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Study Materials

This material is used in a workshop entitled "Problems, Pitfalls, Booby Traps, and Surprises (in Teaching)" workshops. In the workshops, participants discuss how to handle a variety of challenges that can arise in teaching. A number of suggestions as to how to handle the problems in the scenarios have surfaced in the workshops. As we have thought about those suggestions, they seem to fall into several broad categories. Accordingly, in this document we have distilled those ideas into a small number of guidelines. These guidelines provide a good basis for handling many of the challenges that will arise in your teaching career. (Co-authored with Prof. J. Mark Schuster. Used with permission.)

  1. Be aware that two kinds of contracts exist in the classroom.

    Two kinds of contracts govern the expectation and behavior of both instructor and students in any classroom. These contracts are: (1) the explicit contract, which is often spelled out in the syllabus and covers such aspects of the course as weekly classroom topics, course requirements, and course expectations; and (2) the implicit contract, which stipulates norms like who can talk in the classroom, what styles of teaching are used, and what styles of learning are emphasized. Give careful thought to the explicit contract; it is directly in your control, particularly at the outset of the semester. But also be conscious of the implicit contract, particularly as it evolves through precedent in the classroom interactions of your course. Monitor it and respect it throughout the semester.

  2. You are a human being. Admit to and share your humanity.

    This guideline is, perhaps, a corollary of the previous one. You can make your teaching life a very complicated one if you think teaching is neither nothing more nor nothing less than acting. What seems critical is to figure out how to be yourself through your teaching. Then you will accept the role of teacher easily and comfortably, and honesty will be easy to accomplish. Students see through artificial poses, as they should. Be yourself.

  3. Use outside resources, including colleagues. Remember, you are not alone.

    MIT has a number of resources that are available to help with difficult situations that arise in the classroom. The fact that you have been asked to teach at MIT is not, in itself, a validation sticker on your teaching abilities. Teaching skills can be developed and honed, and the Institute provides a lot of resources to help you in that growth. These range from the MIT ombudsmen to policies on cheating and plagiarism to the guide on handling sexual harassment. Please see the handout on resources at MIT.

    One of the most valuable resources at your disposal is fellow faculty members and fellow teaching assistants. Use colleagues as sounding boards as you develop your own teaching style and as you work your way through some of the problems that will inevitably challenge you.

  4. Honesty is the best policy.

    It has been our experience in teaching that there are very few issues that are not addressed best through honesty. If you do not know the answer to a student's question, admit it, but promise to find the answer before the next meeting. If you find yourself in a dilemma to which there is no ideal solution, say so. Provide a truthful reason for why a policy is what it is, and if you do not understand why it is what it is, say so, but once again promise to find out.

  5. Listen with empathy and make sure you have all necessary information before making a decision.

    Listen intelligently and carefully to a student when he/she comes to talk to you about a problem that has arisen. Try to sidestep any preconceived notions about the student, his/her problem, the class as a whole, etc. Put yourself into his/her shoes and attempt to determine both the meaning and feeling behind what the student is saying. Recognize those feelings (e.g., "It must feel terrible that..."). Make sure you talk to all concerned parties before deciding on a course of action, and remember that the issue that seems to be under discussion may not be the underlying problem.

  6. Think strategically about the problem.

    By "strategic" thinking, we mean analyze the problem you have been confronted with by answering the following questions:

    What is my purpose in this situation? Every problem or difficulty represents an opportunity to accomplish one or more teaching goals. Can this situation provide a chance for learning? Do you need to discipline a student? Can you use this problem to change the learning environment in the classroom? To the extent that you can determine beforehand what you want to achieve, you will be able to decide upon an appropriate response more effectively.

    What are the characteristics of the students who are involved in this situation? Knowing something about the personality and background of your students will help guide your response. For example, the norms in some cultures dictate that students should be silent in the classroom, neither participating in class discussions nor asking questions. This norm might account for the unusually quiet behavior of some students, and that knowledge could help you aid those students in modifying their style of expression.

    What responses and/or feelings are brought up in me as a result of this situation? How can I use my particular teaching style and communication skills most effectively? It is not unusual that teaching dilemmas bring up strong feelings in the instructor. For example, you may feel uncomfortable addressing gender issues in the classroom or trying to communicate with a student who is a non-native English speaker. Recognizing these feelings in yourself will help you frame an effective response.

    Similarly, we all come with teaching and communication strengths that we can call upon to help us cope with difficult situations. A sense of humor, the power to observe closely, or the ability to work at different levels of abstraction may all be used to handle effectively the kinds of pitfalls we have been discussing.

    What medium would be the most effective to use in this situation? Is this a situation that is best handled by a meeting with the student? By writing a memo or letter? By addressing the issue with the class as a whole ? Each strategy has its own benefits and liabilities, and sometimes using a combination of media is best.

    What cultural variables are affecting the situation? Cultural variables are at work in the classroom on several different levels. Every course and classroom has its own climate; MIT has its own distinct culture; and your students bring the norms of their home countries and/or of their peer groups into the classroom. Recognizing this diversity of norms will help you understand their impact on the situation and to respond accordingly.

  7. Think about how a difficult situation might be turned into a learning opportunity.

    All kinds of learning take place in the classroom in addition to mastering a certain subject area. Students are learning how to learn, how to work with others, how scholars in the field think, etc. Often difficulties that occur in the classroom can be turned around so that they become a vehicle that can contribute to these kinds of learning.

  8. Remember that each student is a member of the larger group that comprises the class as a whole. Keep issues of fairness in mind.

    Often the thorniest dilemmas in teaching involve balancing the needs of the individual student with the needs and rights of the class as a whole. To use the quiet student as an example again, if students are from cultures in which silence in the classroom is a norm, should they be penalized for not contributing to classroom discussion? On the other hand, is it fair to have two sets of standards in one classroom? And are other students in the class missing valuable contributions because the expectation of particular modes of classroom behavior impedes the ability of some students to speak in public?

    In a related vein, recognize that once a student has asked a question (raised an issue, or expressed a viewpoint), that question may than become the question of other members of the class, and it may no longer be sufficient to respond to that individual student alone.

These suggestions are not meant to be inclusive. Instead, they are an attempt to help you think through ways to handle the problems, pitfalls, booby traps, and surprises you will face in your teaching career. We hope these guidelines will provide a springboard to an ongoing conversation about teaching at MIT.



Gender and Race


Below is a list of possible scenarios one may confront in the classroom related to gender and race issues. These scenarios can be used as a point of departure for discussion. Thanks to J. Mark Schuster (Department of Urban Studies and Planning), Roger Brooks (Physics Department), and Brian White (Biology Department) for their help.

  1. A. You are the professor. During class discussion, a student makes a comment in class that you believe was clearly intended to be a joke, but that, in fact, insults a particular identity group (women, students of color, gay or lesbian students, etc.). Some members of the class laugh, but others don't. What do you do?

    You decide to ignore the comment, but then several students come to you after class to tell you how upset they are by what was said. What do you do in this case?

    You are a teaching assistant in this class. The faculty member seems to have ignored the comment, and you are uncomfortable that this incident seems to have gone unnoticed. What do you do?

    B. You are a teaching assistant. The professor with whom you are teaching makes a comment or uses an example in class that can be interpreted as being insensitive to a particular identity group (women, students of color, gay or lesbian students, etc.). You notice that some members of the class are clearly made uncomfortable by the remark; others do not seem to be. What do you do? What would you do if you did not notice during the class that people were uncomfortable, but the students brought it to your attention later outside of class?

    You are the professor in this class, and a couple of the students come to you outside of class to point out to you that some students had been made uncomfortable by your remarks. What do you do?

  2. You notice that during class discussion students almost always refer to other students, as well as professionals in the field, as "he." Do you comment on this in class? If so, when? (For example, would you correct a student after he/she is finished speaking?) What do you say?

  3. You are a professor who has given a diagnostic exam to assist you in placing students in various sections for the course. You notice that this has resulted in nearly all of the students of color (or nearly all of the female students) being grouped together in a less advanced section. What do you do?

  4. You are a teaching assistant in a very popular course. Because too many students have signed up for the class, space has to be rationed. The professor instructs you to select all of the best looking female students first. What should you do?

  5. You are teaching a seminar that is intended to provide an overview to the development of research in your field. Halfway through the semester several women in your class come to you to point out that the contributions of women researchers are not adequately represented in your course syllabus. They ask you to revise the remainder of the course to include research done by women. What do you do?

  6. One of the students in your class - a student of color - is not doing well in the class. You ask him to come to your office to talk about the course. You ask him what seems to be difficult for him, and how you can help him improve. He says nothing is difficult, and he will do better in the future. However, his work is not getting any better. You talk to the Director of the Office of Minority Education at your university, and he tells you young black men often have difficulty admitting they need help. Now, what do you do?

 








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