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Teaching
Teaching: Introduction
Teaching: First Day of Class
Teaching: Pace
Teaching: Complexity
Teaching: Visuals
Teaching: Attention
Teaching: Point of Reference
Teaching: Animated Gestures
Teaching: Calling on Students
Teaching: Giving Directions
Teaching: Testing
Teaching: Directions for Labs
Communication
Communication: Introduction
Communication: First Day of Class
Communication: Pace
Communication: Flow
Communication: Hard-of-Hearing Students
Communication: Transitions
Communication: Labeling/Referencing
Communication: Rules
Communication: Vocabulary
 
 
 
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Environment: Lighting
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Complexity:Teaching:Challenges/Strategies
Challenges/Strategies
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  Related Topics:TEACHING: PaceTEACHING: VisualsCOMMUNICATION: PaceCOMMUNICATION: VocabularySUPPORT SERVICES: Materials and Media
 
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Explain getting from question to answer.
 Explain getting from question to answer.Encourage questions to pace steps.
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Challenge

You are presenting complex concepts. You realize, or know from past experience, that students are overwhelmed.

Strategies

For all students processing time is critical. If you’re an experienced teacher, perhaps you ‘know’ that this material is simply difficult to understand, and that students will just need to take time to understand it no matter what you do in class. However, don’t give up on trying new presentation techniques. For example:

  • Make certain that the presentation begins with basic elements that all students understand; then build to a more complex level.

  • If you are using visual aids, take a second look at their effectiveness. (Refer to TEACHING: Visuals for suggestions.)

  • If you are not using visual aids, consider how they might be useful to help explain the difficult concepts.

  • If a captionist is present in your classroom for deaf and hard-of-hearing students, review the transcript after the class – and read it from a student perspective. If your campus provides video services, have someone videotape your class and then review the tape. Then ask yourself:

    • Have you presented material in a logical progression (if that was your goal)?

    • Are there unintended false starts, backtracking, or drifting when you present the material?

    • Have you been clear when you’ve changed the topic?

    • Is the class really interactive, or do you unexpectedly dominate discussion? If your goal is to have interactive classes, obtain some specific measures of the interaction. For example measure the amount of time you’re talking and the amount of time your students are talking, or the number of different students contributing to the discussion.

    • Is your presentation style what you expected? If you want to use examples or stories to convey your point, do you actually do so?

  • If you ask students to hold questions until the end of class, reconsider this policy, especially if you want students to understand as the material is being presented.

  • Ask for a student who understands the concept to explain it to his/her peers. You may find yourself startled at the totally different approach the student takes to explaining the material.

  • Have each student write an explanation of the subject and review these in class or after class. Use the material as feedback on student understanding.

 
   
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  Major funding from the Fund for Improvement of Postsecondary Education (FIPSE), and Demonstration Projects to Ensure Students with Disabilities Receive a Quality Higher Education, U.S. Department of Education. Produced at the National Technical Institute for the Deaf, Rochester Institute of Technology, Rochester, NY