I am willing to entertain edumacational hijinx from other ejumacators on my f-list now. So I I figured that going over the syllabus, my expectations, our limitations (in terms of material) and general stuff would take up today's teaching time. It took 15 minutes out of 50. I did remember that we needed to assign drawers in the dark room which took another 5-7. Then I had nothing, and they had no questions yet. Tomorrow I am giving a brief (but hopefully not too brief) overview of the history of photography and maybe an introduction to camera mechanics... I have no idea how to stop today from happening to me again!

no subject
Date: 29 Aug 2008 02:09 (UTC)Usually, one of the things I did on the first day, as sort of a roll call, was to go around the room and have the students introduce themselves, and tell what their interest in the course was. That way, I had an idea of what their expectations were, sometimes their background, etc. It also makes the students be more involved from the first day. Also it was my cheeky way of getting around taking attendance, and I'd try to know all their names by the second class. (granted, you probably have more students than I usually did per class.)
Also, and this will probably still work for HS students, I'm realizing a bit of a gap, I've taught small kids and adults, but, not so much the HS crowd) my first web design assignment was to give a list of web sites of varying quality, and have them give their opinions on them. To think critically about how a site is put together for the first time. So, to intro the assignment, I brought in a few sites for the class to look at, and talk about. On the homework, some were good, some were really bad, some were average, but, I put them in a mixed up list, so that they could put their own opinions on them.
I had a standing "assignment" (nothing I tracked) for them to pick sites they saw along the week and bring them in for the class to talk about, and each class, I'd start with asking about what the members had seen since last class. We'd get 1-2 per class, and it was a good way to look at various things, and to have them ask questions about "how'd they do that?" You can have them be on the look out for photos they've seen in print, online, etc. (Good, bad, in the middle, whatever.) It's a good way to use 10-15 minutes most every class. (well, maybe less for a class that meets daily.)
Basically, I keep a metal file of these sorts of things to pull out whenever time ran shorter than I'd expected.
no subject
Date: 29 Aug 2008 02:41 (UTC)