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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.

Dress is very important

Because always dress as a professional the instructor create a enviroment that everyone respect and make all be in an office area

Auditory Learners

Always is important send the correct info to all listeners, because they attent went you make a good history of your exposition

Role model outside of the classroom

Through my years I have seen many so called 'good role models' who are only good when they are in the classroom, or the boss is watching. I'm not saying they should stop swearing and yelling altogether, but could they at least do it where the students aren't watching? A real role model should still be a role model when they leave the class room.

What the best and easiest way to keep up with grade?

Of a class of about 40 and another of 20 what's the best and easiet way to keep up with grades.

How to be approachable

Some student aren't alway approachable, how can one get pass the student attitude and help them anyway?

Adjusting New Student

What a good way to introduce new students to material that older student have already learned without lossing the old student attention.

Unmotivated Student.

Some students are attending school simply because they are force and don't hold a desire. What a good way to motivate this students

Components of Modeling

I feel that this is important for the classroom because children as well as adults learn through example. Being consistant over a period of time reinforces behavior and a positive outcome.

Students Working in Groups

I try to break the students in pairs or small groups to do short in-class exercises. I have one student who refuses to work with others. When I pair him with another, he takes total control therefore prohibiting the other to participate. This is particularly difficult with a less confident student. Any advice on how to handle the "controlling" student?

Creative Random Assignments

When I use random assignment for informal groups, I like to be creative and use other than numbers. I am lucky to have Dollar Stores in the area, so sometimes I buy pencils in assorted designs and have them draw. Or organic lollipops and separate by flavors. Once I used favorite Halloween costume categories: scary, historical figures, occupations and so on. But in that particular class, I already knew that everyone celebrated Halloween. Not everyone does so the last suggestion is not always appropriate. I work with creative students and out of the box random assignments can be mini ice breakers in themselves. I am curious to know what else people have done.

Reinforcing writing skills in core courses

Teaching core classes in animation, students often believe that their instructors might be lacking in some of the basic literacy skills as themselves. Students seek to identify with and in some ways imprint their own experiences onto the teachers they work with daily. Often students think that my math or writing skills are marginal because my degrees are in art. It is important that we capitalize on the desire to emulate instructors and help student’s develop traditional academic skills. One thing that I have tried to do is provide examples of those skills in my own work. Writing is especially easy to reinforce when students are trying to write proposals or production bibles. Showing students an example of my own, walking them through the process and allowing them to refer to it throughout the process provides a positive example that reinforces itself. Any number of aspects can be taught this way including project/time management, resource citing, and general language usage.

Multiple Disabilities

It common to find that a student may have multiple disabilities. The most important thing for an instructuctor to remember is that everyone does not learn the same way you do.

Ask, Pause and Call...

I have found that asking a question and then pausing draws students into the lesson. With the potential that a student may be chosen to answer a question, most students do not want to be caught off guard. Therefore, students tend to pay attention when they recognize that they may have to answer a question.

Learning to be there for the student

I have found as I teach longer that the student comes with a set of areas that they are struggling with professionally. Being there to help them not only master course material, but be there for them as a life coach they receive maximum benefit for the course

Making sure the point values in syllabus match course

One pitfall I have run into is not matching my syllabus point values with the actual points the students receive. This has helped me as an instructor

technology in the classroom

I like to appeal to all senses of learning for students. One being Auditory learner, kinesthetic and visual. I use you tube clips for visual, stories for kinethetic, and powerpoints for auditory. all points of view are being attended to.

The mega-TrueFalse exam..

As a side-note, I want to give the example of an anthropology class I took as a undergrad. I loved the course, and the material, and deeply enjoyed and respected the professor. But the entire course grade was based on two exams, the mid-term and the final, both True/False, 50 questions each. Sounds simple enough, eh? False! An average test question was phrased something along the lines of, "In 1975, Dr. John Smith from the University of Somewhere discovered the Homo Something fossil in the Great Rift Valley, which had a brain capacity of 850cc, lived approximately 2.5 million years ago, and at the time was believed to be the direct descendant of Homo Something Else which was discovered by Dr. Joe Williams in 1971, which had a brain capacity of 600cc. True or False?" And any one of those elements in the sentence might be "false," rendering the entire sentence false. It might have been 1979 instead of 1975, or Dr. John Smith might have been from the University of Another Place instead. Yikes!

challenges

special needs students need some extra time but are amazing tough students

learning

teachers have to teach to students and work with language barriers

groups

groups are good and help students work together