Teaching Again.
April 30, 2008 8:17 pm EducationIf you don’t teach online for a while, you forget how time- and energy-intensive it is. My organization, LEARN NC, employs a lot of online teachers, and they’re pretty great. You should see the evaluations they get. They’re awesome.
I’m filling in as an online instructor for a little while, and it’s exhausting. But I really like it– almost immediately, I’ve been able to learn about the students and try to forge a personal relationship with them. It doesn’t happen this way in a face-to-face classroom… some students can be with you for a month before you really know anything about them. I’m not saying that’s good teaching, I’m saying that’s a reality sometimes. In the online environment, they tend to share a little more personal information at the beginning of the course because they don’t see their peers… no immediate feedback.
I don’t know if it’s kosher for me to say this, since I work in online learning, but I don’t know if I like face-to-face teaching or online teaching better. When I teach in a classroom, I have a strong sense that teaching is an art, and one I enjoy. I don’t have that as much online. Which may mean teaching is more science than art, and any gratification I get in the classroom is more my own edification than actual evidence of student learning. I had a boss who used to say, when asked how we knew our program was successful, would reply, “I see that look in their eyes, and I know.” I’ve used that logic myself. And it’s a surprisingly non-measurable metric.
Ah, but that look. That excitement. You don’t see that as much in an online course. Is that look, that excitement the best proof I have that I’m doing a good job? Because, if so, I might really suck at this…
In other news, I have committed to a May grind. I’m hoping that tomorrow morning, Matthew Olzmann sends me the instructions that I sent him all the way back in October. He’s written 210 poems since then. Good God.

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May 3rd, 2008 at 10:57 am
I don’t think the look can be discounted. Especially since - when a class is tanking - no one would argue the validity of icy stares proving the lack of connection going on. And any teacher who has ever had that “polishing the turd” class then learns how crucial it is for people to connect in order for learning to happen. At least, that’s been my experience, but I’ve never really entered the online realm.