<< Chapter < Page Chapter >> Page >

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!!

Get Jobilize Job Search Mobile App in your pocket Now!

Get it on Google Play Download on the App Store Now




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
Google Play and the Google Play logo are trademarks of Google Inc.

Notification Switch

Would you like to follow the 'Rice university’s nsf advance program’s negotiating the ideal faculty position workshop master collection of presentations' conversation and receive update notifications?

Ask