T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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66.1 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Wed May 05 1993 12:07 | 32 |
| I never understood why teaching was considered a woman's job. Other
than the fact that it got that way once and that that made it a self
perpetuating thing. Wasn't teaching once primarily done by religious
groups mostly by and for men? I believe that women being the primary
teachers is both the cause and result of this being a matriarchal
society. In a patriarchal society the education of the young,
especially of young males, would be considered far too important a job
to be left for women. :-)
Teaching interests me because sharing knowledge is fun. So is helping
people to try and do new things. Besides I love to talk. :-)
I tried teaching 7th and 8th graders once. It was very frustrating
because they really didn't want to be there. It was a computer class
and they didn't want to learn about computers. They just wanted to play
computer games. I think getting students to see the value in what is
being taught is the hardest thing. That's why I want to teach at a
level where students pick their courses. If they're in class it's
because they wanted to be there. Of course once they're their there is
some responsibility for the teacher to keep the interest level up.
The best subjects to teach are those that interest the teacher. That
enthusiasm can be contagious. Lack of enthusiasm is also contagious.
I believe that if my COBOL teacher hadn't been so anti COBOL I would
have learned it better and appreciated it more.
You know you're a good teacher when the students stay awake in class
and ask for you for other classes. If the students develop an interest
in what you are teaching and actually use it you've been a success.
Alfred
|
66.2 | A good memory | GLDOA::KATZ | Follow your conscience | Wed May 05 1993 14:18 | 6 |
| I was a teacher for a vocational school. I taught computer
repair. Most of the students paid big $$$ to be there so they
had more then just the normal motivation. When they didn't
understand something they would take the time to see me in
private. It was very rewarding and it was also great to
see them graduate and get jobs.
|
66.3 | | CSC32::HADDOCK | Don't Tell My Achy-Breaky Back | Wed May 05 1993 14:34 | 51 |
|
re .0
> It seems that note 65 on "Job Changes" has illuminated the fact that many
> Men would/do choose Pedagogy... This is interesting as Teaching has
> traditionally been a Woman's occupation (at least in the lower levels).
Teaching may be _thought of_ as "women's work" but in reality I have
not found that to be the case.
> I would like this topic to be a discussion of Men in the Teaching
> Profession... What is it about Teaching that motivates you?
That of having an impact of "greater than myself". In otherwords
if I alone utilize that which I know, then the contribution is a
unit of 1. However, if buy teaching what I know to others, then
my contribution becomes many times greater than 1.
>How can/do you apply "Teacher" attributes in your present occupation?
As a System Support Specialist, I "teach" every day. I have to be
able to explain things to customers with mostly no visual or other
aid other than just verbal explanation.
>What do you suppose would be your major successes/frustrations as a
>Teacher?
Major frustration would be a class that I could not hold their
attention and did not want to learn what I was teaching. Where
I would spend a major amount of time just keeping order in the
class. Ie junior high or high school.
>What do you consider the "best" subjects to teach,
Math and Computers. They are a fixed finite entity when compared
to say literature in which there may or may not be a "right" answer.
>and, what subjects should be taught that presently are not?
Actually I think we try to cram too much into school these days
especially at the elementary and junior high levels. Should stick
to the basics first.
>How will you know if you have become a "good" Teacher, etc...
I would be able to tell if the students were learning anything or
if they were just "getting by".
|
66.4 | | HANNAH::OSMAN | see HANNAH::IGLOO$:[OSMAN]ERIC.VT240 | Wed May 05 1993 14:34 | 34 |
|
Anything I know that you don't, I love to teach.
Some teaching experiences I can think of:
When Rubik's cube first came out, I told John Hallyburton in MR1 that I was
going to write a paper about how to solve it. This was before I even knew how
to get all 6 sides the same color myself. I did write a paper.
Then I taught my cousin Wendy, who was 9 years old at the time, how to solve it.
After she learned, we had races, each with a randomly scrambled cube. She became
unbeatable. This felt like both a defeat and a victory for me simultaneously.
Another teaching experience is origami, which is Japanese paper-folding. My mother
bought me some books when I was about 6. She helped me until the last model
in the book, which was the crane, and she couldn't figure out the step where
you make the kite-shape and then open up the paper in the elongated diamond.
The picture in the book looked mystifiing.
I finally figured it out, and I've been making origami figures in boring classes
and meetings ever since (starting with Sunday school, where I filled up one of
those hinge-top desks with paper cranes until the teacher came over and humiliated
me in front of the class by opening the desk and yelling at me).
Anyway, I love to teach origami now at parties. I can show you cranes, boats,
water balloons, tables, candy baskets, not to mention 20-faceted globes made from
12 or 30 pieces of paper.
I like to teach math too. I've done some tutoring.
/Eric
|
66.5 | | DEMING::VALENZA | My note runneth over. | Wed May 05 1993 14:42 | 4 |
| If you want examples of men in the teaching professon, consider
Socrates and his pupil Plato.
-- Mike
|
66.6 | under things to teach | CVG::THOMPSON | Radical Centralist | Wed May 05 1993 14:52 | 10 |
| I was thinking about the question of things that aren't taught that
should be. I teach a course in decision making as a volunteer in the
local house of correction. The students have good motivation to be
there as it counts towards "good behavior" on their records. Most
also realize that they wound up in prison because they made bad choices
without really thinking about what they were doing. I think we should
make a deliberate effort to teach kids how to make decisions. As it
is most of them just react or allow others to make decisions.
Alfred
|
66.7 | | PCCAD::RICHARDJ | My God Is OK, Sorry About Yours | Wed May 05 1993 16:37 | 4 |
| There is a saying, "those who can't do, teach." Where did that come
from ?
Jim
|
66.8 | | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | i musta got lost | Wed May 05 1993 16:47 | 4 |
| re .7, bored students?
Lorna
|
66.9 | It used to be an all-male job. | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Thu May 06 1993 03:06 | 18 |
| Most of the older universities did not permit entry to women for
most of their existence. The teachers were required to belong to
monastic orders, which sometimes included a vow of celibacy.
This was reflected in the lower levels of education too, and it was
unusual for a woman to be taught to read.
Schools for girls only started to become accepted as normal around
1650. One school I went to was founded about then, with its companion
girls school two miles away. The two schools were still there, more or
less on their original sites, and still segregated when I attended.
You can't have women teachers when women are not educated, and
women have only been educated in Europe for about the last 300 years.
The fact that the higher levels of education were still only available
to men meant that even in the girls schools many of the teachers would
be male. An aunt of mine was one of the first women to be admitted to
Oxford University.
|
66.10 | | UTROP1::SIMPSON_D | I *hate* not breathing! | Thu May 06 1993 06:15 | 65 |
| Teaching is tougher than it looks. Over the years I've done my fair
share of presenting workshops and stuff at places like DECUS, but
they've always been fairly short, maybe half a day tops. I've done
them long enough now to know I'm good at them, but even so I wasn't
really prepared for giving a full five day course. Doing it for a
living must be a nightmare.
I'm a Pathworks specialist in a group which sort of specialises in the
ad hoc/emergency requests that no-one else wants to or can handle. It
was therefore no surprise to me to be asked to go to Brussels to give
the Pathworks system management course with practically no warning.
They had eight customers, no instructor, and they'd already cashed the
cheques.
I've been around the product(s) since it was just DECnet-DOS and the
course material was all there (I thought), so I printed out the
instructor's notes and drove down. Fortunately I was at an Edu
facility so their system manager had already set up the equipment for
me - and it worked. Full credit there. I didn't have to set up
anything.
I nearly killed myself that week. There is nothing worse than an
instructor who sits up the front and reads the same notes the students
have in front of them, and I was determined to be interesting. The
course material turned out to be in bad need of revision, but I was
able to explain all the bits that were wrong or out of date, as well as
add all the bits that were missing but which I thought important. At
the same time, just trying to keep the classroom alive for a whole day,
let alone five, is awesome. You quickly use up your standard repetoire
of jokes, and by the first afternoon you have to improvise.
Just to make life interesting, Brussels is a primarily French-speaking
city that's slap bang in Flemish-speaking country, so the class was a
linguistic mix, which is why the course needed to be done in English.
At one end of the scale was a young chap not long out of university who
clearly saw me as some kind of professorial type and who therefore hung
on my every word (including at lunch), as if at the end of the week I
was going to grade him and not the other way around.
At the other end was a government bureaucrat who refused to say a word
the whole week, arrived late and left early every day (at 4 o'clock he
just picked up his briefcase and walked out), and who, according to
those sitting on either side of him, played Minesweeper the entire
time. To tell you the truth I didn't give him an evaluation form to
fill out at the end of the week. He (fortunately?) left early.
In between I had the two guys from the railways who wanted me to
redesign their Belgium-wide network and show them how to setup a
client-server SQL/rdb environment, and the million and one other
questions which are sort of but not absolutely related to Pathworks,
and by the end of the week I was glad to go home.
Getting the evaluation forms done was tough, too. Theoretically they
are anonymous but in a small class like that it's easy to see who puts
the forms down when. I'd poured out five years of hard earned
experience to them that week, in the process I think I at least doubled
the amount of information that the course materials presented, and yet
on the 'Instructor was knowledgeable' question, the only one that really
mattered to me personally, two or three settled on an 'agree' instead
of 'strongly agree'. Geez! There's no pleasing some people. But at
least no-one rated the overall experience as less than 'good'.
I'm glad I've done it, and I may even do it again sometime. But I'd
never do it for a living.
|
66.11 | | PASTIS::MONAHAN | humanity is a trojan horse | Thu May 06 1993 07:22 | 35 |
| I've probably taught about two weeks per year on average for the
(nearly 20 years) time I have been in DEC. With adequate time for
preparation, never teaching the same course twice (well hardly ever),
and most of it internal, I have rather enjoyed it.
The first course I taught in DEC was a nightmare. I had been with
the company for two weeks in software support when they discovered they
had a customer course that needed teaching (OS/8), and no instructor. I
had one week to prepare to teach a one week course, with *no* existing
materials, and I had never taught before in my life. Fortunately (or
unfortunately) I knew the operating system backwards. What could go
wrong?
1) I knew the subject too well. By the end of the second day I had
finished with device driver writing and was moving on to how to do
unsupported things with the file system, when I noticed some rather
blank looks in front of me. Some of the students had never used a
computer before. Since I had never taught before I had no idea what
material I needed to prepare, what rate to teach the course, or even
how to plan a rate for teaching the course. On Wednesday morning I
started again with Monday morning's material and took it slower.
2) Very mixed audience. There were two Checkoslovaks, and I never
discovered whether they spoke any English. There was one person who
worked as a hardware instructor for PDP-8s for Cable and Wireless, so
he was quite happy about the device driver part. He helped by
criticising my teaching techniques. Another person owned
his own company and had just bought a computer, and he didn't see why
his employees should benefit from DEC course credits (he offered me a
job at the end of the course). At the back of the classroom was a girl
from the training department who was sitting in so she would be able to
teach future courses. Her hobby was winning beauty contests, it was
high summer, and the era of the shortest mini-skirts, and as the
instructor, I was the only person in the class facing her. You could
see the frustration on the faces of the other students.
|
66.12 | Sharon Stone eat your heart out ..... | GYMAC::PNEAL | | Thu May 06 1993 10:02 | 3 |
|
Re.11 So, was she or wasn't she ?
|
66.13 | | SMURF::BINDER | Deus tuus tibi sed deus meus mihi | Thu May 06 1993 15:36 | 5 |
| Re .7
"He who can, does. He who cannot, teaches."
- George Bernard Shaw, "Man and Superman"
|
66.14 | Once bitten...twice shy..!!! | TROOA::GUPTA | | Thu May 06 1993 17:17 | 29 |
|
I started my career as an Instructor in a School where various
course's were offered in the Computers.
After the first week I thought I had throat cancer......and I also
seriousely thought of quitting smoking,......it was only later I
realised that I had never talked so much in a week, in my whole
life !!!!
It was a great experience....no doubt. Whenever I needed to learn
somthing new my manager would urge me to conduct a full time course
on the topic.....and naturally I learned. It was a harrowing
experience somtimes but all said and done I learned a lot and also
enjoyed the job a great deal.
It was only after a year of teaching day in and day out....that I
suddenly realised that I was kind of repeating the same ol
stuff....again and again !!! At times even the Jokes would be
repeated...;-)). I kind of burned out so suddenly that all I could
do was - quit the job.
But all said and done, for an entry into the world of computers, I
learned a lot and certainly I learned how to deal with a bunch of
20 guys in a room especially when you dont know how to spend the
next 2 hours...:-<< It taught me how to communicate with people,
and that experience I feel is very necessary for any one right out
of university.
Ankur
|
66.15 | | 3168::SOULE | Pursuing Synergy... | Fri May 07 1993 18:33 | 40 |
| Very informative responses in this topic...
.0> This is interesting as Teaching has traditionally been a Woman's
occupation (at least in the lower levels).
.3> Teaching may be _thought of_ as "women's work" but in reality I have
.3> not found that to be the case.
.9> You can't have women teachers when women are not educated, and
.9> women have only been educated in Europe for about the last 300 years.
Many thanks for setting the record straight... When I went to school
(K thru 8) most of _my_ teachers were women (they seemed like sweet little
old ladies at the time) so I think you can understand where I was coming
from in .0. I never thought of teaching as "women's work" but you have
to admit that many women gravitated to the profession even though the
job had some restrictive rules for women (I seem to remember reading that
at one time women teachers couldn't be married, etc). At any rate, many
men in this file expressed an interest in teaching so I wanted to explore
this some more...
.5> If you want examples of men in the teaching professon, consider
.5> Socrates and his pupil Plato.
Mike, I wonder if you might expound on this... What subjects are more
conducive to the "Socratic Method"? Do you think Socrates would succeed
as a public school teacher in this day?
Alfred, what method do you use at the prison?
.0> and, what subjects should be taught that presently are not?
I was pondering about the subject of Stewardship and feel this would be
very useful at all education levels... Suppose you were chartered to
design a course about Stewardship - How would you go about this?
.13> "He who can, does. He who cannot, teaches."
Well Dick, why would George Bernard Shaw make such a statement?
|
66.16 | | PCCAD::RICHARDJ | My God Is OK, Sorry About Yours | Mon May 10 1993 11:27 | 14 |
| RE:15
>.13> "He who can, does. He who cannot, teaches."
> Well Dick, why would George Bernard Shaw make such a statement?
I'm not a Dick, but a Jim Richard.
I don't know why Shaw made the statement. Maybe because there are many
teachers that teach, but have no field experience ? They go right into
teaching after graduation.
Law professors come to mind.
Jim
|
66.17 | Copying without permission strictly forbidden | GYMAC::PNEAL | | Mon May 10 1993 11:36 | 8 |
| Set term/mode=heavy_sarcasm
Digital managers come to mind too but with a difference ... I doubt that
they graduated ...:-)
- Bob
|
66.18 | | BUSY::DKATZ | I unpacked my adjectives... | Mon May 10 1993 12:44 | 6 |
| Actually, you ought to take the context of the quote from Shaw.
It comes out of the mouth of a character in that play who is, by all
evidence on stage, a pompous, self-important twit.
Daniel
|
66.19 | i think she just likes teaching | VAXWRK::STHILAIRE | not her real initial | Mon May 10 1993 13:09 | 6 |
| re .16, I've met one law professor in my life, my roommate's sister.
She strikes me as someone who could do just about anything she wanted
to do.
Lorna
|
66.20 | | JURAN::VALENZA | My note runneth over. | Mon May 10 1993 14:00 | 5 |
| When my brother was an education major in college, he added a third
line to saying, "Those who can, do; those who can't teach"; the third
line went, "those who can't teach, teach teachers."
-- Mike
|
66.21 | | NOVA::FISHER | DEC Rdb/Dinosaur | Tue May 11 1993 08:53 | 7 |
| Thoe who can, do.
Those who can't manage.
Those who can't manage, manage managers.
- Plagiarized by Ed Fisher, 1978
|
66.22 | How many versions are there?? | CARTUN::TREMELLING | Making tomorrow yesterday, today! | Tue May 11 1993 13:21 | 7 |
|
Those who can, do.
Those who can't, teach.
Those who can't do either, manage.
- Author Unknown
|
66.23 | To sir with love | PEKING::SNOOKL | | Thu May 20 1993 09:11 | 4 |
| Has anyone read the book "To Sir With Love"
We studied at school a couple of years ago. I think they also made a
film.
|
66.24 | They did. It starred Sidney Poitier | MKOTS3::JOLLIMORE | Plastic Fantastic, yeah! | Thu May 20 1993 10:17 | 0
|