Preparing the Teaching Assistant for the Job

The Teaching Assistant [TA] job is typically filled by an upper-level university student or graduate student. There are several different roles that the TA must fulfill in their job. First and foremost, the TA is a student and must complete all responsibilities to maintain this status to the best of their abilities. Second, the TA has a responsibility to the hiring professor. To the professor, the TA is the assistant and must abide by the requirements set out by the professor. Third, the TA has a responsibility to the students in the class. The role here is the teacher, the tutor, and occasionally the advisor.

How does your school prepare the TA for each of these individual and important roles? Many schools simply run the TA through the hiring process and those whose grades in the subject area are high enough to qualify for the position. Ideally, the hiring body also prepares the TA for each role they will serve, as the student, as the assistant, and as the teacher. But in most cases, the professor is solely responsible for preparing the student to also become a competent TA.

It is important for both the TA and the professor to clearly understand all three roles. It helps if the professor sets ground rules early in the semester. As a professor, be sure to plainly communicate your expectations and be open to hearing any concerns of the TA. Remember, the TA is first a student, second an assistant and third a teacher.

The TA is most familiar with being a student and this role is the one they should take most seriously. It is the reason they are at the school after all. They should know study techniques and know the subject matter. Combining the student role with the TA responsibility adds new importance in time management. The student’s time is now occupied not only by his or her own studies, but additional requirements set out by the professor. Therefore, time management is paramount.

Setting priorities are the hallmark of time management. The priorities of one’s own courses and those that one is teaching must be balanced. If the balance becomes disrupted, then the TA must communicate this to the professor. Emphasize to the TA the importance of advanced communication. If the TA is falling behind in his or her own student work, the professor must know this. Arrangements can be made to relieve the TA if the professor knows about the difficulty ahead of time. Be sure the at the TA knows these responsibilities and facilitate an open line of communication.

The role of assistant deals largely with class preparation. Remember the TA probably has no formal teaching experience, so class preparation is new to them. As the professor’s assistant, the TA may be expected to deliver lecture material, formulate discussion questions, grade papers or other learning material, and maintain office hours. Each of these activities takes considerable planning. Sometimes a new TA underestimates the amount of time each activity requires. It is a good practice to collaborate with the TA at first until you and the TA are comfortable. Here, communication is again key. Clearly state your requirements and direct the TA on how to accomplish each task.

Preparing content for teaching is more than forming an outline. The professor should work with the TA to emphasize important points, fully prepare examples of difficult concepts, work through tough problems and even draw out schematics or concept maps. Discussion questions should be open-ended and initially developed with the professor’s guidance. Working directly with the TA on these matters ensures the focus of the lesson is appropriate. Standards for grading need to be clear and as objective as possible. Have the professor decide how much feedback to give the students. The TA should be prompt and attentive to all office hours.

Presenting to the class may be the most unfamiliar and daunting of the roles the TA will face. To prepare the TA the professor may have the TA practice before giving to students or observe a professor’s lecture. The style of the TA may be different, but the content should be the same. Presentation techniques include lecture, discussion questions, debates, interactive problem-solving, or case study analysis. The more interactive the content the more the students will retain. And the more a professor interacts with the TA the better the TA will know the emphasis of content material.

Managing the class is also important. Taking role, controlling distracted students, entering grades are all jobs that are now the responsibility of the TA. Walk the TA through various scenarios and techniques. For example, what procedure do you prefer the TA uses for attendance? Should the TA call out the role or use a sign-in sheet? Is the classroom set up for easy access to converse with students or is set up for lectures? Can the TA easily reach out to students who may be distracted? Direct the TA in how the papers should be graded. Do you want to focus on content yet still comment on technique and grammar? How much feedback are the TAs capable of giving? Are you comfortable with the TA giving advice to students?  These questions should be answered early before the start of the job.

Hiring a TA can be a relief for the administrative duties of the classroom if you properly prepare. Clearly set your requirements out early. Guide the TA on how to prepare a lesson. Show the TA what you are looking for in your grading techniques. Emphasize the key points throughout the semester. Communicate openly and frequently. Make TA training part of your own preparation and the process should flow smoothly.

Going for the APTD!

As a lifelong learner I’m constantly in search of new courses and opportunities to increase my current knowledge. After a small hiatus from teaching I decided to refresh my knowledge and go for an Associate Professional in Talent Development [APTD] certification. The APTD certification includes three main areas of expertise, instructional design, training delivery, and learning technologies.

To start the journey to getting certified I took a study course. It was like doing a needs analysis on myself. I now know where my knowledge gaps are and where to focus my most intense studies. While I have a good grasp on instructional design I will have to focus on specific learning technologies.

The exam is set up as case studies of real world situations. The practice exams were difficult, lifelike and required deep analysis. Of course, this is to be expected from an exam designed by learning experts. I felt that when I answered questions correctly I fully understood and could apply the knowledge.

Taking this course I realized that it will not only refresh my skills. I’ll continue to fill more knowledge gaps and improve myself. The APTD is not just another learning course for me. It is proof that I am a learning expert.

Blended Learning: Production

Blended learning is the process of incorporating digital technology and tools into traditional learning environments. It would be truly unusual for anyone to use anything other than digital for documents; the new position is to easily create digital documents with more than one author. Collaboration is an important skill for all to learn (check out previous post) but can be difficult to manage. The change tracking, the actual authors vs. those who simply comment, the editors… How can all of this sharing be done with ease? Luckily, there are many tools to aid with this.

MS Word does offer tracking solutions, but too often if more than one author is working on the document simultaneously a version is lost. Version control becomes a nightmare. A better solution is GoogleDocs (https://www.google.com/docs/about/) where authors can work on the same piece at the same time and changes are kept.

Another great tool is using a Wikispaces (https://www.wikispaces.com). Wikispaces allows students to collaborate with writing and has a nice social network feed. It also allows for easy student progress checks and a classroom tool for teachers.

The previously mentioned tools are great for documents but a blended learning classroom often allows for different media. Moxtra (http://www.moxtra.com) allows multiple binders to be kept on a project and neatly organizes who does what and when. Binders are shareable and searchable. Prezi (https://prezi.com) allows multiple users to work on a presentation. Group presentations become unified with one theme on one giant canvas. Simply zoom to your portion. Presentation can include links to other sites as well as video and audio clips too.

Search the net for free shareable projects. Thousands of solutions are out there waiting for your class to explore. Even make it an assignment for different groups to evaluate different products. What is more real world learning than that?

Blended Learning: Collaboration

Focused students analysing dna on digital interface in university library
Focused students analysing dna on digital interface in university library

Blended learning, adding digital content to a traditional lecture type lesson is not new, but the types of digital content is always changing and the best lessons make use of the new tools. This article will cover using digital tools to have students collaborate and produce content. Collaboration, cooperation, group-think, shared learning – it goes by many names and has been taking place in the classroom for years. What has changed is the tools and the types of sharing.

It is important to have the learner write his or her own material, but an equally important work skill is working with others. And workers will collaborate on papers, presentations, and ideas. Learning to collaborate after being told to share can be difficult. It is a skill of dividing up the work, assuring all are equally present and each person is working on there own strengths while learning how to improve weaknesses.

Here are some tools and ideas to start with collaboration in a digitally friendly classroom and ultimately end with a digital product. First, let’s use some tools to brainstorm and share ideas. This can be done in groups within the class or across the digital divide using a tool such as Padlet or Tricider. Padlet (https://padlet.com) is simple- it is like sticky notes posted on a board. Anyone with an idea can post. And the ideas can be words, sounds, videos, or drawings. Once posted, simply take the most popular and build from there.

A tool to help narrow down ideas is Tricider (https://www.tricider.com). This allows users to comment on several ideas and add their own all while collecting up votes on which is best. It provides a beautiful and digital way to gather feedback on each specific idea.

So with these two simple apps you have allowed students to share ideas across platforms and vote on which they like best and why. And as the facilitator you can easily see who has contributed. There are many other free apps on the market (Simplemind, Mindomo) these are simply two I have used successfully. Simply search for free brainstorming apps and try one.

Once the ideas are narrowed down, it’s time to produce the product. There are so many free and accessible tools such as Wiki’s, Google docs, Prezi. I’ll cover more on these in my next post. Until then start sharing ideas!

Adding Audio and Visual to Training

Elearning Online Education Button
E-learning online education concept with sign and word on a computer key for blog, website and online business.

If you aren’t using blended learning, why not?

Blended learning is the process of incorporating digital technology and tools into traditional learning environments. In most cases your students are already familiar with the digital tools and may even expect the course to be filled with them. Videos, audio-casts, notes and social media sharing allow students to interact with the lesson like never before. Here I’ll present some examples and some tools to easily incorporate audio and video into your current training program.

Adding audio and video to your lessons brings them to life. In addition to enlivening- it creates a standard. Rather than having the instructor repeat and possibly miss or change a lecture, a video or audio recording ensures all students receive the same material. But best of all, the students get the message on their time and on their own device. The lesson is not limited to the classroom, but the classroom is where the students choses to learn.

Aside from adding life to your lesson audio and video also make the material accessible to those with disabilities. Audio lectures can be replayed, the pace slowed or sped up, and with sub-titles can be a life saver for those with learning disability. Video functions in a similar fashion but also adds pictures to those hard to describe processes and procedures.

Audio Programs such as Audacity and Audiobook Cutter allow for creating or clipping small sections of audio. Adaptive Multimedia Information System (AMIS) is a software program that reads specially formatted books for the visually impaired. Other reader programs include Dspeech and Balabolka. And there are more options.

Consider using some of these features in your next training program. Make your learning interesting and accessible to all. In my next post I’ll cover more on the benefits of building collaboration and production into your training.