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- Rice university’s nsf advance
- Rice university’s nsf advance
- Teaching your first course
Seeding discussion
- Have all (or subsets of) students read a specific assignment (often a chapter or a research paper)
- Ask for critiques of the assignment
- What makes sense, what doesn’t
- Why
- Find ways for students to
engage each other with your guidance
Evaluations
- Do
- Think about the feedback
- Incorporate changes as appropriate
- Note that
completely opposite comments will be provided
- “Too much biology, not enough engineering” vs “Too much engineering, not enough biology”
- Don’t
- Take feedback too personally
- Try to figure out who said what
After – recap and revise
- Fix the lectures/activities that needed the most work first
- Know that you will need to write new exam questions (word gets around)
- Get a teaching mentor and meet ~monthly and go over everything
Time management/balance
- Set office hours and keep them
- Drop-ins can eat away your time
- Try to teach the same course over multiple years
- Make appropriate adjustments, but minimize preparation time
- Limit undergraduates in your lab to what you can effectively mentor
Find colleagues for feedback
- How to deal with absent/failing students
- How to deal with students who are not like you were
- How to recycle quiz/exam questions safely
- How to be appropriately responsive to student requests
- How to protect your time
- How to know what is critical/not critical
Dealing with teaching assistants
- Find your comfort level and have a strategy for quality control
- Can they grade homework? Exams?
- Can they grade written assignments?
- Can they convene help sessions?
- Can they hold office hours?
- Can they assist in the classroom?
- Can break up assignments based on what you perceive specific individuals can do
Dealing with parents
- You, for privacy reasons, cannot answer questions from someone other than the student about their performance
- If the student and parent come to see you together, you can provide input and advice about what is happening to the student
Dealing with cheating
- Ask if your institution has an Honor Code
- Discover your institution’s policies on cheating
- Follow the procedure carefully
- Decide whether to xerox exams before returning them to prevent changing answers
- Find avenues that work for you!
Tips from faculty
- Put office hours right after class
- If you have TAs, direct questions first to them (convey that as you are accessible, but they have to check with the TA first)
- Provide a measured response to emails
- Do not establish high expectations for rapid response (and make longer response times for repeat questions to avoid reinforcement)
- Establish clear criteria for re-grading (exams, homework, etc.)
- Accept that someone(s) will have big problems
- One faculty member had students in a large course write down names of two students in the class to contact with questions before even the TA
- Direct students to a blog site (but you have to monitor to ensure answers are correct)
- Draw clear boundaries
- Don’t instant message
- Can use Facebook site for the course, not for the instructor (don’t “friend” students)
- Use “announcements” for any errors in class
- Know your institutional culture
- “Good” teaching varies with institution
- Ask a lot of questions about expectations
- From the institutional hierarchy (e.g., P/T)
- From faculty colleagues
- From students if you have the opportunity
- “Good enough” is good enough
- Perfection is probably not an option
- Keep your research effort dynamic and healthy!
- If you get a hard teaching assignment, ask to keep it for multiple years
- Some departments use team teaching
- Be sure you communicate with your co-teacher and agree on the course design
- Don’t negotiate grades — use your best judgment and be prepared to defend it
- Alert students who are at risk of failing
- Email that says that their standing is well below average and that they should consider getting a lot more help for the class or dropping the class.
- Smaller classes allow more personal interaction with the lagging students
- The student has to seek/get help
- Faculty member cannot “fix” the student
- Grading group projects
- Group grades
- Each person grades their own work and each person in the group
- Give them option to report group isn’t working and find ways to fix it
- Check copyright policy procedures at your institution before copying copyrighted material
Teaching can be fun!
- Develop a teaching style with which
you are comfortable
- Be diligent, but don’t over-stress
- Seek help/feedback if you run into problems — don’t just suffer
- Anticipate future years when you run into students and they thank you for your course and what it did for them!!
Source:
OpenStax, Rice university’s nsf advance program’s negotiating the ideal faculty position workshop master collection of presentations. OpenStax CNX. Mar 08, 2012 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col11413/1.1
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