Talking to Students or talking AT them
There is a phenomenon that all public speakers encounter
when they are addressing a crowd that if you thought about it very much, it
would get to you. It is a phenomenon
that any teacher who is trying to impart knowledge to a room full of students
will experience as well. And if you think about it very much, it will get to
you too. That phenomenon happens when
you are talking along and you look out at those blank faces staring up at you
and you realize that a few, some or maybe all of those minds behind those faces
are paying absolutely no attention to you at all.
Whether or not that drives you crazy depends on whether you
consider the act of teaching complete when you speak or when the student grasps
and understands what you are saying.
Very often when you see a teacher speaking you know that this teacher
has absolutely no concern for whether the students are getting it or not. They do not consider it their job to make
sure the students understand or interact with the material. They are a delivery vehicle and if they
enunciate the lecture successfully, they have successfully "taught".
But just saying words into the air whether or not they are
heard or understood really isn't teaching is it? Put it in the context of a chef. If you cook a wonderful meal that is
delicious, prepare it with the finest of materials and present it with perfect
ambiance, is it still a delightful meal if there is nobody at the table to
appreciate it and nobody eats the meal?
No, you are only a chef when the patron dines on your food and
appreciates every nuance of the flavor and the experience of enjoying what you
have done.
That distinction is what drives teachers crazy when they
feel students are not listening. To a
teacher who has a passion for the real act of teaching, their job is not done
until the students grasp the material and interact with it, question it and
finally grasp it and make that knowledge their own. A lecture not heard, not understood, not
"taught" is not teaching at all, its just talking.
Preparing to become a teacher is about more than just
knowing how to design a lesson plan and how to organize a class room and make a
bulletin board. Becoming a teacher means
you become one of those amazing people who can take students from uninformed to
informed and from unenlightened to truly "taught". When it is your calling to become that kind
of teacher to just talk at students with no knowledge of whether they know what
you are saying at all is absolutely unacceptable.
This means that you will have to change your teaching style.
It means that you won't be satisfied with just working through a lecture. In fact, it might spell the end of the
lecture as a teaching device for you entirely.
To really find out if those kids are listening and interacting with the
material, you will have to change your approach to an interactive teachingstyle. You will have to start talking to
students or with students and not AT them.
But once you do that, the feed back you will get and the quality of your
teaching will improve so dramatically, you will never want to go back.
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