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Teaching a large group of students is very different from teaching small
groups. When you stand in front of a large lecture theatre, 100 to 400
pairs of eyes watch your every movement and 100 to 400 pairs of ears listen
to every word that you utter. The size of the lecture theatre makes you
feel very small. The class dynamics also makes it difficult for you to
encourage active participation from students. Many of us often have to
teach, and teach effectively, against such odds. So we would like to share
with you some tips gleaned from years of teaching large classes and materials
that we have read about teaching large classes effectively.
Lecturing Tips
- Overcome your fear. The secret is to be prepared.
Rehearse part of the lecture aloud. Go over your notes. If this is the
first lecture, reach the lecture theatre before class starts to get
a feel of the place. Imagine what it is like to have those eyes looking
at you.
- Use humour. Studies have shown that humour in the
workplace can lead to higher creativity. Employing humour in the classroom
will at least make your class less boring and stressful. But the jokes
should relate to the subject matter that you are teaching.
- Project your voice. Shouting is not necessary, but
you have to be heard by students seated at the back of the lecture theatre.
Do a test: ask those who are seated at the very last rows if they can
hear you. If not, raise your voice accordingly. Also, remember not to
speak too quickly during a large class lest you lose your students.
- Use your whole body to lecture. To bring our lessons
across to students effectively, we should exploit both verbal and non-verbal
means of communication. So besides speaking, use facial expressions,
eye contact, hand gestures, and body language to help make students
understand you.
- Move around. Do not be anchored to a particular
position. The only piece of immovable furniture in the lecture theatre
should be the lectern and not you! But avoid excessive body movements
that could distract students.
- Vary the tone of your voice. Occasionally move from
high to low pitch and vice versa to prevent yourself from speaking in
monotone and boring your students to death. If possible, tape your lectures
and judge if you speak monotonously.
- Use stories and illustrations. Scour newspapers,
journals and magazines for the latest stories that will give up-to-date
illustrations of your subject matter. Sharing such stories with students
will help convince them that what you are teaching has practical relevance
to their future work and therefore increase their motivation to learn.
- Use good stimulating questions. If you can get students
to participate by responding to your question, half the battle of delivering
an effective lesson in a large lecture would have been won! Carefully
word and pitch your questions at an appropriate level so as not to confuse
the students. Perhaps allocate some time for students to discuss these
questions during the lecture. Studies by Eric Mazur (of Harvard University)
have shown that students learn more from peer discussions.
- Use breaks. Give students two-minute long restroom
or ‘stretch’ breaks especially during long lectures. Students
cannot concentrate if they are thinking of the restroom or are falling
asleep.
- Ensure your overhead projections/font sizes are large enough.
Try out your transparencies or PowerPoint files before lecturing. With
experience you will be able to tell which font size and colour contrast
will be the most legible.
Coordinating Tips
- Treat all tutorial groups equally. If a large class
is broken down into smaller groups for tutorials and laboratory/practical
sessions, handle all the various groups fairly. Students are very smart
and can sense when you have favoured some groups at the expense of others.
- Be approachable to all your students. Be ready for
all sorts of course-related queries from your students. Nowadays, we
should expect to get more emails from our students. Answer each diligently.
- Brief your tutors/TAs thoroughly. Before each tutorial/practical
session, brief tutors/teaching assistants about what to expect from
students and what are the session’s major learning points.
- Make all important announcements at the class level. The
effort will reduce perceived inequity of the way you handle the class.
- Give special attention to students and tutors/TAs who need
help. Weaker students and newer tutors/teaching assistants,
in particular, need all the support you can offer.
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