Last year she received a Canterbury University Teaching Award. One of her students said: "Juliet is incredibly dedicated to her students. She is truly a talented educator and academic."

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