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tests

the tests that we use are made up of all the the different types of tests discussed except assasy tests. with a mixute of different type of questions you can cover a lot of mateerial in one tests.

quizzes

quizzes can be helpful to you and your students if they are handled correctly. they should not be an exact copy of the test but should cover the immediate lesson information. this will indentify an area that may need additional instruction.

Assessments

How can assessments be valid and reliable if teachers can grade tests differently?

Something I've Noticed

Yeah, students will most likely pass if focused and organized, but with all due respect, realistically, most students these days are held down by a multitude of problems which throws focus and organization all awry. Good teacher/student bonding is hard to come by these days. Why is that the mutual relationship between students and teachers, from what I have observed, is usually described as unsatisfactory or otherwise absent.

Pass/Fail Assessments

We are currently teaching one course with a Pass/Fail assessment. It is interesting in that the students either excel in their final project or not, almost in step with the Pass/Fail concept. I think that this is a type of assessment that would not work well with all courses or subjects and seems to be extremely difficult when it comes time to determine a student's grade.

Interactive Demos

In my experience, I have found that students can get bored with even the most entertaining of demos. To resolve this, I will start a demo and them call upon a student or students to continue or copy my demo

Accomplishing the entire syllabus

Even though this rarely occurs, occasionally, we run out of time, which can throw some of the course goals off, leaving something to be cut short or cut all together...

Students that don't listen

I have had several students that I have taken several different approaches with on getting them to listen and to "soak up" the information, yet they still don't want to be proactive in their learning.

Knowing yourself

Students are able to read instructors far better that what we imagine sometimes. When your personal life comes in conflict it is sometimes difficult to keep out of the clasroom but it is certainly a matter that must stay out. By knowing yourself you can put all other things aside and concentrate on the matters at hand and that is developing your students.

Learning Styles

Different Learning Styles? Ideas?

A successful first day in class

Keep students motivated especially if they are night students.

Lesson Plans

What is an easy way to make up lesson plans?

Professionalism

How do you instill professionalism into a student?

Course & Instructor Evaluations

At my school, students have the ability to log on to the campus portal and submit an electronic evaluation of each course and instructor. The frustrating thing as the instructor, though, is that the predetermined statements to which students simply agree or disagree do not allow for further qualitative responses. So for example, one statement might be "This course was valuable to me." A student might strongly disagree, but that response alone gives no clue as to how the instructor can improve the course. When writing evaluations for students to fill out, it is critical that the response - whatever it may be - be useful in improving teaching style and curricula

delivering course content

When delivering course content it is important to be organized and concise in the delivery. It is also important to stick as closly as possible to the course content, because student's get anxious when there are to many unexpected changes.

When no textbook is available.

Here's a dilemma. Software changes are a constant issue when it comes to teaching classes on the software. What do you do when there is no textbook available for the current version of the software, and the changes are enough to make the old text no longer valid? The manufacturer publishes one, but the cost is prohibitive. So we don't make it part of class requirements. My current solution is to use the old one, and caution the students that there are changes, and to note where those are. I am open to a better suggestion.

Successful First Day of Class...

I teach motion graphics and visual effects, the one thing I noticed is showing students my industry work always seems to get them excited about the class, and focused on what they are about to learn. I guess it helps with conveying to the class that I'm not some hack. In the past, I didn't do that. I thought students might be intimidated by it- comparing themselves to someone who has worked out in the field- but if I didn't, some students would constantly question the industry proven methods and techniques they were required to learn.

Memory Topics

Hello, I have already been using some of these techniques; however, this learning unit has really emphasized their importance and brought them into focus more. For example, before teaching students to write a thesis statement, topic sentence, or body paragraph, I have students examine entire essays, since this is my ultimate goal, to have them write an entire essay. Also, before I begin my class, I write the learning objectives for the class period on the board.

mini lectures

Does this help the students with concentration? I do a lab class and usually lecture and then do lab. Would it be better to break it up?

How do you engage students who want to put out little effort?

I feel as if some students don't put in the time necessary to absorb the material and blame me when they don't remember terms, etc. I use participative exercises to try and get across the concepts, but I do feel as if I am always trying to present a ton of material in a short twelve weeks. What do you do with students who want to run through things once and don't understand why they aren't getting all of it?