tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27054305.post2361582467670353813..comments2023-12-23T04:56:29.702-05:00Comments on Ferule & Fescue: Burning my lesson plansFlaviahttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17832765671541392835noreply@blogger.comBlogger13125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27054305.post-60477379396255924972014-12-13T13:29:23.901-05:002014-12-13T13:29:23.901-05:00Thank you for this post - I am so bored with my cl...Thank you for this post - I am so bored with my classes now that they are prepped and running smoothly. I need to change things up so I am engaged because I am a sucky (to me) instructor when I am bored. These comments were so helpful!Psycgirlhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13476028853857792495noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27054305.post-52321612612367447522014-12-12T01:26:53.787-05:002014-12-12T01:26:53.787-05:00My techniques tend to be similarly constant, I thi...My techniques tend to be similarly constant, I think yeaaaababasonicoshttp://www.entradiux.com/2014/11/entradas-babasonicos-en-argentina.htmlnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27054305.post-78471946893465363952014-12-11T23:17:03.349-05:002014-12-11T23:17:03.349-05:00Historiann:
Yes--unless something unexpected happ...Historiann:<br /><br />Yes--unless something unexpected happens, I expect to be moving next year. But I still think that my classroom strategies could be tinkered with productively, since it's not just about the students, but about some ingrained ideas about teaching that I don't think are specific to my current student population so much as they are specific to my own approach to texts, my core strengths, etc. (And the one class that I *am* redesigning really needs it--it was a noble failure last time, but I think I know how to make it awesome this time (and it's a class I'll take with me to any future job).<br /><br />Notorious:<br /><br />That's really interesting! I suppose I've done something similar with my Shakespeare class, by virtue of swapping in and out different texts, or reorganizing the thematic focus (even as the central structure, assignments, etc., have only slowly evolved), but I haven't done it particularly consciously or deliberately. I think I'll try it in the future. Thanks!Flaviahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17832765671541392835noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27054305.post-39593814987366884562014-12-11T13:13:19.071-05:002014-12-11T13:13:19.071-05:00clarification: those 2-3 rewrites are yearly. So b...clarification: those 2-3 rewrites are yearly. So by the time I teach a course 5 times, it's almost entirely new.Notorious Ph.D.https://www.blogger.com/profile/08700875559325201086noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27054305.post-59286742424812579302014-12-11T13:11:45.102-05:002014-12-11T13:11:45.102-05:00For me, it depends:
a new course gets a thorough...For me, it depends: <br /><br />a new course gets a thorough reconsideration right after the first time I teach it, then a minor one the next time.<br /><br />Once a course is up and running, I'll re-evaluate it and usually either try out all-new readings or assignment structure every 4 cycles. If it works, I keep the new. If it crashes and burns, I go back to the old.<br /><br />In the midst of these cycles -- and *especially* for survey courses that have a substantial lecturing component -- I mark 2-3 lectures to re-research & rewrite, or to ditch entirely and replace.<br /><br />Why? Because I just get bored.Notorious Ph.D.https://www.blogger.com/profile/08700875559325201086noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27054305.post-15226533479080661912014-12-10T19:29:05.999-05:002014-12-10T19:29:05.999-05:00I also have my tried-and-true teaching strategies,...I also have my tried-and-true teaching strategies, and one thing I've done to try to keep things fresh is to observe colleagues' classes and try out things that work well for them. And, for the most part, I wind up going back to my tried-and-true strategies because they actually work better for me than whatever works better for someone else! But I like returning to those strategies because I've tried something else and am making a deliberate choice about how I want to teach.<br /><br />The other thing that is not at all tried-and-true is thinking through the skills I want to teach and the order in which I want to teach them. This may be more of a high school thing (I experience it most in my 9th-grade classes), but thinking about these skills does give me ongoing work to wrap my head around even when I'm familiar with the texts.What Now?https://www.blogger.com/profile/08221008082872963036noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27054305.post-33924668358529568322014-12-10T17:02:02.945-05:002014-12-10T17:02:02.945-05:00I frequently have trouble with students not readin...I frequently have trouble with students not reading, so I sometimes have them read for the first 15 minutes of class so that they can have something to say in discussion. Or sometimes, if I feel confident they have read, I have them write for the first 15 minutes of class, then collect it at the end of the discussion and count it as a quiz grade. I do group work sometimes. I do "chalk and talk" sometimes. Sometimes I just lecture. Then, another thing I like to do with advanced students is set a timer and sit there and say nothing for 30 minutes while the students discuss whatever we read. It's really funny how the pressure to fill the silence will make them talk -- even the normally quiet students. <br /><br />I really like to mix it up, so I try a lot of different things. Last time I taught the Shakespeare class (two YEARS ago. Sob!), I had a couple of class days where we focused on one word per day. It was FASCINATING. Oh, god, I loved those classes. <br /><br />Anyway, I rarely get bored in the classroom. Maybe it's just that I haven't been at my full-time job long enough to get bored. Fie upon this quiet life!https://www.blogger.com/profile/12047096700049201873noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27054305.post-13195862819281948582014-12-10T16:36:04.155-05:002014-12-10T16:36:04.155-05:00Wait--aren't you moving to a new job next year...Wait--aren't you moving to a new job next year? I'd table any thoughts of making major changes until you get there. You'll have to spend a great deal of mental energy on just figuring out how your new uni works. You might as well wait to see what your students will be like & how you might best engage them.<br /><br />Changing jobs is one way of keepin' it fresh!Historiannhttp://historiann.comnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27054305.post-80317563059504674342014-12-10T13:57:25.364-05:002014-12-10T13:57:25.364-05:00Thanks, Pat--I think that's what I'm hopin...Thanks, Pat--I think that's what I'm hoping: that this is just a awkward phase!<br /><br />I also like the advice to think of the class from an outcomes-based perspective. The most satisfying thing about teaching the Shakespeare survey (which I've done 20-22 times now) is that I've gradually come to have a really clear idea of how the course serves our larger curriculum, and I've made a number of changes to the assignments with that in mind. My other classes could stand some more of that.Flaviahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17832765671541392835noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27054305.post-8485749503839225042014-12-10T08:17:13.193-05:002014-12-10T08:17:13.193-05:00I remember 10 years in as a sort of sticky spot - ...I remember 10 years in as a sort of sticky spot - I had things enough under control to wonder if they would ever change again but not enough under control to have a big grab bag of methods I could draw from at a moment's notice. Now that I've been at it longer, my classes don't feel scripted because I have so many different tricks I can pull out in response to the energy level in the classroom or what I see the students having trouble with.<br /><br />Three things that kept my teaching interesting to me in that uncomfortable in-between time were:<br /><br />1. learning to write online tutorials to help students through sticky spots. <br /><br />2. putting my course in a departmental context - in my case, it was an initiative for developing quantitative skills that required us to identify those skills and plan where they would be taught in every class.<br /><br />3. teaching a grad class in the field.<br /><br />4. challenging myself to find out exactly how students were going to use what I taught them after they graduated, and rethinking the course from that perspective.<br /><br />Sometimes changing the syllabus or content is, as you note, not a big change in the course. Changing the focus and purpose can be more satisfying.pathttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15532518675955579561noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27054305.post-70375083214788058162014-12-10T00:20:16.256-05:002014-12-10T00:20:16.256-05:00Thanks, both. Yes, I do this too--swap in and out ...Thanks, both. Yes, I do this too--swap in and out a text or two, or modify or entirely scrap an assignment--and that's been all I've really needed to stave off boredom in the past. And maybe all I need with my warhorses is to do two or three new exercises a semester--just modify the <i>way</i> we deal with a particular passage or formal feature or whatever.<br /><br />But I feel I want to do something dramatically different, starting over as if I'd never taught a class that I have (in fact) taught a dozen times. And that probably isn't going to happen--or not in my remaining time at this job.Flaviahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17832765671541392835noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27054305.post-22453324624206986682014-12-09T23:49:49.596-05:002014-12-09T23:49:49.596-05:00My techniques tend to be similarly constant, I thi...My techniques tend to be similarly constant, I think, but for (I think) reasonably sound pedagogical reasons. <br /><br />What keeps things interesting is that I keep shifting sources. Of course, my courses are so broad (World to/since, Japan or China to/since, etc.) that I have a great deal of freedom to change things and still be within my territory. But I'm always looking for new readings, translations, etc. And I'm never happy with textbooks: I change those when I can, and then all the lectures I was doing to point out the misunderstandings or omissions or not-quite-up-to-date-ness of the textbook have to be changed as well. <br /><br />And the class sizes keep changing, and the online stuff keeps getting more involved....<br /><br />Not bored yet. Jonathan Dresnerhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04356112719229675996noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27054305.post-73895179662939481342014-12-09T23:41:41.608-05:002014-12-09T23:41:41.608-05:00Flavia, I keep many things but shake it up by assi...Flavia, I keep many things but shake it up by assigning a new text or doing a new exercise. That way, if the new thing falls spectacularly flat, as sometimes happens, I know that something tried and true is still coming up. undinehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05589384016564587214noreply@blogger.com