Public
Activity Feed Discussions Blogs Bookmarks Files

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.

Show & Tell

Have many tools to help you get the topic and goals accomplished

Short attention spans

One thing to keep in mind when lecturing is that people have short attention spans. The material in this course says the average adult’s attention span is about 15-18 minutes long, after that it is difficult for them to keep focused and learn new information during a lecture. In addition to the short average attention span problem there is the fact that we deal with a younger group of people that are used to information being presented to them in very flashy eye catching ways on TV, internet, magazines and their phones. They do not become interested or keep their attention focused on you very easily unless excitement about a subject is created and projected. It makes our job a little tougher but it also keeps it interesting because we have to keep coming up with ways to keep the material interesting and the students focused.

Firm but Fair

To give the students the good and bad rules that will lead to there success, being consistent is a key that they will respect. Having some fun but keeping in mind that there is a goal to be accomplished.

The Audience

Delivering a lesson requires very good planning and communication skills. It is most important to take into account of makeup of your class. Who are your students? What are they most interested in? Tailoring the presentation to the audience is of most importance.

First Impressions

You only get to make a first impression once. Your relationship with your students develops very quickly and a poor first impression can lead to a student becoming de-motivated. It is the responsibility of the teacher to make sure that he/she is prepared right from the first moment.

Getting all my students on the same page while having to move forward

I'm new in the instructional field and I'm having to learn to keep my pace slower because of some (not all) students not catching all the details involved with the subject at hand. I am also experiencing what I call the "timid" class, where no one wants to take a chance a speak out. Sometimes it is very difficult to know or see if my students are actually understanding the subject matter. Where I am becoming concerned is the fact that as a class, we have to move forward to get everything into our class time. Some of the material I am teaching on has to do with safety for not only the individual but for many others that might be involved on a site. My question is: How do I go about checking to see if everyone is actually understanding, before test time?

Role Model

When we talk about being a role model, sometimes we only view this as a model for the industry we are training students for. In reality, we're modeling for life in general. How we conduct ourselves extends beyond the industry standards of our profession. How our interaction with students, staff, parents, industry professionals, etc., are all observed and are examples to our students of what a professional person is all about.

Socratic

I have used questioning before but actually using them in this method is awsome. I used in a class today and the engagement was amasing.

Classroom as a Stage. We are the Main Actor

I have always reiterated to my faculty staff that when we enter a classroom, we act, we direct, we supervise and we produce the course of the event. Principally, we are the main actor. It is up to us to convince, and attract the students' attention. Acting is not merely gestures. It behoves the tone of our voice, the body movements, the intonation and the manner we interact with ther students. This is how we motivate and deliver course content.

Discipline versus motivation

Why do instructors feel the need to discipline a student at the drop of a hat? It seems instructors are eager to punish but late to coach and mentor. Too many instructors do not know how to treat students and take everything they do wrong as a personal attack on the instructor. I have found it is best to be friendly, but not their friend, talk not shout, discuss in private not in public.If this does not produce the results you are looking for, maybe it is time to look inward and find out more about yourself.

Lesson planning must be flexible

You have a great lesson plan for your new class. On the first day of class you get feedback that indicates your original plan may not be best suited for this class. So to now make the class a good learning experience your plan must be changed. No one wants to sit through a class and feel left out.

Setting your self up for success

In the beginning extra time and effort is needed to make sure all goes well on the first day. If all goes well on the first day, it sets you up for success. I know from experience that it is much more work to recover from a bad first day of class. Do your self a favor and take the time to make sure you are prepared the first day. Someone once told me that there is no substitution for preparation. I think they were right.

Working With the Syllabi

More often than not, I am given a syllabus with which to conduct my course. The curriculum developers usually develop the syllabi as well. I always take this to be a guideline, rather than a rule. The best syllabi are developed by those who need to use it in the class room. That means teachers.

First Day Checklist

Every start of a new module or a term (usually every 5 weeks), our faculty has a "Script" and "first day check off list". We go through the academic policies as well review the course syllabus. Although redundant, we feel that this is necessary with the kind of population and the level of our students in our institution.

Motivation

To motivate students I build their self esteem. You make them proud of what they are accomplishing and the decision to improve their lives.

Tarty Students

I am making an attempt to motivate students to arrive early and prepared.

Online Learning

I think we as professors, teachers, facilitators, and coaches should learn more about online teaching and distance learning.

First Day

I ask each student what their Goal is in their new Culinary life! Then I tell them to write it down and use it daily to remind them of the end result during a rough time.

rolling with the punches

I find that most student will give there best if the instructor involves the class in the lesson plan. The instructors should learn to be flexiable with the lesson plan some times the old pour and snore method just doesnt work. make the lecture fun by having the student move with lesson. Occasionally it leave the instuctor open to failure but if you roll with the punches you can over come the set back and learn a new way of getting the student involved.

First Day of Class

After I introduce myself to the class, I ask the students what do they think this class is all about,Why is it important for them to take this class and How will this class help them in their chosen field or career.