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Sometimes talking the talk and walking the walk
seem like two contradictory goals, particularly
when it comes to teaching history. Ours is
a content heavy subject. There is simply no
substitute for reading. So how do we maintain
rigour and standards on the one hand, yet inspire
enthusiasm about the subject among an often
large number of students on the other? My answer
is not to compromise either one for the sake of the
other. These CDTL Briefs in which we share views
on teaching often wind up recycling very widely
accepted maxims, and I am not going to forego
that here. We all agree students learn best from
each other. We all agree it is better to inspire
curiosity than to spoon feed content. We all agree
problem-based learning is more challenging than
didactic teaching and so on. But I too rarely notice
anyone paying due attention to an unavoidable
reality: we are the teachers, they are the students.
My approach to teaching starts from accepting
this fact.
To work from that starting point, I try always
to be guided by three notions. First, the
line between teacher and student is fluid and
permeable at all levels. Though this may be more
obvious in a graduate seminar than a level-one
tutorial, it is always there. When I want to learn
more about something, I teach it. Second, my
students want a teacher, not a group leader. They
want a teacher who will challenge them, motivate
them and not bore them especially. Above all,
students want someone who can persuade them
that this is a subject worth exploring, and then
let them do so. But as teachers, we need to give
students some ideas about how they might do so
effectively. Finally, I try to bear in mind that not
all my students will engage my course with the
same level of ability and motivation no matter
what I do. Over the years, I have found that
students respond to a teacher who not only wants
them to learn for themselves but is also willing
to teach, not just grade assignments. In other
words, the challenge is always to reconcile things
that seem to want to move in different directions
on the surface.
That apparent tug of war surfaces every time you
meet students. No one is going to want to listen or
discuss if they are not interested. But no one, even
mildly motivated, is going to be interested unless
there is some challenge that requires students
to stretch themselves. So I try to resist the
temptation to play to the gallery. Making sense of history is hard work but that is also the reward.
Everything I say and do is an effort to persuade
my students to accept that reality and seek that
reward. Let me cite three examples to make this
more concrete.
First, how often do we hear the question, "Am
I on the right track?" Students quickly learn
not to ask me that question, because my answer
is always the same, "What right track? This is
not a treasure hunt." Instead, I ask students to
present a credible, thoughtful, evidence-based
interpretation and take their seats at the table of
discussion. What is a credible interpretation and
what is not? Well, that is what students are here to
learn for themselves with my assistance. Second,
I put my money where my mouth is. All good
university history teachers problematise the topic
of the day and discuss a variety of interpretations
regarding any given topic. I always add my own
opinion because I think my students deserve to
know my views on the issues facing us. Students
also need to know those views are never set in
stone. We can all reconsider our interpretations
as we learn more, read more widely, consider
different issues and engage different theses.
But students deserve to know that just because I
respect the need to engage all interpretations does
not mean I give them all equivalent value. Finally,
I lay particular stress on evidence-based clarity
in interpretation and explanation. I expect it in
assignments and I try to provide it in seminar,
tutorial and lecture. If you cannot be clear, you
cannot engage.
All these seem rather far from any touchy feely
rhetoric about providing student-centred learning.
But that is exactly what it is. I see every module
as a collection of different components, and I use
each one in a different way. The idea is to provide a
problem-based, question driven and participatory
learning experience-one that sparks students'
interest and curiosity in the subject as a whole. It
takes an entire module to do that. So, sometimes
I take the lead and on other occasions I push
students out in front. This rests on a crucial
assumption: my students are independent adults
who will make up their own minds about what
they want, what they need, what they will do and
how they will take advantage of their time here at
NUS. But some will do this more effectively than
others. So I set them all a challenge and get them
started. Then I nudge them to join me up front
and make them walk the walk by justifying that
they need to stretch or gain nothing of value. I
think the fun comes from knowing that students
have stretched themselves, grew, overcame
challenges and not just endured. My teaching
philosophy is to groom my students to discover
how wonderful it is to be able to join the endless
discussion in their own right, because they did
the hard work everyone must in order to do this.
If I were to meet them ten years later, I do not
really care whether they still remembered the
content I discussed, but I would care very much
that they can use their critical faculties to make
sense of history for themselves and others. I am
their teacher, not their uncle.
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