11 Bad Teaching Habits That Are Stifling Your Growth

contributed by Saga Briggs,ย opencolleges.edu.au

Thereโ€™s a certain class of mistakes that all educators can eliminate with conscious effort, and in this post we outline 11 of them. They range from habits of practice to habits of thought, but all of them have one important thing in common: they make your job harder.

It sounds easier to lecture to a sea of faces than to get through to thirty individuals. It sounds simpler to make students volunteer the answer than to spark voluntary interest. It sounds like less work to administer a few tests throughout the course than to administer many. But in the long run, itโ€™s not. If you donโ€™t eliminate these โ€œshortcutsโ€ now, you will end up with shallow learning outcomes and more work on your plate in the future.

We all make healthy mistakes, every class period of every day. The point is to recognize the difference between these mistakes and mistakes that can become larger problems if they arenโ€™t monitored. Some of the following blunders you may be guilty of, some of them you may have already eliminated, and some of them you may never have encountered.

They really only scratch the surface of a long list of potentially destructive practices. Whatever your level of familiarity with them, take a moment to reflect on what it takes to snuff out each habit for good.

1. Not learning from colleagues.

Effective instructional strategies change with time; what you learned in teaching school may no longer be relevant to the students youโ€™re currently dealing with. The best way to improve your own instructionโ€“aside from reading this blog, of courseโ€“is to watch what others do. If you have a free period, ask another teacher if you can sit in on their class. Film your own class, hand out copies, and ask for feedback.

Sure, it doesnโ€™t hurt to watchย TED talks and inspiring videos of others teaching, but using the resources within your own environment should be the first place you start.

2. Assuming a lesson taught is a lesson learned.

We all know thereโ€™s a difference between giving a presentation and actually teaching. But how do we achieve more of the latter? The answer really lies in Blunder 7, as youโ€™ll read in a moment, but a good first step is to never assume (or hope wildly) that youโ€™ve gotten your point across.

3. Failing to establish relevance.

Establishing relevanceย doesnโ€™t mean filling your lecture with analogies to the interests of every individual student in your class. Not only would that take an eternity, but it would be counter-productive. Establishing relevance requires a bit of creativity on your part. It can come in the form of a lecture, an assignment, or a chosen text. But itโ€™s not in the detailsโ€“itโ€™s in the bigger picture. Itโ€™s in the difference between allowing and banning cell phones in class, in the relationship between topic and motivation, in choosing to teachย Catcher in the Ryeย orย The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao.

4. Teaching without empathy.

Iโ€™m not talking about emotional empathy; Iโ€™m talking about the ability to put yourself in a studentโ€™s shoes and imagine what they want, like, and think (or donโ€™t want, donโ€™t like, and donโ€™t think). You were a skeptical, self-interested, fickle-minded student once. Donโ€™t forget it.

5. Immediately calling on volunteers to answer a question.

When you do this, more often than not, few students will even bother to think about the question, since they know that eventually someone else will provide the answer.ย Instead, ask students to write down questions they have on a notecards or as a kind of concept-map, then collect them as exit slips.

This is also a great way to offer a re-cap before the bell rings.

6. Failing toย diversify your teaching.

Variety is the spice of the classroom. Itโ€™s also proven to enhance learning and memory, and is naturally engaging. Diversifying your teaching means diversifying your students’ learning.

7. Assessing infrequently.

Infrequent assessmentย encourages cramming, reduces retention, and places immense pressure on students and teachers alike to cover a huge amount of material between testing rounds.ย Giving a short, 10-question quiz every Friday will help students remember what theyโ€™ve learned, become better test-takers, and allow you to gather weekly feedback on your own effectiveness.

8. Setting low student expectations.

Generally, students will perform at a level consistent withย performance expectations. This means we have to consciously treat students equally, make our expectations clear and applicable to all, and constantly encourage improvement. Know the difference between a lazy student who claims a concept is โ€œtoo hardโ€ and a motivated student who is truly challenged by the concept.

Keep your expectations high, but adjust your approach accordingly.

9. Not preparing for silence.

You know the feelingโ€“when you ask a question and receive absolute radio silence. Many of us often fail to anticipate that many students will not share our enthusiasm for a lesson. What happens now? We answer the question ourselves, make an ironic joke, move on.

The best way to deal with silence is to not be phased by it. Smile to yourself and move on, show you are still in control, and your students will feel more comfortable and be more willing to volunteer the next time.

10. Letting the moment pass.

Ever heard of Malcom Gladwellโ€™s concept of โ€œthin slicingโ€? Itโ€™s the the ability to find patterns in events based only on โ€œthin slices,โ€ or narrow windows, of experience. When we need to make instant decisions โ€“ ideally good ones โ€” without much information, we rely on this sort of thinking. If we donโ€™t use this type of thinking, and instead get weighed down in details and analysis, we may lose precious moments that could have been used as learning opportunities.

11. Not getting to know your students.

Getting to know students too often comes second. The truth is, whether you learn anything about their learning preferences or not (which you probably will), the gesture itself is powerful enough toย increase student motivation, self-expression, and performance.

Got a bad habit you think should have made this list? Share it in the comments below.

This post was first published on opencolleges.edu.au;ย 11 Bad Teaching Habits That Are Stifling Your Growth; image attribution flickr user nasagoddard