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TA concernsConcerns Number of TAs
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Overall teaching effectiveness
Grading fairly and efficiently
Maintaining personal and professional boundaries
Being prepared for labs and tutorials
Language and cultural diversity of students and TAs
Not knowing the answer to student questions
Opportunities to develop teaching
Classroom management
Understanding student and institutional expectations
Plagiarism and academic integrity
Goals and challenges for today’s session
Goals1) Alleviate anxiety about these matters2) Strategies for anticipating and managing challenging
questions in the classroom
Challenges• Significant disciplinary variations on this issue• Different kinds of questions/ different expectations for
answers
Benefits• Cross disciplinary information – reflects your students
Discussion
Find someone in a different field from you. How would students in your tutorial/lab react if they asked you a question that you could not answer?
In general…
1. Prepare
2. Pre-empt questions by building in active learning strategies and other means to ask questions
3. Turn questions that you absolutely can’t answer into active learning opportunities for students
Different kinds of questions
• Factual– Only one right answer; answer can be
located in a variety of sources.
• Evaluative/analytical– Expert opinion; answer depends on
source consulted.
• Different student motivations
Today’s Outline
1. Preparing for labs & tutorials– Activity: sharing preparation strategies
2. Strategies for addressing questions in class A. Pre-emptingB. Deflecting
3. Applying today’s information to your own context– Activity: brief reflection & planning
Preparing to TA
• DISCUSSION (groups of 4 or 5): How do you prepare to TA (or, if you do not TA in a classroom, for academic presentations)? How much time do you spend? How much time are you allotted for these activities in your contract?
• For example, do you:– Attend course lectures?– Read the relevant texts?– Explore additional sources?– Develop a lesson plan?
Tips for preparing to TA
• Like studying for an open book exam: anticipate questions, identify resources – but no need to memorize everything!
• Talk to friends/colleagues/faculty advisors. What are common questions about this material?
• Your advantage – you’re also a learner – what are the sticky points/interesting questions for you?
• Identify and prepare resources and bring them to class (e.g. encyclopedia/textbook entries, access to the internet). Mark up well for easy reference or develop notes.
Tips for preparing to TA
• Shape your preparation around “big ideas” – priorities for student learning.
• Identify a small number of essential ideas that students must grasp by the end of the session.
• Incorporate these into lesson planning - introduce these at the beginning of class and revisit them at the end of the session.
• Why? • Instill student confidence• Streamline preparation
With this preparation…
• You will be able to bring to class:– Your lesson plan, with three big
ideas/objectives for the day and how you will communicate those.
– Information on any areas of common problems or student concerns.
– Resources (or access to resources) to fill in additional basic factual, background questions that might come up.
Pre-emptive strategies
Most importantly: set a precedent of NOT answering all questions in the first few classes, even if you do know the answer.
Explain to students why you are doing this – that you are helping them to develop long-term skills for identifying and answering their own questions.
All questions will get answered, just not all by you and not all right away.
Pre-emptive strategies
The strategies you choose will depend on: 1) How much flexibility and autonomy you have in your class sessions and 2) Your own approach to teaching.
Before the semester…
Think about, and speak with your course instructor about, ways to incorporate other means for students to ask and answer questions into the course.
For example:Can you use a discussion board on
Blackboard? Can you ask students to ask or answer
questions for participation marks?
Before each class…
Think about how much flexibility you have.
How much time will you have to explore issues students raise?
Are you able to plan the structure of the tutorial session or are the activities already planned for you?
Two strategies:
1. Build in other ways for students to ask questions
2. Incorporate active learning activities into your teaching.