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.

dealing with challenging students

I believe it is very important to keep everything documented when dealing with a challenging student because it may support/help the instructor in case of a “conflict”

dealing with unfocused students

In my opinion when an instructor “spells out” what is expected and required of students at the beginning of the class it reinforces his/her expectations for the class as a whole.

setting the stage for success

I really think that having a written note for late or missing assignments on a syllabus shows that the instructor is “serious” about the course’s work & its content.

Not being fully prepared

The mistake an instructor often makes is not rearching completely the material they want to present. One suggestion is to make an outline of your presentation and try to anticipate questions your students may ask. Another idea is to write a brief quiz on the topic and ask the students to complete as an in class learning exercise. You may be able to identify areas that may be to be revisited or further explained.

Outspoken students

I have had many students who would like to ask questions away from the topic at hand. They usually will try to bring in their own life experiences which have nothing to do with the material being presented. You just simply tell that student that we appreciate your input but for this class can we please get back to our topic.

Getting back on track

Most adult learners are most likely to have had a learning disability identified by this stage in their career. Recognize that the average attention span is about 15 minutes. Change your method of presentation frequently and maybe ask that particular student a question on material previously covered to help keep that students attention.

Classroom management

Identifying certain behaviors of students can help you intervene quickly and directly to the challenge presented to the instructor. If you explain your goals and objectives in a firm, clear and concise manner you may achieve a level of acceptance from your class.

Building Rapport

One way I do that is to talk about a contemporary problem that is in the news...it gets the student to think about what they hear in the news and it also keeps me in tune with their mindset as I go forward.

Cheating students

Objective tests tend to increase the chances of this happening. I try to use short answer and an example in my quizzes and tests

Students who want all the attention

This happens each class I teach, after a couple of weeks I suggest tot he student that he/she may be affecting others who want to speak in class but are not having a chance because of them

Syllabus

I like the use of different colored paper when creating the course direction.

Professional Image

I always tell my students on the first day of class my academic credentials and my experiences. I feel that students should know their Instructors experience in their fields of expertise.

Reduce cheating

One of the ways that I have noticed some Instructors use in college is to use 2 tests in testing, each one with the questions arranged in a different order. That way students cannot look at another student's test next to them for answers.

Waking up students that are falling asleep in class

I have a variety of small foam rubber objects that I toss around in class to the students to get them energized after a complex topic. Thanks

Instuctor Respect

When meeting my classes for the first time. I start my introduction whith the fact that I was a former student where I now instruct, and share a breif recap of my sucsess of being a graduate. The whole class settles down and you can see the calm on all their faces.

Instructor Awareness

Although one has assumed the role of instructor, it is still always better to remember that to error is human. Try not to be above making mistakes, but be about learning from them. Correcting the oversight in front of the class not only shows morals, but sets the stage for honesty. They are learning from the example you are leading by.

Addressing a cheating student

If you can take a few minutes to speak to him or her to see if you can identify what type of help is needed, it might reduce the temptation and increase better study habits. Some students cheat simply due to ashamed of undeveloped learning habits. With encouragement, this might improve greatly.

Focus on the unfocused

If you are presentated with a student who has a low attention span, try to incorporate class projects and make that student project leader or manager of the assignment. Once that students has some responsibilites, he or she will be more willing and receptive to the new found role.

Engaging students during orientation

I have recently found that the more you engage your personal life experiences into your introduction, the less tention students release and become more involved and somewhat excited in the conversation. They are more receptive and willing to participate.

Grading Multiple Choice Tests

The vast majority of tests we give are multiple choice. We don't have Scantron, so instructors grade these by hand. Since each test is usually 10 or 20 questions and the answer sheets are in columns of 5, grading tests by pattern recognition becomes very easy. Comparison of the pattern on the student's answer sheet to a master key allows instructors to mark wrong answers from top to bottom of the sheet, not from question 1 through 10 or 20. Using this system is quick and effective, and becomes a huge time saver. Another time saver in grading multiple choice tests is to have an answer sheet with the correct answers hole-punched out of it. Simply marking the student's sheet where there is no answer seen in the hole allows rapid, accurate grading.