SHOULD I WEAR SHORTS AND FLIP FLOPS
James Lang's book On Course: A Week-by-week Guide to Your First Semester of College Teaching is filled with wonderful tips for new and veteran teachers. The BRCC Libary has it available as an ebook which is terrific since access is unlimited. Lang says, "the teaching process starts with the construction of the syllabus, the document that will guide you and your students throughout the course. The process of drafting the syllabus forces you to think about the learning objectives you want to establish for the students in the course, and those objectives should be formulated by answering a simple question: What should students know or be able to do as a result of taking this course? Put more broadly, when students walk out of the final exam, or hand you that final paper, in what ways will you have changed them?" One of the best pieces of advice, in a book filled with nuggets of gold, is to spend the first day of class demonstrating what will happen for the rest of the term. Do not let them go early, or if you do, let it be 10 minutes at the most. Engage them in an active learning experience to set the tone and by all means, have them read and share the class syllabus. Research proves that one of the best ways to learn about something is to teach it. Lang has a great icebreaker in his book that asks the students to "teach" the syllabus. It is really a think-pair-share learning experience.
WHEN STUDENTS CARE, THEY LEARN
Stanford Erickson, in his book The Essence of Good Teaching, writes that a student's engagement with a subject matter becomes ignited when it is linked to their lives in some way. He says, "students learn what they care about and remember what they understand." This is a great reminder as you approach each learning experience you plan to implement in your course.
TEACHER EDUCATION
The New York Times reports that up to 25 states are moving toward changing the way they grant
licenses to teachers, de-emphasizing tests and written essays in favor
of a more demanding approach that requires aspiring teachers to prove
themselves through lesson plans, homework assignments and videotaped
instruction sessions. The change is an attempt to ensure that those who become teachers not
only know education theories, but also can show the ability to lead
classrooms and handle students of differing abilities and needs, often
amid limited resources.
SHINING EYES
If you haven't heard of Benjamin Zander yet, you are in for a real treat. There are a number of videos on YouTube featuring this inspirational speaker who also happens to be a world-renowned conductor. One of my favorite quotes of his about what teaching is all about comes from his Shining Eyes clip. He says that our job as teachers is "to awaken possibility in other people."