Saturday, November 17, 2007

On old notes and teaching

I've spent today prepping for an Adult Forum I'm leading after church tomorrow, and I've been dipping heavily into my notes from seminary. I know a few of my classmates ditched some or all of their notes at graduation, glad to be done with them, but school geek that I am, I saved ALL of mine, even for the classes I really disliked --like Church History 1.

This should come as no surprise to anyone who knows me. I only threw away my undergrad notes when I went off to seminary (and then I still saved a few of them). I still have some of my grad school notes, too, I think. In the back of my mind when I was going through things was the thought that if I ever went back to teaching, I would or least might need them.

I'm a good note taker and I've found useful things in old notes, things I'd forgotten that I had once known--or at least been exposed to. Today I've been going through notes from my liturgy classes and felt once again the excitement of being in those classes--they were part theoretical and part practical and they really helped me start feeling like becoming a priest was real.

The other thing I appreciate about going back to old notes is finding how things that I didn't fully grasp or appreciate at the time I see in a whole new way now after having lived with the material in real life for while. That happened sometimes when I was teaching, too--some concept I'd mostly but not completely understood suddenly because crystal clear to me as I thought about how to teach it, thought up new examples to use.

Over the last year I've starting doing more and more teaching at church--mostly in small groups--and I've really been enjoying it I hadn't especially missed teaching, but I'm finding what I am doing now very rewarding. Of course my audience (so to speak) is more motivated and interested than the average first or second year college student, and there's no grading involved :) Even better it motivates me to dig into material that I'm interested in but likely wouldn't take the time to do just on my own. I need external motivation,too.

And now I'd better finish up for tomorrow.

1 comment:

Snickollet said...

I am your notetaking opposite. I take brief, poor notes and rely on my short- and medium-term memory to get me through. The long-term memory retains what I find interesting/insightful/etc. Then when I'm done with the class, the notes go. The only exception is specialized glossaries that were part of classes I took in grad school. I've only rarely wanted to go back to notes that I no longer have, but I'm not currently working in the field I studied in grad school.

Aren't motivated students great? They really make the teaching experience a whole different ball game.