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Ask a question from your peers to help you in your professional work. Seek different points of view on a topic that interests you. Start a thought-provoking conversation about a hot, current topic. Encourage your peers to join you in the discussion, and feel free to facilitate the discussion. As a community of educators, all members of the Career Ed Lounge are empowered to act as a discussion facilitator to help us all learn from each other.

Organization

I find that if you are early for class and have everything you need prior to class, then the students are more relaxed. And to them it seems that you know what you are doing and teaching.

Testing

Test should challenge students but also be used to gage the overall comprehension the student has acheived from the material. This tells me whether or not I can move on or are there students that still need additional help or clarification.

Learning Styles

A lesson should touch every different learning style throughout the entire session. This will help to engage each student. Some students may seem to not be engaged, but when check point questions are asked, the student can answer the question. So are were they engaged or do they have a prior knowledge of the material?

Power Points

The biggest key to have a successful power point is to remember that your slides are just summaries and should not be over crowded. The presenter should expand from the key points on the slide.

Planning

My favorite quote for students and instructors is "Failing plan means you are planning to fail."

Integrating a Lab/Lecture Course

Hi. I teach anatomy that is designed to have 2 hours of lecture in one location and then 2 hours of lab in another. I find it really difficult to keep them interested in my lecture for the full time. Lab seems easy because I have all of these activities planned that are fun. What are some suggestions to integrating the two together when they are held in separate classrooms, and keeping the lecture portion relevant and as exciting as lab time?

Grading and Evaluation

I always go over the grading scale with my students and let them know that class particaption is 10% of their overall grade and a quiz will be 20% of the overall grade and an exam will be 30% and their final exam is 40%, if they do a project it is usually 30% of their overall grade, then at the middle of the course I go over their grades of where they are at that point in the class, so they have an idea where they stand and what they have to do to either keep their grade where it is at or maybe bring their grades up.

FIRST DAY INTRODUCTIONS

I ENJOY A FIRST DAY ICE BREAKING SESSION OF INDIVIDUAL INTRODUCTIONS.WE GO AROUND THE ROOM STATEING AGE,WHERE WE WRE FROM,MARTIAL STATUS,KIDS,HOBBIS,SHORT TERM GOALS,LONG TERM GOALS ECT. MAKES FOR A GREAT ICE BREAKER AND ALOT OF LAUGHTER.

Study groups

What I have found helpful is putting together study groups. We all meet once a week and I am there to oversee and answer any questions that may come up. I have found that my student's test averages have gone up and (I feel) there confidence has increased. In doing so, my student retention has gone up as well.

Time Management

Before new lesson to be taught, I have students read the lesson and jogged down questions. I focus on main points of the lesson plan, stay on subject. Allow enough time for Q/A at the end. If students that have many questions have them wait after class.

chalk board

I like using the chalk board, and I agree that the best thing is to write the information as you discuss the information. I think this is a more effective way of re-inforcing, too, what I am saying, as I discuss, then write down my point, and review the point afterwards.

Lesson Preparation

As an instructor, lessons are key. If you don't have a lesson then you set up the class for chaos. There may be too much time left with no instruction and that tends to lead the students to believe that either you don't care or you don't know the material.

Testing

I think it is important to have the students either take an assessemnt or just quiz them on the objectives at the beginning of the course to see who knows what and which direction the instructor should go.

Course Management

I think that if an outline or objectives aren't in place before the start of a class, I wouldn't teach it. You have to have a syllibus as well as your direct supervisor in case something happens and someone else needs to teach it for you.

Keeping them engaged

Keeping the students engaged in the classroom is very important. I always be sure to be real, up front, and to the point in my classes. To me that clears the air for any misunderstandings in the beginning.

Make up test

I usually have two versions of the test so if there are any absent students it lessens the chance of answers being shared. I also send the student to take the test in the library while using an instructor proxy, this lets the student have quiet time instead of trying to take the test while in a noisy classroom since all other students have taken it already they will be on other tasks.

Pretests

I find pre-tests useful when you have a very diverse group with multiple learning styles. It can give you an idea of where more of your time needs to be spent and keeps the student from being bored.

Tactile learners

I have many tactile learners and need to find a balance so that my tactile and my audio/visual students can co-work at the same time. I find one group gets distracted when we are using the other styles of teaching.

Prep for class

I try to make sure I use many teaching styles per class as to catch everyones attention and make them successful by playing to their individual strengths.

Lecture Notes

Lecture notes are most important to me the second and third time I teach a particular class. The first time is exciting, the text might be new to me, and the butterflies surrounding that always makes the class exciting and terrifying at the same time. The important thing for me, if it's going to be a class I teach multiples times, is that I take my lecture notes from the first class and build from them. Simplify, add things, try new angles. The class should get better every time you teach it.