What Makes A Great Teacher? Just Ask Tom Parry

Tom Parry, assistant professor of physical education and exercise science

News and Features | Monday, June 23, 2014

What makes a great teacher or an exceptional coach? Is it the physical act of teaching? The assessment of athletes? The nature鈥攁nd frequency鈥攐f feedback? The practice schedule? These are all questions Assistant Professor of Physical Education and Exercise Science Tom Parry is exploring. 

Parry is currently working on a better theoretical understanding of how practice schedule and feedback provision influence motor skill performance and learning. In fact, some of Parry鈥檚 findings regarding feedback run counter to what many coaches practice. 鈥淚f you watch most coaches, they will provide feedback to their athletes very frequently, when years of research has shown that lower frequencies of feedback are actually more beneficial, as it allows athletes to problem solve and evaluate their own performance, which is essential for learning.鈥  

As a high school and club-level soccer coach, Parry finds plenty of opportunities to apply his research findings. But he also believes the research reaches far beyond the soccer field. 鈥淚f you think of all the different movement skills people complete鈥攆rom learning fundamentals in elementary school to controlling surgical equipment for a complex surgery鈥攆acilitating the teaching of movement skills is very important.鈥

As a man who devotes his life to studying feedback and assessment, Parry is particularly interested in the ways in which his students evaluate the courses he teaches at 秘密研究所n. 鈥淭he best course evaluation I had so far is that I have high standards for my students and that it makes them have high standards for their own work and performance,鈥 Parry said. 鈥淚 want to push their boundaries and show them they can achieve great things with hard work.鈥

Parry practices what he preaches. Over the course of his career, his hard work and research has resulted in a number of publications and presentations, as well as in a new design for track starting blocks that was eventually used in the Track and Field World Championships. 鈥淭here is no substitute for hard work,鈥 Parry said. 鈥淚f you can impart a strong work ethic to students, they are more likely to work through problems and take leadership roles in their careers, usually making them more successful in the process.鈥