5 Ways to Make Faculty More Effective

Faculty in higher education are facing unprecedented demands. Some class sizes may be shrinking, but expectations are growing—especially as technology, campus priorities, and student needs evolve at breakneck speed. Burnout is on the rise, and resources are often stretched thin.

To help faculty thrive in this environment, institutions must rethink how they support effectiveness. At Instructional Connections, we have identified five key strategies to empower faculty and improve outcomes.

1. Embrace Technology Thoughtfully  

Technology can streamline instruction and reduce operational burdens—but only when adopted with purpose. Artificial intelligence, in particular, offers significant transformative potential; however, many institutions lack clear guidance for its implementation. Faculty are experts in their disciplines, not tech rollout. Asking them to lead AI integration without support risks confusion and inefficiency. Institutions must provide policy, direction, training, and tools that make technology an asset—not another stressor.

Equally important is ensuring students understand how to use AI responsibly. Institutions must provide tools, policies, and training that help students leverage technology to deepen their learning—not shortcut it. AI should assist with exploration, practice, and comprehension—not complete assignments on their behalf. Without clear boundaries and ethical guidance, the promise of AI can quickly become a liability.

2. Reduce Routine Tasks  

While routine instructional tasks—such as grading, responding to student inquiries, and posting course announcements—are essential to course operations, they often consume disproportionate amounts of faculty time. These activities, though necessary, are typically procedural in nature and can detract from higher-order responsibilities such as curriculum development, scholarly research, and individualized student mentorship or interventions.

In high-enrollment or multi-section courses, the cumulative time required for these tasks can be substantial. Faculty may find themselves allocating hours each week to repetitive functions that, while important, do not directly advance pedagogical innovation or institutional goals. This imbalance can lead to diminished instructional impact and increased risk of burnout.

Reducing the burden of routine tasks does not imply lowering academic standards or disengaging from the learning process. Rather, it reflects a strategic reallocation of faculty effort toward activities that yield greater educational value.

3. Prioritize Rest and Recovery  

Faculty burnout is no longer a peripheral concern—it is a systemic challenge impacting instructional quality, student outcomes, and institutional stability. Recent estimates suggest that more than half of faculty members report symptoms of burnout, driven by a convergence of factors, including increased workloads, constant digital connectivity, ambiguous expectations surrounding emerging technologies, and the erosion of clear boundaries between work and personal life.

This chronic strain undermines faculty effectiveness and morale, leading to disengagement, reduced innovation, and higher turnover. Institutions that fail to address burnout risk not only diminish academic performance but also reputational harm and long-term operational inefficiencies.

Creating a sustainable campus culture requires more than offering mental health resources or extending leave policies. Faculty effectiveness is inextricably linked to faculty well-being. In 2026 and beyond, institutions must treat rest and recovery not as optional benefits, but as strategic imperatives for academic excellence.

4. Rethink Scale  

Scaling instruction through online education has become a common strategy for institutions seeking to increase efficiency and broaden their reach. While this approach can reduce operational costs and expand access, it is not a panacea. Faculty members tasked with managing hundreds of students across multiple sections often face significant challenges in maintaining instructional quality, providing timely feedback, and fostering meaningful engagement.

The assumption that fewer courses with more students will yield better outcomes overlooks the cognitive and emotional demands placed on faculty. Even when content is standardized and delivery is streamlined, the complexity of managing diverse learner needs, monitoring progress, and sustaining academic rigor remains high.

Institutions must strike a balance between economies of scale and pedagogical integrity. That means designing models that support faculty at scale without compromising the student experience. Ultimately, scale should serve as a tool—not a constraint. When thoughtfully implemented, it can extend institutional impact while preserving the core values of personalized, high-quality education.

5. Leverage Academic Coaches  

In today’s complex instructional landscape, faculty effectiveness depends not only on expertise but also on bandwidth. As demands grow—especially in online programs—institutions must provide scalable, high-quality support that preserves academic integrity and enhances student outcomes.

Instructional Connections offers a proven solution: the Academic Coaching Model. Academic Coaches are qualified subject-matter experts who work under the direction of the faculty to support the management of essential instructional tasks, such as rubric-based grading with formative feedback, answering questions, and posting announcements. 

This strategic delegation enables faculty to focus on high-impact activities, such as course outcomes, curriculum innovation, student interventions, and scholarly research. Rather than replacing faculty, Academic Coaches complement their efforts by reinforcing instructional quality and operational consistency across courses and programs.

Ready to Maximize and Empower Your Faculty?  

In an era where instructional excellence must scale without compromise, Academic Coaches offer a sustainable path forward.

If you are looking to make your faculty more effective, Instructional Connections is here to help. Contact us today to learn how our Academic Coaching Model can transform your online programs.