When a 100-level introductory class seems tough.
Not all students know how to handle college classes. If you're having problems, there are places to turn. This isn't one of the best places - this is just another set of tips that might help those who can help themselves do a little something about their approach to my introductory courses. (For a short list of possible aid sites, see the bottom of this page.) And keep in mind that an "intro" class is not a synonym for an "easy" class... some of the advice here applies to any class.
1. Do you have to read the text prior to class?
Of course not. Nor do you have to eat your vegetables or do anything that anyone tells you to. You can disagree with established facts if you like. You can shout obscenities in the church of your choice. In other words, you are welcome to look stupid if you want to. But what does it get you? A few turned heads? Why'd you write the check for tuition in the first place? If you want to learn the material in a class, read whatever has been assigned prior to the class in which it'll be discussed. You think you can understand the text better only after you've been in the class? Great. Then read it again after the class. The textbook won't go away, but the lecture will fade fast, especially if you didn't know what to write notes on, or if you didn't know what the discussion was about until it was nearly over. Reading the assigned readings gives you the advantage of being at least vaguely familiar with material - and we teachers expect so much of our students when they come to class. It'll also save you from asking the really stupid questions in class - the ones everyone who reads the text knows the answers to. In the words of one of my colleagues, "Why ask a question that the book answers? And, after having read the chapter, if there is something in there that you don't understand, you'll be able to ask about it in class. If you haven't read the chapter, how will you know to ask?"
2. Is it important to memorize definitions?
If you don't know what a word means, you ought to look it up, right? But when you talk with other people about things - about whatever it is you talk to them about, be it politics or sports or work or love or the weather - do you ever just recite definitions? How far will a definition get you in life, especially if you can't keep other people from looking them up? I suggest you never satisfy yourself with knowing a few definitions. The tests in my classes require that you know your terminology, but they never just ask you to define words. They ask you questions that are testing to see if you understand concepts and issues. The concepts might be words whose definitions you memorized, but you show me that you understand it - really understand, and have thought about it - by applying it to real or hypothetical situations, or by analyzing whether or not it's valid, or by being able to explain it in layman's terms without oversimplifying it.
3. Why do test questions in my class seem ambiguous?
There's an easy answer to this one: If the questions seem ambiguous, and you have a feeling that you don't really know what I'm looking for, then you obviously don't understand the material well enough. I usually don't ask simple questions requiring definitions or memorized facts as answers. I ask questions that I think will give you a chance to demonstrate whether you know and understand an issue. It's pretty easy to tell the difference between when you're just regurgitating memorized tidbits of knowledge as an answer and when you understand what the concepts and ideas are that are being tested. Regurgitate on your own, at night. I'm looking for comprehension.
4. How important is that GPA anyway?
Funny you should ask. It depends. If you want to go to graduate school, it might be very important. But GPAs are not an entrance ticket on their own. With problems of grade inflation they might not count as much as they once used to. I heard in the news that 59% of new teachers in Massachusetts - people who had just completed their BA/BS in education - failed the state's standard test for teachers. You don't think all these people had rotten GPAs do you? Of course not. They had passing grades, many probably had good grades, but they obviously weren't educated. When it came down to passing a standard test - one not affected by grade inflation and "but, oh, I just need an A or my perfect GPA will be ruined" whining - the incompetents were caught. Going back to that colleague of mine again, she also wrote, "Once you graduate, no one cares about your GPA. What they care about is whether you learned something." Graduate school? An inflated GPA won't get you in - a good education might. Jobs? The degree gets you in, not the GPA. The education - if there was one - moves you to a better position.
5. Is everything in the book or everything the teacher says right?
Only if you think we're superhuman. Books are written by people and teachers are people. We have one advantage though - we tend to be well-educated people; that's how we got to being teachers or textbook authors. So what are you supposed to do with all the material you're presented with in class? First, get a grip on it - work on it until you understand it; then ask yourself things like, 'is this true? Does it make sense? Why does it work that way? If this is true, then...?' If you're paying close attention and are a good observer, you'll find contradictions in what we know and think. As I mentioned in the syllabus, psychology (or sociology) is not an easy science. We build theories on the basis of facts and then look for more facts to support the theories. Sometimes we don't find the facts where we expected them to be. Sometimes we wind up with two or three theories to explain the same set of facts. They're probably not all right. But we don't get frustrated and give up. That's not what educated, inquisitive people do. We seek more information, more facts, we revise our theories, we look for something that might have been missing, and so on. The alternative is blind faith and no progress. You want blind faith and no progress? Save your money - I think the Taliban in Afghanistan are looking for a few dumb men. (Well, not any longer; but there are other such groups around, and you won't have to look hard to find them.)
6. Is it the teacher's responsibility to make sure the student learns?
No. You students are responsible for your own education. As the college teacher or professor I do things that help you learn the material and help you to become educated, but in the final analysis your education is in your own hands. Frankly, it's your life and I'm not responsible for it. I'll structure the class to set guidelines for the learning experience; I'll provide interpretations, viewpoints, and material not provided by the readings; I'll set assignments so you can get work done that promotes learning, and completes this on schedule; I'll present information, thoughts, and ideas; I'll try to stimulate and guide your thinking; I'll grade your work - but - I don't implant memories into your heads or alter your thoughts; only you can do that. Learning is a product of your work.
7. Is your opinion important?
Do you really think that I care - really care - about all of your opinions? Every person in the world has opinions. Some feel more inclined to share their opinions with the rest of us; others keep their opinions to themselves. There is nothing inherently valuable in an opinion - especially those opinions that are not based on careful analysis, healthy skepticism, or real data. In some classes it might be interesting to see that different people have different opinions, but in most classes this is passé. What I care about is that you are learning the material - perhaps taking material from class and building new, more informed opinions out of it. An informed opinion is one that's based on careful analysis, healthy skepticism, or real data, and it's worth more than an uninformed opinion, but many questions can be answered with scientific methods, and opinion is of little value there. Learn to recognize an opinion from an informed opinion and an informed opinion from scientific facts, hypotheses, and theories. Also learn to recognize when an opinion is called for and when an analysis of the validity of an argument, a fact, or a theory is called for. For example, disagreeing with established facts or theories (as I mentioned at the top of this page) is your right, but it doesn't show scholarship. You shouldn't disagree unless you have good reason to disagree. And if something doesn't fit your opinion, that alone isn't good reason to disagree with it. Disagree because the facts require you to disagree, but not because you simply have the freedom to disagree.
8. Why do you have to learn about research methods?
Everything that we know or that we think we know has come from some system of finding out what's true and what's not. It's perhaps the single most important part of your education - to realize and understand how knowledge is acquired. If you don't know how valid information is acquired you will not be able to distinguish between valid and useless knowledge. You will not be able to protect yourself from the multimillion dollar industries that want to feed you whatever information (valid or not) that profits them. You will not be able to protect yourself from the persuasive arguments of people who have power over you, like your friends, or from fast talkers and con artists in the streets and on nationally syndicated radio or television shows. Studying research methods is basically just studying the way we get valid knowledge out of the world. It is an extremely important part of an education.
9. Why don't we cover the whole textbook?
It's too long.
If you have any questions, ask
me.
(The colleague mentioned above is Sue
Frantz.)
Some sites that might help with general college survival problems:
Ten Tips You Need
to Survive College
How to Be a Student
How
to Flunk Out with Style and Grace
Michael S. Ofsowitz, 1998/2002