Lecturers contribute a bare minimum if all they do is repeat what's in the text or the slides. The situation is worse if you have a group of students (as I believe I do) who are independent learners and can absorb all the basic references without much help.
What, then, ought lecturers do to add value? Here are some ideas, by no means exhaustive:
What, then, ought lecturers do to add value? Here are some ideas, by no means exhaustive:
- Give a fresh slant to what's in the textbooks - either give a new perspective or just challenge everything the writer says
- Lecture on a related sub-topic (one not in the generic handouts)
- Facilitate a discussion or a case-study (thus taking the class away from recall-mode to application-mode)
- Get the students to present
- Show a video
- Facilitate a project which takes them out of the classroom (kinda like a case-study on steroids)
- What else?
Adding value nowadays usually involves creating new value. Whatever this is, it's probably not repeating what's already available.
2 comments:
Teachers should make students to think more to broaden their knowledge on any particular area.Teachers should encourage students to come out with their ideas. An excellent site furnishes teachers with many steps for effective teaching.
a case study on steroids? how refreshing :P
i find that using Google Documents and a blog helps kids to pick up research skills - it's amazing how little they know about online collaborations.
once Google creates an OS online education will have an even greater platform.
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