As I noted earlier, I have begun teaching a statistics course at my old undergraduate university. This is my first real experience teaching people en masse. It has been an interesting experience to say the least that I am glad I am learning sooner rather than later. Based on my experiences so far, anyone considering becoming a professor in the future should teach as soon as possible once they begin grad school.
I have had experience tutoring and such, which is good because I learned how to communicate things to people to help them understand material early on. However, tutoring and teaching are very different. Obviously, the first major difference would be the difference in amount of people being dealt with at one given time. This is a major obstacle because everyone moves at a different pace; some people get it and others need a lot more attention. Now I have come to realize very quickly that I do not like letting people fall behind because I believe, as a personal philosophy, that no student should ever feel like they are floundering out of water and are unable to perform because of this. That said, I have had a hard time dealing with balancing between going too fast and going too slow in class because you really have to find that sweet spot where the people that get it aren’t dying of boredom and people that don’t get aren’t dying of fear and anxiety over not understanding what is going on in class. It is an interesting and delicate balance that must be achieved and I think I am starting to get the hang of it but still have done definite kinks to work out of the system.
Another major thing I have noticed is that I am a bit of a push over when it comes to grading or exams. This may just be due to lack of experience with the whole administering a test thing, but I think some of it goes back to my whole personal philosophy. I don’t like seeing people fail and stuff like that but I also need to learn that evaluations must be made of people both for their sake and my own. It is important for me because it lets me know how I am doing as an instructor because it lets me know exactly how many people may be floundering. But there is something that goes hand-in-hand with people floundering, which is apathy.
Some people just don’t care about what is going on and see their participation in this class as merely a requirement to graduate. Those people make it difficult to gauge how things are going in the class. Since they are completely apathetic they are probably not trying nor do they care so motivation is at an all-time low and is poised to stay there indefinitely. For someone like me, who has chosen to devote themselves to the world of academics and such, it can be a little hard to understand why you couldn’t care less about your education, especially when you are paying to be there (well, at least your parents are paying for you to be there). But again, these are all types of students one has to encounter and deal with as a teacher.
These are all things as a student that I don’t think I ever really considered beforehand. Sure you noticed the people who weren’t paying attention or who didn’t get it, heck, at one point or another you probably were one of those people. But as the teacher, it becomes your responsibility to maneuver through all of these types of students and everything in between and hope that at some level you are getting through and helping at least those who want to learn. It is interesting being the one who writes on the board and comes up with lesson plans. It isn’t easy but it is an exciting challenge that I am adapting to and hope to carry on with throughout my grad school career and the future. In a lot of ways, the learning never stops, it just changes in terms of where you get your knowledge. Before it was textbooks and professors, now it is more like students and experience. It is all very interesting to me.