Nicole S.

Oct 122016
 

I love taking notes. It’s sometimes the only thing keeping me from drooling all over my desk. I am better able to stay energized and focused when I am writing down what my professor is saying, or making quick comments about my own thoughts. When I first began graduate school, it took me a while to get used to taking notes of what OTHER STUDENTS say in class. In my seminar/workshop classes, I learned to value my peer’s statements as much as I valued my professor’s.

When I look out and see my students doodling in their notebooks, I want to give them the benefit of the doubt. I was a chronic doodler all throughout undergraduate school and it helped me focus when I was in danger of zoning out. However, as an instructor, I get a sinking feeling when I see their spirals and line tracings. When they do take notes, it is often on due dates (which they are inevitably confused about anyway) or the occasional class discussion. I prompt them to take notes, but without specific instructions on how to do this allusive activity, I fear they are not getting the most out of this useful process.

In The Chronicle of Higher Education, George Williams posted an article entitled, “Do Your Students Take Good Notes.” He includes several helpful articles about the note-taking process and how professors can facilitate activities to spur students on. He asks several helpful questions: “What do you do in your teaching to facilitate effective note-taking by your students? Do you have specific assignments that involve students’ notes? Do you lecture or facilitate discussions in ways that make note-taking easier?” (Williams).

I want to structure my classes in a note-taking-friendly way. A useful tactic I pulled from this article was to ask students during their one-on-one conference whether they had anything helpful in their notes when brainstorming.

http://www.chronicle.com/blogs/profhacker/do-your-students-take-good-notes/62864

Sep 142016
 

These past few weeks have been eye-opening and draining. I feel that one of the hardest challenges I have faced has been the time I spend prepping for my class. It is these moments that send me into a frantic spiral as I worry about whether the students will understand my directions and explanations. I worry about whether they will understand the importance of this assignment and whether or not the assignment is actually important. I worry about whether they will laugh at the jokes and sarcastic remarks I try to smuggle into the dense content and discussions.  I keep hoping this feeling will go away–but we are several weeks into the semester and I still feel the late night dread and the early morning panic of lesson planning.

The classroom is a totally different story. I walk in and my worry goes away. I feel comfortable and in control when leading discussions, facilitating activities, and delivering brief lectures. It is the in-between time, this purgatory in my week between being a teacher and being a student, that gives me a conniption. My struggle is codified in my blog title.

“Stiffening and Suppression: Hairspray and the Savage” is indicative of my attempts to bring balance to my life as an educator and a student. When creating a student example paper heading, I used the website http://www.besttitlegenerator.com/ to generate a random title for my paper because I was tired of coming up with ideas and worrying about whether I would get a laugh out of my students. In the end, I had one student chuckle at what I thought was a hilarious example of a title for an academic article. I had been so excited about my carefully crafted example heading/title, but it took me all of 30 seconds to present it. It took them all of one rough draft to format it incorrectly–but that’s another rant for another day.

I’m not upset at the formatting errors, but rather at the amount of time it seems to take me to construct these educational artifacts. I want to become more competent and equipped to structure class activities and examples in a way that leans on my strengths in the classroom and makes the planning time a less stressful experience.