Observable Characteristics Of
Effective Teaching
1.
Begins class promptly and in a well-organized way.
2.
Treats
students with respect and caring.
3.
Provides the significance/importance of information to be learned.
4.
Provides
clear explanations. Holds attention and respect of students….practices
effective classroom management.
5.
Uses active, hands-on student learning.
6.
Varies his/her instructional techniques.
7.
Provides
clear, specific expectations for assignments.
8.
Provides
frequent and immediate feedback to students on their performance.
9.
Praises
student answers and uses probing questions to clarify/elaborate answers.
10. Provides many concrete, real-life, practical examples.
11. Draws
inferences from examples/models….and uses analogies.
12.Creates a class environment which is comfortable for students….allows students to speak
freely.
13. Teaches
at an appropriately fast pace, stopping to check student understanding and
engagement.
14. Communicates
at the level of all students in class.
15. Has a
sense of humor!
16. Uses nonverbal behavior, such as gestures, walking around, and eye contact
to reinforce his/her comments.
17. Presents
him/herself in class as “real people.”
18. Focuses
on the class objective and does not let class get sidetracked.
19. Uses
feedback from students (and others) to assess and improve teaching.
20. Reflects on own teaching to improve it.
Characteristics
Of Effective Teaching
Effective
teachers appear again and again to display certain characteristics, while
ineffective teachers tend to make the same mistakes repeatedly. Below is a look
at some of the things more effective teachers tend to do right and less
effective teachers tend to do wrong.(Stanford university)
EFFECTIVE TEACHERS
Based on a scheme originally
developed by M. Hildebrand, 1971.
Organization
and Clarity
·
explains clearly
· makes difficult topics easy to understand
·
uses examples, details, analogies, metaphors, and variety
in modes of explanation to make material not only understandable but memorable
·
makes the objectives of the course and each class clear
·
establishes a context for material
Analytic/Synthetic
Approach
·
has a thorough command of the field
·
contrasts the implications of various theories
·
gives the student a sense of the field, its past, present,
and future directions, the origins of ideas and concepts
·
presents facts and concepts from related fields
·
discusses viewpoints other than his/her own
Dynamism and Enthusiasm
·
is an energetic, dynamic person
·
seems to enjoy teaching
·
conveys a love of the field
·
has an aura of self-confidence
Instructor-Group
Interaction
·
can stimulate, direct, and pace interaction with the class
·
encourages independent thought and accepts criticism
·
uses wit and humor effectively
·
is a good public speaker
·
knows whether or not the class is following the material
and is sensitive to students’ motivation
·
is concerned about the quality of his/her teaching
Instructor-Individual
Student Interaction
·
is perceived as fair, especially in his/her methods of
evaluation
·
is seen by students as approachable and a valuable source
of advice even on matters not directly related to the course
Characteristics of ineffective teacher
Doing the right things with your
teaching is of course critical but so is avoiding the wrong things.
Richard M. Felder, North Carolina State University and Rebecca Brent, Education
Designs, Inc., have come up with a list to the ten worst mistakes teachers
make. They are summarized here in increasing order of badness.
Mistake #10: When you ask a
question in class, immediately call for volunteers. When you do this most
students will avoid eye contact, and either you get a response from one of the
two or three who always volunteer or you answer your own question
Mistake #9: Call on students cold. If you frequently call on
students without giving them time to think ("cold-calling"), the ones
who are intimidated by it won't be following your lecture as much as praying
that you don't land on them. Even worse, as soon as you call on someone, the
others breathe a sigh of relief and stop thinking.
Mistake #8: Turn classes into
PowerPoint shows. Droning through lecture notes put into PowerPoint slides
is generally a waste of time for everyone.
Mistake #7: Fail to provide
variety in instruction. Effective instruction mixes things up: boardwork,
multimedia, storytelling, discussion, activities, individual assignments, and
group work (being careful to avoid Mistake #6). The more variety you build in,
the more effective the class is likely to be.
Mistake #6: Have students work in
groups with no individual accountability. The way to make group work work is
cooperative learning, an exhaustively researched instructional method that
effectively promotes development of both cognitive and interpersonal skills
Mistake #5: Fail to establish
relevance. To provide better motivation, begin the course by
describing how the content relates to important technological and social
problems and to whatever you know of the students' experience, interests, and
career goals, and do the same thing when you introduce each new topic.
Mistake #4. Give tests that are
too long. If
you want to evaluate your students' potential to be successful professionals,
test their mastery of the knowledge and skills you are teaching, not their
problem-solving speed.
Mistake #3: Get stuck in a
rut. Things
are always happening that provide incentives and opportunities for improving
courses. This is not to say that you have to make major revisions in your
course every time you give it-you probably don't have time to do that, and
there's no reason to. Rather, just keep your eyes open for possible
improvements you might make in the time available to you.
Mistake #2. Teach without clear
learning objectives. A key to making courses coherent and tests fair is to write
learning objectives-explicit statements of what students should be able to do
if they have learned what the instructor wants them to learn-and to use the
objectives as the basis for designing lessons, assignments, and exams.
Mistake #1. Disrespect students. If you give students a sense
that you don't respect them, the class will probably be a bad experience for
everyone no matter what else you do, while if you clearly convey respect and
caring, it will cover a multitude of pedagogical sins you might commit.
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