First Day Fun...Everday (Pedablogue)
Here's a collection of teaching tips for the first day of classes brought to us by Honolulu Community College (check their reference lists for more good sources, too). The Pig Personality Profile [try here -- DGJ] is frivolous fun, but probably a good icebreaker and something I might even use when I teach Memoir Writing again in 2005-6. I especially liked reviewing Joyce T. Povlacs' 101 Things You Can Do the First Three Weeks of Class. If your term is just getting started too, you might want to review this list.Our first day of classes isn't for another week. Today was a full day of meetings, with lots of slideshows bearing statistics about how many students are enrolled, how we are doing on various ongoing university goals, and so forth. I'll be chairing the undergraduate English program review committee, and I also volunteered to be part of an ad hoc committee implementing an undergraduate humanities conference next spring. We hope to encourage juniors to deliver research papers on campus, so that during their senior year they can apply to off-campus conferences. (I presented on academic panels with four undergraduates at two conferences, last year, and I'm excited by the prospect of establishing a more formal way to keep that momentum going.)Here's a carefully worded google search that results in a great sampler of more on this topic. --Mike Arnzen
Getting ready for the students is foremost in my mind, even though I've got another full day of meetings tomorrow. So now that the kids are in bed I'm taking a moment to think about the first day of classes. I'm still casting about for a comfortable way to start the first day of classes.
One year, I asked a bunch of first-year writing students to get into
small groups and tell each other something that they are very good at,
and then I had them try to teach me wahtever it was they could do. My
thought was that if they saw me struggling to do something they were
very good at, they would feel better about struggling with writing.
One student sang a beautiful verse of "Amazing Grace," and another demonstrated the alphabet in American Sign Language. As it happens, I used to be a church cantor, and while I've never had any voice training, I didn't mind joining in on the second verse of the hymn. And once when I was on a long bus trip, I sat next to a hearing impaired woman who taught me some basics of singing. I had got myself all charged up to do my best when the students issued their challenges, that I was worried my plan was backfiring -- even if neither my singing nor my signing were up to the quality of the student who challenged me, that might not have been obvious to the rest of the class -- all they saw was that I was instantly able to have a meaningful exchange in the student's chosen mode of expression.
But then a very tall student demonstrated his high jump. I'm just a hair under six feet tall, so I'm not used to looking up at people when I talk to them... I had to leap with all my effort to touch the ceiling light, which my student could tap with very little effort. Then another student challenged me to a cartwheel. I made sure that she knew that her job was to teach me to do it, not just to watch me fall flat on my face. I didn't do it very well, but I did try. But then my adrenaline was pumping so much that I kind of lost focus, and sort of rushed through the "I felt pretty foolish trying all these things that you've been doing for years; but I did it anyway, to show you that you needn't be afraid of a new experience" part of the opening day.
A few years later, one of the students told me that the opening day was so much fun that he thought the whole class would be a blast, but that he was seriously let down when the routine work started piling up. So I haven't had the guts to try that particular gimmick again.
One student sang a beautiful verse of "Amazing Grace," and another demonstrated the alphabet in American Sign Language. As it happens, I used to be a church cantor, and while I've never had any voice training, I didn't mind joining in on the second verse of the hymn. And once when I was on a long bus trip, I sat next to a hearing impaired woman who taught me some basics of singing. I had got myself all charged up to do my best when the students issued their challenges, that I was worried my plan was backfiring -- even if neither my singing nor my signing were up to the quality of the student who challenged me, that might not have been obvious to the rest of the class -- all they saw was that I was instantly able to have a meaningful exchange in the student's chosen mode of expression.
But then a very tall student demonstrated his high jump. I'm just a hair under six feet tall, so I'm not used to looking up at people when I talk to them... I had to leap with all my effort to touch the ceiling light, which my student could tap with very little effort. Then another student challenged me to a cartwheel. I made sure that she knew that her job was to teach me to do it, not just to watch me fall flat on my face. I didn't do it very well, but I did try. But then my adrenaline was pumping so much that I kind of lost focus, and sort of rushed through the "I felt pretty foolish trying all these things that you've been doing for years; but I did it anyway, to show you that you needn't be afraid of a new experience" part of the opening day.
A few years later, one of the students told me that the opening day was so much fun that he thought the whole class would be a blast, but that he was seriously let down when the routine work started piling up. So I haven't had the guts to try that particular gimmick again.
Recent Related Entries
Two-Year in HellInside Higher Ed goes to hell.Job Listing #666. University of Hell at Seventh Circle. Visiting Assistant Professor, two years (with possibility of converting to tenure-track position at culmination of two-year appointment). Beginning September 2009. Teaching load of forty-three courses per...
Collaborative Authorship Made Easy
A good overview of the issues relating to using Wikis in the classroom. From the NCTE Inbox Blog:The benefits for collaborative writing should be obvious. Wikis allow multiple authors to edit a text easily. While the video doesn't discuss it,...
Educational benefits of social networking sites... low-income students, contrary to recent studies, are in many ways just as technologically savvy as their counterparts
From a University of Minnestoa press release:"What we found was that students using social networking sites are actually practicing the kinds of 21st century skills we want them to develop to be successful today," said Christine Greenhow, a learning technologies...
Above the Law?
Inside Higher Ed:Student newspaper advisers are something of an endangered species these days. They often get caught in the middle when administrators and student journalists clash over content, and in more than a few cases on college campuses in recent...
Hypertext '08: Session 7: Applications of Hypertext
Chair: Ken Anderson (University of Colorado at Boulder, USA)Enhancing Access to Open Corpus Educational Content: Learning in the Wild (Long Paper) Seamus Lawless, Lucy Hederman and Vincent Wade Lack of relevant and accessible digital content hampers the implementation of e-learning....

Leave a comment