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Once, I was discussing students' responses during
lectures with a colleague. This conversation
had stayed with me for a long time because my
colleague complained that NUS students were
like 'monkeys', leaping into action (copying
furiously) whenever a new PowerPoint slide was
shown without comprehending or ref lecting on
what my colleague was saying. Although I had
had similar experiences with my own students, I
had originally found this assessment harsh and the
'monkey' reference unnecessarily cruel. However,
the animal metaphor jolted my memory of a
Russian physiologist, Ivan Pavlov and his dog. He
had induced in his dog a conditional reflex wherein
his dog would expect food and salivate every time
he rang his bell.
As I reflected on my own lectures, I realised
that I too had induced a 'Pavlovian reflex' in
my students. In a bid to make my lectures more
interactive, I left blanks in the lecture notes
circulated to students before a lecture and revealed
the answers during the lectures. However, instead
of sustaining students' attention and stimulating
them to think of answers to the blanks on the
lecture notes, I learnt that I was training students
to expect a new nugget of wisdom with every
change of PowerPoint slides. It is then that I began
to understand my colleague's point and that the
'monkey' reference, while cruel, was not entirely
misplaced.
Thus, now, I firmly believe that this practice is
counter-productive. My experience has shown
that students became obsessed with filling in
the blanks during lectures, and would start
copying furiously the moment the answers were
revealed on PowerPoint slides without paying any
attention to my explanation. With this realisation,
I discontinued the practice of leaving blanks in my
PowerPoint presentation and circulated complete
lecture notes instead. To engage students in the
lecture, I asked them questions related to their
personal experience, show them clips of relevant
movies and links to useful websites, and conduct
short discussions in class. The transformation in
my students was significant. Not only did students
became more relaxed and started paying more
attention to what I was saying during lectures,
students also listened and took note of the salient
points I made. Further, students became highly
involved in classroom discussions.
By providing students with complete lecture
notes, I disabled my students' 'reflex' of copying
down what ever was shown on the screen.
Instead, they can now focus all of their energies
on understanding the concept and noting its
complexities. As I reviewed student feedback from
those years where incomplete lecture notes were
given, I noticed that a sizeable portion of student feedback focused on one mundane issue-how I
did not give students sufficient time to copy, how I
should provide complete notes after the class and so
on. But after I distributed complete notes, student
feedback moved to higher level issues such as the
nature and quality of my theoretical exposition and
the scope of the syllabus.
While some educators feel that giving students
complete lecture notes is tantamount to spoonfeeding,
others believe that giving students
complete and comprehensive notes helps students
understand and learn better. Given my own
experience, I am now strongly inclined towards
the latter.
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