| Is your energy level dropping? Do you feel burdened with too much work and too
little time to do it? Do you sense that your students are becoming lethargic? Then
you and your students may be experiencing midcourse droop--an insidious yet common
syndrome. Why? When enthusiasm wanes, the ability to cope with stress decreases
and the joy of teaching is sometimes lost. Thoreau reminds us that "None are so
old as those who have outlived enthusiasm." "Nothing great was ever achieved without
enthusiasm," says Emerson.
At registration time, energy levels were high as you and your students envisioned
the mountaintop of growth and possibilities inherent in the learning experience to
come. Now at or near midterm the storm clouds of academic and personal problems
may have obscured the summits of success.
Midcourse letdown strikes students when they have underestimated the time required
to learn the content of your course. Or when poor time managements skills cause
them to delay the completion of major assignments until the deadline approaches and
panic sets in. Disappointments occur when students fail to achieve the level of
success they envisioned. Lower than expected test scores, poorly received
contributions to class discussions, rejection by teammates assigned to a group
project and the frustration experienced from working with lazy lab partners have
taken their toll. What was first perceived as an enjoyable learning adventure may
have by midterm become a code-3 struggle for survival.
On the other hand, you may be feeling discouraged because text scores reveal that
the class exam averages are much below what you expected. Assignments may have been
turned in late or poorly done. You feel that some students seem unable to write
clearly and concisely and are exhibiting punctuation and spelling skills.
Participation in discussion groups seems to be lackluster, and dozing has become
more and more common during your lectures. Furthermore, this group of students
seems to be taking twice as long to complete the required lab projects than usual,
and in general you feel a bit panicky about how you will ever cover all the
required material before finals. If this description fits you, you may have slipped
into the quicksand of a mid-semester slump.
Survival experts tell people caught in a bottomless quagmire in the woods to stop
struggling -- uncoordinated effort only causes the victim to skin ever deeper.
Only by calm, purposeful and coordinated actions can the victims save themselves
by swimming through the muck or sand to the safety of a solid shore.
How can you extricate yourself from the ooze of a midcourse sinkhole? Try a REFOCUS
strategy. REFOCUS means:
- Recognize
- Empower
- Focus
- Objectivize
- Commit
- Unburden
- Surprise
First, consider that a likely cause of midcourse letdown is a slow change of the
thought focus from achievement to deficiency. Each time reality doesn't measure up
to an envisioned ideal, emotional energy is drained, self-esteem is lowered and
feelings of being in control are diminished. The result is instructor burnout.
Here is a prescription that can help you rebuild your enthusiasm:
- Recognize
- Recognize your achievements thus far. Remind yourself of the lectures
that were well organized, delivered and received; the visuals that enhanced
understanding of a complex issue; the assignments that sparked critical
thinking and the innovative ways in which you activated and involved your
students in the learning process. Give yourself a pat on the back for
learning all your students' names, staying after class to answer questions,
meeting with your students even though you don't have an office and taking
the time to develop the individualized feedback designed to help each
student improve his or her performance.
Recall the work that your students have completed despite the demands of
other classes, a job and perhaps a family. Acknowledge the progress your
students have made.
- Empower
- Create a list of your strengths as a teacher. Are you an excellent
communicator, manager, instructional designer or leader? When are you at
your best -- leading a discussion, planning a collaborative learning
activity, delivering a lecture, or going one-on-one with a student who
needs help? Maybe you're an outstanding motivator. List your five greatest
personal achievements in the past year. Can you remember how you felt
during these moments? Reliving these peak experiences can really empower
you to teach with greater enthusiasm and sense of purpose.
At the beginning of the second half of your course, perhaps after springbreak,
ask your students to begin a class by sharing in a small group setting a
personally significant learning experience. Encouraging them to remember and
publicly affirm their academic achievements helps motivate and energize
learners. Also, many students don't appreciate what they have learned while
engaged in the process of reaching an academic goal. Therefore, help your
students identify the skills, attitudes and knowledge they have acquired in
only a few short weeks or study. For example, many aviation maintenance
technology students were gratifyingly surprised when asked to list all the
pieces of equipment and tools they could now use as well as the repair and
troubleshooting procedures with which they were now familiar. It was then
recommended that they update and keep these lists in a folder as data to help
them prepare a resume upon graduation. Don't assume that students realize all
they have learned or will learn in your course of the value of this education
to bettering their lives.
- Focus
- Concentrate your attention on the material to be learned in the second
half of your course and the selection of the most effective teaching style
possible. Take a few moments to visualize the students' increased skills and
changed behaviors or improved performances that you hope to see at course's
end. Take a quick look at your syllabus. Are you on track? Will there be
enough time? No? Then you have a management problem. Use a triage system
to gain control of the situation. Triage is a strategy used in medicine
under emergency conditions to son patients into treatment categories. The
number one priority is to treat those who will benefit the most and who
require the easiest treatment. Then move to those who require more difficult
treatment but will benefit greatly. Last, attend to those who require
difficult treatments and probably won't benefit from it. In other words,
in difficult situations work to achieve the highest benefit with the least
amount of time and effort.
When course time is short and learning is proceeding slowly, work on the
material that will bring the greatest reward with the least effort. Plan to
accomplish first the learning tasks that will bring the highest reward for
your students. When you assign the easy, important tasks first, you often
motivate them to continue working until even more difficult responsibilities
are completed. Triage thinking can help you more effectively manage the
second half of your course.
- Objectivize
- In the intervening weeks since you formulated your learning targets or
objectives, the stresses and strains of teaching and daily living may have
caused you to veer from your original instructional plan. If you have
refocused your teaching priorities, it's important to create learning
targets to guide your post-midterm efforts. Learning targets are a series
of statements that describe levels of performance increases that are
required for your students to advance. Some faculty think that only
teachers in occupational, technical or professional curricula need to
develop performance targets. With today's accent on critical thinking,
learning to learn, collaborative processes, total quality management, etc.,
faculty in humanities, business, fine arts and developmental education could
significantly improve learning by teaching for doing rather than just
knowing. For example, compare two statistics course sections:
- Section A is built with knowledge objectives. The objectives
are that "at the end of this course students will know the concepts
of central tendency, variability, normal distributions, hypothesis
testing and analysis of variance." How does the instructor know
that these objectives have been achieved? By grading homework
problems, unit tests and a comprehensive final test. Students
achieving above 60% pass; those scoring below fail.
- Section B is constructed using performance targets. The target
statement says that "at the end of this course students will have
chosen a random population, created an hypothesis, developed a
questionnaire, completed an analysis of variance and presented a
final report using a PC and recommended statistical software
packages." In this course the instructor not only teaches
statistical knowledge but ensures that each student can put this
knowledge to practical use in a holistic manner. With this design,
learning evaluation can be performance based rather than strictly
knowledge based.
Which course would you rather take or teach? Which would be of more value to
your students? To energize your teaching, apply performance targets.
- Commit
- After you visualize your goal and create specific, measurable learning
targets for your students, commit to achieving them. To reach your goal
you'll need a strong commitment; one that will not waver as you encounter
difficulties. In teaching nothing goes completely as planned or as expected.
The number of variables in the learning process are too great to permit
total control. A staunch resolve enables you to persevere through tough
times, and it builds self-esteem. Ask your students to recommit to success
in learning. Their initial commitment may have weakened and they need to
reenergize for the second half of the course. Remind them of the benefits
of making short-term sacrifices to obtain long=term rewards.
To illustrate the point, remind them of the value of priming the pump. An
old story illustrates the principle. As the tale goes; old Desert Dan
traveled the deserts of the southwest digging wells an installing pumps to
aid those traversing the parched sands of this region. Buried beneath each
pump he left a full jar of water with instructions on how to use it to
prime the pump and thereby obtain all the water a thirsty traveler could want.
Each dehydrated passerby who reached one of these watering holes was faced
with a difficult decision. Drink the water in the jar and hope that it was
enough to sustain life until the next water source was reached or commit
this precious resource to punp-priming and the promise of greater reward.
- Unburden
- You don't have to be perfect; you just have to be yourself. You may
hold the expectation that as a college teacher you should know all the
answers. Once you accept the fact that successful teachers emphasize the
roles of learner, presenter, guide, coach, facilitator, designer, evaluator,
manager and leader and minimize the role of expert, you unburden yourself
from unrealistic expectations. Then teaching becomes much easier and more
enjoyable. Your students will appreciate knowing that you and they are on
the same learning path. You have just proceeded farther than your students.
Unburden your students by applying good management techniques to your course.
Look for barriers to learning that hold your students back or cause them to
devote time to unnecessary work. Question your assignments and tests and
align them to your learning targets.
- Surprise
- During the second half of your course variety is often desperately
needed to keep your students motivated. Two surprise teaching techniques are
discussed:
- Tell a story. It is said, "A good story can touch something
familiar in each of us and yet show us something new about our
lives, our world, and ourselves. Stories can also be powerful
tools for growth and learning."
However, there are several things you should consider before
choosing to tell stories as a teaching strategy. Before telling a
tale experienced storytellers consider these aspects -- purpose,
practice and priority.
Purpose. Stories should be used to fulfill a definite
instructional purpose. They help students visualize and
internalize complex issues or concepts. Anecdotes draw students
into the learning process by activating their imaginations.
Practice. Storytelling takes practice to master. Effective
communicators practice by developing narratives in three parts:
context, challenge and climax. Begin the account by setting the
stage; describe when and where it happens and introduce the
characters. Next, add the dilemma and explain how each of the
characters are affected. Resolve the problem in words that convey
the kernel of learning contained in the story.
Priority. There are times when excessive storytelling in
classes get in the way of learning. To prevent this situation,
prioritize your strategies according to their effectiveness and
time-benefit. Brief stories can serve as introductions to units of
learning or as mental rest spots during a long lecture. Stories
spaced about every 20 minutes work well for many faculty who
lecture extensively. Narratives can help you summarize material
in a memorable way and enable your students to understand how your
course material relates to the "real world."
- Simulate a crisis. Crisis situations occur in most occupations
and students should be prepared to think under pressure. "The
Crisis Game" provides an excellent way to explore crisis thinking
and introduce the element of surprise into your class.
To play, announce to your class that the red phone has just rung
and the president or other authority appropriate to your subject
area has requested that a student advisory panel be immediately
created to deal with a sudden crisis. (You have previously prepared
a handout describing a crisis situation applicable to your course's
study material.) Then divide your class into groups of five to
eight students.
Explain to them that they will have a limited time (say 30 minutes)
to discuss the emergency and prepare a contingency plan to meet it.
You may wish to assign roles to group members to facilitate this
learning activity.
After ten minutes interrupt the groups and verbally add some
additional information that simulates the dynamic environment of
crisis situations. About ten minutes before the end of the game
declare that because of mounting pressures from the press, the
group must complete their plans and participate in a press conference
in five minutes. This new time frame increases the pressure on the
groups to work quickly.
When the time limit is reached the recorder of each group presents
the details of their plan to the entire class. After all plans are
shared. It is recommended that students be debriefed about how
they reacted to the crisis situation and the added pressures of
changing information and compressed time schedules.
Through this game, you can accomplish two goals: (1) help students
learn how to better function in emergency situations and (2)
review in an intriguing manner critical course materials.
This seven step REFOCUS strategy will help you to renergize and renew, and it will
help you to continue to teach for success!
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