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- Rice university’s nsf advance
- Rice university’s nsf advance
- Teaching your first course
Finding your style
- Adopt a preparation style that suits you
- If you over-prepare, limit the time by doing it closer to the class
- If you are anxious, prepare ahead of time but “budget” the time you spend
- Adopt a lecture style that suits you
- Lots of PowerPoint slides with detail — give students a copy
- An outline that you fill in
What you project matters
- Students pick up on your attitude
- If you care, they will be more respectful and forgiving
- If you dismiss them, they will reciprocate
- If you are open, they will engage
- If you are defensive, they will attack
- Large classes are harder
- Get to know a subset of the students by name to break down barriers
Challenges for women
- Openness can be interpreted as being familiar and/or easy
- Students can try to take advantage in a variety of ways and can impact the class
- Talking to them privately may work
- Dressing more formally has worked for some women
Find your own style
- Do what makes you feel most comfortable
- Clothes
- Presentation style
- Listen to feedback and adjust your style, to the degree you feel comfortable, accordingly
You cannot know everything
Know that a student
will ask a question to which you do NOT know the answer
Tell them it’s a great question
- Ask them what they think OR
- Assign it as homework OR
- Invite them to come by after class and talk because it’s a little off topic for the day OR
- Indicate you don’t know, but there are a number of ways to find out
- Do a web search, find a research article
- Ask a colleague with expertise
There will
Always Be someone
- …who is bored and looks it
- …who drives you crazy
- Talking, reading, sleeping, smirking
- …who questions your authority
- …who does not follow instructions
- …who simply does not “get it”
Keep your balance, get input, stay steady and get support when you need it!
Issues with today’s distractions
- Facebook, Twitter, YouTube
- All compete for your attention and are here to stay; banning computers won’t work
- They expect your respect, you have a right to expect theirs
- Find your own comfort level in handling these distractions
- If they make you less effective, you can simply tell the class, these activities make me less effective and impact everyone
Examinations
- Establish your guidelines (check with your department/institution)
- Examples: No A/V device (no iphone, no ipods, no headphones, nothing electronic)
- Determine the grading policy
- Go over it with any graders involved
- Determine policy/process for re-grades
- Decide whether to provide a complete answer sheet for the examination
Classroom needs vary
- Mathematicians use blackboards
- Biologists use Powerpoints
- Chemists and physicists often use classroom demonstrations
Discover the culture of your discipline at your institution and operate within that culture
Ensuring assignment reading
- Use on-line quizzes (probably easiest and best)
- Variety of resources, often campus-specific
- Pose a specific set of questions and assign them to subgroups
- Assign topics to specific individuals
For smaller classes
- Class engagement is more feasible
- Lecture preparation less onerous
- Case-studies can be used
- Group activities engage everyone
- Can do some of this in larger classes, too
- Learning to write is important
- Can use peer as well as instructor feedback
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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