THE ART OF LECTURING
Induction course for new academic members
T Bere
OUTLINE OF THE PRESENTATION
How to give a good lecture
Preparing teaching and learning materials
Lecturing styles
Lecture outline
Tips in lecturing
In his teaching, the wise man guides his studentsbut does not pull them along; he urge them togo forward and does not suppress them; he opensthe way but does not take them to the place……..If his students are encouraged to think forThemselves we may call the man a good teacher.
Confucius
HOW TO GIVE A GOOD LECTURE
1. Plan
2. Prepare
3. Be punctual
4. Personal Presentation
5. Communication
6. Organisation of material
HOW TO GIVE A GOOD LECTURE7. Appropriate methodology
8. Critical thought
9. Student input
10. Closure / summary / conclusion
11. Evaluation / change.
PREPARING TEACHING AND LEARNING MATERIALS
1. Isolation of ConceptsIsolate concepts from facts, principles examples etc.
subject matter.
2. Definitions of ConceptsDefine each concept and give one simple and
appropriate example.
3. Diagramming the Subject MatterProvide key subject matter in a clearer synopsis with
sub-themes and sub-headings.
PREPARING TEACHING AND LEARNING MATERIALS
4. Principles ElucidationSince concepts are related to other concepts,
show this in related principles, rules, theorems, axionis, or generalizations.
5. Organize information in some of hierarchy.
LECTURING STYLES
Lecturer is confident but ill-prepared.Generally lecturer does neither think out nor write down
objectives of his lectures for students.Lecturer is likely not to give students a course outline.However, lecturer may achieve objectives randomly.Lecturer appears to have no problem selecting and
structuring material as he/she relies on past attainment.Lecturer tends to review previous lecture before beginning a
new one.May use chalkboard or Overhead Projector.Does not give notes; and does not wait for students to jot
down the main points.
1. Amorphous Lecturing
LECTURING STYLES
Uses a variety of techniques and humour.
Lack delivery skills.
Lecturer is a self doubter.
Lecturer has difficulty selecting and structuring materials.
Lecturer tends to use headings and subheadings only.Lecturer determines objectives in advance but feel he
doesn’t achieve them.Lecturer tends to think more about his students’
experience.Does not recap his previous lecturers.
2. Eclectic Lecturing
LECTURING STYLES
Lecturer talks only to students.
No use of aids, diagrams, etc
Use of technical language only.
Lecturer quotes from texts and articles during lecturing.
3. Oral lecturing
LECTURING STYLES
Provides information through visual aids.
Uses OHP, chalkboard, diagram structures, maps, graphs, e-learning platforms e.t.c
Grants students time to study graphs diagrams.
Tend to rely on one text as source of information.
Tend to be less humorous.
Very assuring content is given.
Competent information-giving.
4. VISUAL LECTURING
LECTURING STYLES
Lecturing is well structured.
Uses a wide variety of oral and visual techniques and questions.
Provide more handouts.
Uses citations from varied sources.
Show links between materials, lectures and activities.
Generate understanding and thought provocatives.
5. EXEMPLARY LECTURING
LECTURE OUTLINE A. Statement of purpose and objective of lecture
A. Statement of the problem to be examined (posed in a style which is meaningful to the audience).
B. Short exposition of framework of structure to be presented
C. Point 1
D. Links between point 1 and point 11
E. Point 11
F. Recapitulation
LECTURE OUTLINE G. Links between point 11 and point 111
H. Point 111
I. Structure of points and links reviewed
J. Recapitulation
K. Application
L. Conclusion Restatement of purpose and objective Summary of valid solutions
TIPS IN LECTURING Learn the student’s names
Use lots of visuals: graphic organizations, charts, graphs, photographs, videotapes e.t.c.
Use demonstrations whenever possible.
If it is not written down, it will be ignored.
Put long derivations in handouts (leave gapes). Spend most of the class time on examples, discussion. Filling the gaps, small-group exercises.
Give short activities, and/or stretch breaks during lectures.
Make eye contact with the students. Don’t write with the right hand and erase with the left. Don’t read notes…
100
% R
etai
ned
0 10 20 30 40 50Time (minutes)
Figure: Relationship between time in lecture when information was passed and the rate at which that information is retained by the student
TIPS IN LECTURING
TIPS IN LECTURING Don’t be afraid to say “I don’t know.” If you want to, add “but I
will find out.” Then do it!!!
Ask questions periodically, and not just “Is that clear?” or “Any questions?” What should the solution look like? What do you think happens next? What’s wrong with what I just said? What are possible safety problem here? Environmental problem?
Ethical problem? What’s a practical application of the material we just covered?
After asking for the question, wait for the answer.
TIPS IN LECTURING Get students to generate answers (or questions) in small
groups.
When answers are provided, find something positive to say about them, even if they are wrong (or at least say “Nice try”).
Don’t always stop asking when you get the answer you are looking for.
Summarize occasionally during lecture and always at the end ... or get the student to do it.
In his teaching, the wise man guides his students but does
not pull them along; he urge them to go forward and does
not suppress them; he opens the way but does not take
them to the place……..If his students are encouraged to
think for themselves we may call the man a good teacher.
Confucius
THANK YOU!!