Congratulations, Summer Teaching & a Workshop
Congratulations! Classes are over and only finals week remains. We hope you have plans for some well-deserved rest this summer.
But if you’re teaching this summer, you may be in the midst of planning a six-week course. “Compressed” or “intensive” classes, like those in summer A or B, challenge us to distill our courses to their essence. Since we can’t simply cram everything we usually assign into the shorter time frame, we have to prioritize instead, focusing on the course goals and how students can make the most progress toward them in six weeks.
Since most of us are excited about all of our material, it’s not easy to determine what’s truly most important: You might ask yourself what you’d keep if you had only one day to convey the most essential concepts of your course. What would you really want students to take away? What should they be able to do because they took your course? How should they be changed? Your answers will shape your learning goals, and an effective summer course will be built to help students achieve them.
The extended meeting hours of compressed summer courses also demand that we vary our teaching strategies. Learning takes time and effort. It needs elaboration and practice, so galloping through masses of material isn’t terribly effective. Delivering a week of content in a three-hour marathon session will be counterproductive and exhausting for you and for students. Instead, students need multiple and varied opportunities to engage with the material and with each other. They’ll need to write, talk, solve problems, make predictions, analyze data, and dig into the concepts and skills they’re practicing.
Bill Kops (2009) studied faculty teaching summer courses and compiled a list of best practices, summarized below: