Friday, October 16, 2009

My struggle with teaching

The first time I taught was actually quite fun. It was an intensive summer class on cognitive psychology. There were only nine students, and they were interested in the class. I only gave essay tests and life was good. I had no idea how to teach, so I just outlined the material from the book, put it on an overhead slide, and read off what was on the overhead slide in class. It was very rudimentary, but seemed to work for that bunch of students. My course critiques were fine.

Then that fall I taught intro to psychology for two classes of 80 students. I shifted to multiple-choice tests. Tests were the only form of assessment I gave. I didn't know what constituted a good multiple-choice test. My students all bombed the test and the course went downhill from there. Dealing with irate students during class was not fun.

After deciding that the graduate program I was in was not right for me, I started a different grad school. I was given a teaching post just a few days before class started. I was to teach social psychology to 60 students. Once again, I was a novice teacher. The only thing I attempted to do was come up with different examples than were in the book, lecturing the whole time. Once again, the students bombed the first assessment and were irate during class. I started to notice a pattern that students would stop coming to class after the first assessment.

I decided I seriously did not want to teach ever again. But, two years later, I ended up teaching again; this time I taught child and adolescent psychology. The experience was even worse than the first few times I taught. Students were malicious, testing was horrendous, and I had to take an incomplete in one of my classes because I was so overwhelmed. I spiraled into depression, withdrew from my colleagues, and seriously contemplated dropping out of my program.

Against all desires, I stayed and taught child and adolescent psychology again the following semester. I finally made some changes to my teaching. I put more thought into the exam questions, wrote detailed study guides, and gave two writing assignments so students could bring up their grades if they bombed the tests. The class was made up of students who were vocal and appeared to enjoy the material. About half-way through the semester, I stopped vomiting right before teaching.

Then I taught child and adolescent psychology again to a group of 20 students during a three hour block of time. I tried coming up with activities for students to do to take up time. I connected really well with one student and okay with the rest. There were no major hiccups and the class went okay overall. But, I didn't particularly enjoy teaching.

After I graduated, I taught four classes of general psychology to 80 students total. I only connected with one of the four classes and felt overwhelmed the whole time. Students critiqued me lower than the other instructors teaching the same class. I was relieved when the semester was over.

Now this semester, I'm teaching the same class again to 80 students, and I had finally started to get comfortable with it until three weeks ago when I read the mid-semester feedback. Students thought I was boring, unorganized, and horrible at expressing the material. I get that students were reacting to the changes that were made since last semester. The department head got a directive from the dean to make our class harder because we were contributing to grade inflation. Now I think it is too hard, and once again students are revolting and I think some are taking it out on me. And once again, I feel too depressed to go to work and teach.

I actually said to my fiance that I would rather be sick and stay home than teach. So this week I got sick and ended up staying home. I was so happy and so relieved. But, even though I'm home again today, I'm feeling depressed because I know I have to get ready to teach again on Monday.

I'm going to finish out my contract to teach for the next two years, but I'm seriously thinking about getting pregnant just so I don't have to renew my contract and I can take a break from teaching. If I go back to teaching at all, I want to try online teaching so I don't have to stand up in front of a bunch of students.

All of this has been really tough on me because I feel like I wasted 7 years of my life pursuing some dream that I no longer want. I've even lost interest in doing research. I haven't done a research project since I left grad school last December, and I'm just not interested in writing up the projects I've already done. I feel like I'm in a really bad place professionally, and I don't know what to do to change it.

4 Comments:

At 9:10 PM, Blogger Chebrutta said...

I've been reading your blog for awhile but never commented. Teaching is the single most challenging undertaking there is. The one thing you can do is to always, always appear confident in front of them, whether they are 5 or 25. They can smell your fear and depression, and they feed off of it.

One thing you can do is to incorporate more of Multiple Intelligence into your lectures/lessons, so you are appealing to more than just the audio/visual learners. And don't let them get you down!!!

 
At 11:08 PM, Blogger karen said...

I know you posted this, like, a month ago now. But I love you and I admire you, and I want to thank you for honestly expressing myself.

Teaching is hard and sometimes it sucks bit time and students can be BRUTAL. Some of the profs, including my advisor, are pushing me to teach next year - give up my cozy research-based GA and go back to the classroom. I love teaching, but after my experiences in the music dept, the thought of teaching and being evaluated in a formal school environment makes me feel sick.

I try to reframe it - teaching has become scary for me, but I love to share with people. So I try to view teaching as my opportunity to share really cool stuff with students. I'll be honest, the jury is out on MI's as far as I'm concerned, but I still agree with Chebrutta that incorporating a variety of presentation styles and activities can help stimulate you and the students. And you can't please everyone all the time. I swear, some students are just never happy.

Mostly, though, I guess I just feel with you and for you - you're not alone! Wish I had some answers, but I don't...
My mom always tells me "everything works out in the end. If it doesn't work out, it's not the end," so whether you bear down and stick with it, get pregnant, or find a research position, I AM confident that you will settle into your niche and thrive. You are amazing, Kiki! Never forget that!

 
At 8:35 AM, Blogger kiki said...

Thank you both for the encouraging words. Those students really do smell fear, and lack of confidence shows. I think I went through the worst it, and I'm starting to come out the other side. Like you both suggested, I started putting the students in charge of their learning inside the classroom. I split them into groups, assigned them sections, and had them present the material. It was a relief not to be in front of the class the whole period, and they seemed more engaged. I spent a couple class period showing clips from movies and they really liked that, asking for lists of psych-related movies to watch outside of class.

I'm so glad to feel the difficulty lifting, and I think the main thing has been that I've decided that since students can do the reading outside of class, I don't need to reiterate the readings using powerpoint during the class period. I'm going to shift away from powerpoint and towards activities, movies, and student-generated presentations.

As for future plans, I'm still not confident enough about things to have a better idea of what I'll do.

I'm sorry teaching has become scary for you as well, Karen. I totally agree that it would be difficult to leave or cut back on hours in the cushy GA. That is such a wonderful place to work, and you can further your research career by staying there. Maybe you could teach in the psych department instead of the music department. Anyways, I hope things work out for you, too. Thanks for your mother's advice. I really appreciated it.

 
At 3:45 AM, Blogger Unknown said...

One thing you can do is to incorporate more of Multiple Intelligence into your lectures/lessons, so you are appealing to more than just the audio/visual learners. And don't let them get you down!!!
powerlevelingguide

 

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