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by greggman
4367 days ago
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Whenever I think about teaching I generally assume I'll run into similar problems. Teaching apparently has tons of politics and strict rules. The only thing I could think of is starting my own school but I haven't gotten myself to make that jump yet. |
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It can work very well indeed. Younger teachers with vocational experience (e.g. graphic designers teaching part time) can produce superb briefs that they even get 'customers' to evaluate.
I once had to write a University level module on 'scientific method'. That could be really dry, but I hit on the idea of getting the students to interview a research scientist of post-doc or higher experience level (the university in question had plenty of those around) about the extent to which the philosophers' idea of the scientific method actually worked. Each group of students rapidly found a lot of tension around the publishing and peer review processes. Big discussions! Good quality reports!
Do you have adult basic education in the US? Sorting out people's basic maths (I mean being able to check their change, find the value of a percentage, check wage slips) is another area where there is a lot of autonomy and opportunity for creativity.
Have the OA and others here given thought to mentoring teachers that are in training? They can challenge your assumptions and refresh your practice as well.
As you can see, I'm in mid-50s and still going.