1 / 13

MCAPD 2013 Conference Presenter: Lynne Elkes

From Bluster to Bonhomie: Turning Student Apprehension and Attitude into a Collegial Learning Environment. MCAPD 2013 Conference Presenter: Lynne Elkes. Do you have trouble with…?. Lack of classroom participation Students’ fear of speaking Students’ fear of being wrong

mills
Download Presentation

MCAPD 2013 Conference Presenter: Lynne Elkes

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. From Bluster to Bonhomie: Turning Student Apprehension and Attitude into a Collegial Learning Environment. MCAPD 2013 Conference Presenter: Lynne Elkes

  2. Do you have trouble with…? • Lack of classroom participation • Students’ fear of speaking • Students’ fear of being wrong • Students’ fear of standing out among peers

  3. Who’s afraid of whom? • “…One of the blessings of teaching is the chance it gives us for continuing encounters with the young, but whatever eventually blesses us may at first feel like a curse! We are more likely to survive the curse and arrive at the blessing if we understand that we may be as afraid of our students as they are of us…” • Palmer, Parker J. The Courage to Teach: Exploring the Inner Landscape of a Teacher's Life, San Francisco, Calif. : Jossey-Bass, 2007.

  4. Opening doors, windows, anything • Change the conversation NFL example Impacts of national or international news Be open to using a few minutes to detour

  5. Shocking students into consciousness • Try new ideas, and be very spur of the moment • Literally shocking students into paying attention • Make them look forward to attending • They never know what you will do

  6. Using the Web for good • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xwndLOKQTDs: Guinness advertisement • Macklemore “Thrift Shop” : find your subject in the strangest places

  7. Passion for your subject • If you can find unusual examples of your subject in daily life, use them to trick students into seeing your subject outside the classroom • Jon Stewart • C-Span • Late night talk shows

  8. Flipped classroom • Never underestimate the power of interaction between students to learn • Encourage them to work together in class • Leave the lecture for e-learning and leave time for intra-learning

  9. Stultification vs. emancipation • “to explain a text to someone who has read it is to treat that person like a brute who is incapable of understanding…and it makes sure they won’t learn” • Leads to stultification in the student • From Chambers, Samuel. “Walter White is a Bad Teacher: Pedagogy, Partage, and Politics in Season 4 of Breaking Bad, “ Theory & Event, forthcoming.

  10. Emancipate your students • Free students to use their own intelligence (Rancière) • Students will recognize the equality of intelligence leading to a new exchange dynamic between instructor and student • De-emphasizes the “sage on the stage” • From Chambers, Samuel. “Walter White is a Bad Teacher: Pedagogy, Partage, and Politics in Season 4 of Breaking Bad, “ Theory & Event, forthcoming.

  11. The Courage to Teach • Good teaching is “an act of hospitality toward the young, and hospitality is always an act that benefits the host even more than the guest…the teacher’s hospitality to the student results in a world more hospitable to the teacher.” • Palmer, ib. id.

  12. Professors are people too • Be open about your experiences when they intersect your subject • Students will warm to you and to the subject when they see implications beyond the textbook and a grade

  13. Enough about me…It’s your turn! Questions? Comments?

More Related