Is going to lecture a huge waste of time?

In summary, I think lectures are obsolete because they are not necessary for most people to learn most information.
  • #106
Guys the OP wasn't saying that lectures are bad; he was just saying that he could watch them online so he didn't need to physically attend class. And then if he needs further professor help then he can go to office hours.

What is wrong with that?
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #107
i wish i were in a class where everyone had that attitude. then i would be the only one in lecture, and i could ask all my own questions.
 
  • #108
mathwonk said:
i wish i were in a class where everyone had that attitude. then i would be the only one in lecture, and i could ask all my own questions.

I'm practically in this case: almost everyone goes to class, but I'm the only who asks questions. I don't like that, actually.
 
  • #109
mr. vodka said:
I'm practically in this case: almost everyone goes to class, but I'm the only who asks questions. I don't like that, actually.

Ah, so you're that guy ;)
 
  • #110
So you're the guy that keeps sighing when I raise my hand?
 
  • #111
Just my 2 cents. I'm an italian math student, and lectures cannot be watched online or on youtube here, but most topics can be learned from a textbook or you can grab the class notes from other students if you're friendly enough. Through my undergraduate years, roughly from the second year on, I started skipping lectures from time to time. Seeing that I'd find the material on the book I soon started skipping ALL lectures consistently. This caused me big troubles when test time came around and I usually had to put in double the effort (wrt students attending class) only to get average grades (for several reasons: I often studied more material then necessary but more superficially, sometimes professors were irritated because I showed up on test day and they'd never seen my face before, etc.). Instead of making me realize I was on the wrong path, my average grades only made me lose enthusiasm for the subjects and I soon found myself on a downward spiral, becoming completely detached from uni (I went there ONLY on test days) which led to even worse results, which led to me basically wasting 2 years doing nothing. Then I started to attend a Quantum mechanics class at the physics department, just for fun, and the lecturer was so good I actually started attending class everyday and gradually going back to being an actual student, 'cause I realized what I'd been missing. So my point really is that even though you might be a better person than I was and keep from degenerating completely like I did, skipping classes is a somewhat lazy behavior that promotes drifting away from your studies and university life (except partying) with potentially terrible consequences. I strongly urge you not to make the same mistakes I did.

N.B.
Also consider that education here is practically free (1000$ per year) so I never felt I was wasting much money by not attending. If I'd had to pay huge tuition fees, I'd probably never have stopped attending
 
  • #112
Lectures just don't do anything for me. I can't concentrate for more than 20 minutes, and I'm easily distracted if I don't find the lecture or lecturer interesting.

At undergraduate level I was either too far behind to understand a given lecture, or I was too far ahead for it to be of any use.

For me, going to lectures was a totally inefficient use of my time. I prefer to read textbooks, journals or watch interesting online video lectures. I guess everybody is different. In particular, I love Sal Khan's math/science videos at Khanacademy.org, I think Sal has really hit the nail on the head when it comes to efficient learning. I wish he'd created the videos 10 years ago (when I was only 15), I would have gobbled them all up in a few weeks.
 
Last edited:
  • #113
mathwonk said:
please don't let me get you as a doctor (engineer, architect, lawyer...) , if you think the purpose of school is just to get decent grades. did it ever dawn on you that attending class might have taught you something valuable by listening to the carefully prepared lectures of someone who knows more than you do? If you attend school at any reasonable school at all, and do not attend every class when you are not sick, you are... I cannot say this politely so I leave it to your imagination, but it rhymes with *****.

If you are indeed correct in your behavior, then why are you paying to attend a school where the lectures are not useful? Are you a talented student who has accepted a bribe to attend a school for imbeciles? Do you realize how you will be regarded when you exit such a school?

My apologies but obviously I regard this as one of the most clueless threads I have ever seen here.

The purpose of school is to gain the most amount of knowledge possible in your area of study while developing the skills necessary to be successful in whatever you plan to do in life. I get far, far more out of reading the textbook than I do out of attending lectures. This archaic idea of attending a meeting where a bunch of people mindlessly write down what another person says/writes needs to go.
 
  • #114
coreluccio said:
I get far, far more out of reading the textbook than I do out of attending lectures. This archaic idea of attending a meeting where a bunch of people mindlessly write down what another person says/writes needs to go.

The thing is, they're not mutually exclusive. You can read the textbook and go to class. You would literally have to get nothing out of it for it not to be worth your while.

And since it gives you a chance to engage with a knowledgeable person on the subject, I don't see how you can get absolutely nothing out of it.
 
  • #115
dotman said:
The thing is, they're not mutually exclusive. You can read the textbook and go to class. You would literally have to get nothing out of it for it not to be worth your while.

And since it gives you a chance to engage with a knowledgeable person on the subject, I don't see how you can get absolutely nothing out of it.

Plus, some books are abysmal.
 
  • #116
Plus, some books are abysmal.
True, but I constatate that whenever I've had a bad book, my professor was even worse...
 
  • #117
gravenewworld said:
I notice that more and more med students in my class have figured out by now that they don't need to attend lectures anymore to get good grades. Attendance can be sparse. Every lecture is recorded and can be watched online anyway. So what's the point of lectures? Almost all material covered is in some textbook or can be found with a quick google search anyway. Are lectures an obsolete artifact within higher education? I mean I guess lectures were useful back in the day before information wasn't as easily copied and disseminated. It's 2011 though, almost every single concept taught in a university can be studied by somebody with a library card and internet access at home. What's the point of going to lecture then? I really only find lectures useful only if they go over problem sets/examples rather than going over concepts. Every concept is already discussed in a textbook.

It depends on the lecture. Some of the people who lecture in our med course never budge from behind the podium the entire time, and I'm sure they could just record their lectures at their desks and post them online and students would get just as much out of them as showing up to class. I struggle to convince students exposed to too many of those lectures that they really should show up for mine. I think they're probably freaking out about now, because today I just told them I'm picking up the pace and no longer going over basics they can read for themselves in their textbook. Instead, I use lectures to cover conceptual themes and application. I also demonstrate things that photographs and 2D illustrations don't show clearly, and really need to be explained by demonstrating movement. I'm also still a fan of Socratic method of presenting a basic concept and then asking students in the class to think about it and offer explanations of why or how the concept applies to a particular scenario. Audience discussion doesn't record well.

But, then with anatomy, I do think the majority of learning happens during lab, and lecture just needs to hit the highlights of the tough stuff. That's why I was grumbling elsehere about someone else on the faculty with me who keeps turning lab time into supplemental lectures. He spoonfeeds them all the material I intentionally don't cover in lectures and the students lap it up while it pisses me off to no end that it completely undermines the method I choose to use for the material I cover.
 
  • #118
mr. vodka said:
I'm practically in this case: almost everyone goes to class, but I'm the only who asks questions. I don't like that, actually.

As long as you aren't interrupting so often as to be disruptive, it's appreciated to have an interested, engaged student in lecture. Though, if you're asking more than two or three questions during a lecture, it might be more appropriate to jot them down and ask after class or during office hours.

Personally, as a professor, I agree that too many lectures are just spoon feeding the textbook to students, and are an ineffective way of teaching. This isn't news to anyone who knows anything about good teaching methods. Good teaching employs a variety of classroom approaches beyond the lecture itself. I teach an undergrad nursing course in anatomy and physiology that I developed from scratch and the students love, and is a much better example of how I think classes should be taught than the med course I have to teach more consistent with the curriculum set up long before I arrived. I don't just give straight lectures from the text. Instead, my lectures in the nursing course pull together material from multiple chapters to show how systems are interrelated. I also provide clinical examples and additional material not included in any textbook. I actually had sophomores reading research articles by giving them a little synopsis of the content and leaving them on the course website as optional reading. I had my students break into small groups and do team learning exercises. I finally got the kinks worked out of those and had an incredibly enthusiastic class competing to see who could get done first (they had to answer the first question correctly before I let them move to the second, etc., and if it took more than two tries, they had to explain their answer to me to be sure they understood and weren't just guessing). I included demonstrations and audience participation. This involved things like playing with jump ropes and tossing nerf balls around the room. My favorite was shaking up a sealed bottle of seltzer water and handing it to a student and asking them to open it. I asked them why not when they refused...there were no visible bubbles. I'm willing to bet they will never forget how pressure changes across the respiratory membrane affect gas solubility in blood. Those are the types of topics where I saw near perfect response rates on the related exam questions. This was all done during their scheduled lecture time, and I had full lectures most days (the exception being the day before Thanksgiving break when those who attended got a pop quiz that required them to demonstrate they could sign their name on a piece of paper...tee hee...just a tiny reward for those who didn't bail out early for the break).
 
  • #119
dotman said:
The thing is, they're not mutually exclusive. You can read the textbook and go to class. You would literally have to get nothing out of it for it not to be worth your while.

And since it gives you a chance to engage with a knowledgeable person on the subject, I don't see how you can get absolutely nothing out of it.

If you have an hour of time to spend, and you get more out of reading a textbook instead of attending a lecture, then obviously it's not worth you're while attending...

Simples...
 
  • #120
I used to attend a course with an indian student who asked at least a dozen questions during each lecture. I wanted to stab him.
 
  • #121
mathwonk said:
just let us know where you open your practice so we do not wind up as your patients, mr self educated med student guy.

mathwonk said:
you are a perfect example of why teachers should not be blamed for the failure of their students. some people just cannot be helped.

mathwonk said:
i wish i were in a class where everyone had that attitude. then i would be the only one in lecture, and i could ask all my own questions.

I don't understand the need for comments like these. If the OP is getting more bang for his or her buck by watching video lectures rather than attending in person, what's the big deal? Would it bother you if some of your students found ways to be successful other than attending your lectures?
 
  • #122
I don't think the issue is whether attending lectures is necessary for good grades. Obviously several posters have found they got good grades without attending lectures. The point is that face-to-face lectures give the student something he/she cannot get in other ways. IMO there is some indefinable benefit to hearing a real live person explaining something, even if they are a poor lecturer. Plus, lectures give you a chance to see your classmates and ask the professor (or other students) questions. In some cases professors give out pop quizzes to check attendance, if you miss lecture you will miss those. I have found the best way to learn something is to learn about it in many different ways: through lecture, through reading a book, through an online video, through a website or a forum. Plus, when it comes time to ask professors for a letter of recommendation, who do you think they will be more willing to write it for, the student they have never even seen face to face or the student that always came to class and asked good questions?

I admit that almost everyone will get professors that are so poor at lecturing that going to their lectures may in fact be little more than a waste of time, but there is no need to generalize that ALL lectures are a waste. I bet that out of, say, 5 classes a student takes a semester, only 1 professor is so bad that you get nothing out of going to lectures.
 
  • #123
The purpose of school is to gain the most amount of knowledge possible in your area of study while developing the skills necessary to be successful in whatever you plan to do in life. I get far, far more out of reading the textbook than I do out of attending lectures. This archaic idea of attending a meeting where a bunch of people mindlessly write down what another person says/writes needs to go.

What you described is not an accurate description of all lectures, just some. A good lecture will be one where you far from mindlessly write down some key ideas and form a useful reference for yourself.

There are professors who take notes on each others' lectures, depending on what the individual has to say. These professors, I would be willing to bet, are far more efficient at learning things, far quicker minded, and far more productive than either of us, without knowing who you are. They wouldn't be doing it if there can't be value to lectures.
 
  • #124
I will just note that some students do learn better by just reading the book than attending lectures. It's not a lot of students, but certainly some. Our faculty have had that discussion, and our view is that by the time they are in med school, they know what works for themselves. We don't require attendance in lectures (I do require it in my undergrad class, because they're still learning to study, and I have evidence from the days I gave them a recorded lecture, only because I knew they wouldn't pay attention anyway due to another test right after lecture, that they do not do as well on exam questions if they only get a recorded lecture...though it's better than when they show up for lecture and don't pay any attention while studying for the other test). However, I also get annoyed when someone sends me an email asking a very basic question or demanding something be labeled differently in my lecture if they were not in class. I got one of those today, complaining they were disoriented by my illustrations and asking for more labels on them. They got an unsatisfactory answer, I'm sure, because they were directed to the atlas the figures came from. If that person was in lecture, he wouldn't have been confused, because while slides of arm muscles were up, I was pointing to the location on my own arm. I also refuse to be tethered to a podium and mouse while lecturing, so will point to things with my fingers, or otherwise gesture at directions while moving around the room. If for some reason a student in the lecture is still confused, I'm happy to answer their questions in lecture. So far, the students showing up have been asking very thoughtful questions. But if you don't show up, don't complain if you are confused when you could have attended and asked a question.

Our first quiz is coming up, so now is the time when I like to mess with the students who don't show up (I don't like having to wake up early enough for an 8 AM lecture any more than they do). I turn off the microphone, prep the students in class for the joke, then turn it back on while tapping on the mic for maximum crackle effect as I say something like, "and that's what I'll be covering on the exam" followed by applause from the crowd. Someone usually let's them off the hook and squeals that it was a joke.

In our course, we're not worried about those who do well even without showing up; we're concerned with those who don't do well and don't show up. One of their deans even drops in from time to time to see if they are attending class if they're struggling. Showing up for them can be the difference between being given a chance to remediate and being thrown out of school.
 
  • #125
Apparently it did not it ever occur to some students that teachers spend an enormous amount of time preparing the lectures, and that it is supportive of them and courteous to show up and listen to them. Not to mention that the lectures are designed to benefit the students, and that it is foolish to refuse to partake of an experience that was prepared for their benefit.

I have been writing notes for my classes for 10 to 20 years, but these notes have never been an adequate substitute for being in class for any of my students so far. Indeed those students who seem to get the most out of the notes also attend class faithfully.

I posted a few of those notes on my website and they are free to all, still I get regular questions here from students about exactly the same things that are explained in detail in my freely available notes. Apparently asking specific questions about what bothers you is a more popular way of learning than reading notes.

Once I rode down in the elevator with Hironaka (a Fields medalist) after his lecture and he said something to me that made it seem obvious why resolution of singularities should be true. One can never have that experience reading notes.

I admit that as a rebellious young student I had an "us versus them" attitude toward teachers and thought they were out to get me on tests. I had no idea they were people and I could make friends with them and actually learn personally from them. I thought tests cores measured how smart I was and how well I had done in class. I did not realize there is an infinite amount to be learned and I needed to use every tool available.

I did not know about auditory, as well as visual, and motor learning. If you too are as clueless as I was, and think everything can be learned by reading and measured by test scores, try to get over that attitude as soon as possible. It will make a world of difference.

By all means read and learn as much as you can on your own, and then expose yourself to the presence of your teacher and see what else there is to learn once you have qualified yourself to appreciate his deeper help.
 
  • #126
mathwonk said:
Apparently it did not it ever occur to some students that teachers spend an enormous amount of time preparing the lectures, and that it is supportive of them and courteous to show up and listen to them. Not to mention that the lectures are designed to benefit the students, and that it is foolish to refuse to partake of an experience that was prepared for their benefit.

I have been writing notes for my classes for 10 to 20 years, but these notes have never been an adequate substitute for being in class for any of my students so far. Indeed those students who seem to get the most out of the notes also attend class faithfully.

I posted a few of those notes on my website and they are free to all, still I get regular questions here from students about exactly the same things that are explained in detail in my freely available notes. Apparently asking specific questions about what bothers you is a more popular way of learning than reading notes.

Once I rode down in the elevator with Hironaka (a Fields medalist) after his lecture and he said something to me that made it seem obvious why resolution of singularities should be true. One can never have that experience reading notes.

I admit that as a rebellious young student I had an "us versus them" attitude toward teachers and thought they were out to get me on tests. I had no idea they were people and I could make friends with them and actually learn personally from them. I thought tests cores measured how smart I was and how well I had done in class. I did not realize there is an infinite amount to be learned and I needed to use every tool available.

I did not know about auditory, as well as visual, and motor learning. If you too are as clueless as I was, and think everything can be learned by reading and measured by test scores, try to get over that attitude as soon as possible. It will make a world of difference.

By all means read and learn as much as you can on your own, and then expose yourself to the presence of your teacher and see what else there is to learn once you have qualified yourself to appreciate his deeper help.

Eh. But you have to understand that from the student's point of view, their goal should be to make the most efficient use of their time so that they can learn as much as is possible. For me, and I think many others, lectures are a very passive way of learning. A well-written textbook trumps a lecture every single time. That is of course if the lecture is just a rendition of the textbook, and most of the time it is. I realized pretty quickly into my university career that I was not getting much from lectures, and that I should focus on textbook reading (which has always been the way I learn best.) In the engineering school I attend, most if not all of the students that came in are perfectly capable of doing the work, perfectly able to perform at a high level, and for the most part many of them do work quite hard. The problem is, most people don't do very well. But are they really working efficiently? Does attending lectures all day and then going home with a very limited and shallow understanding of the material really benefit them? Most don't read the textbook in addition to attending every lecture, because quite simply with the shear number of lecture hours and assignments each week, there really isn't time. Working inefficiently is I think reflected in exam averages. In the courses I took last term, exam averages hovered in the mid/high 50s. Average course GPAs were around 2.7. I tend to wonder what those statistics would look like if everyone else studied the way I do; by simply skipping every lecture and reading thoroughly every single textbook passage instead. But there in lies the dilemma. Most of these students are straight out of high school and have parents that are paying hefty tuition costs. I don't think the parents of these students would be too thrilled if their children stopped attending lectures. Most students in turn obviously will probably never stop attending. It's fairly sad to me that in this day and age we rely on something to medieval as our primary mode of learning.
 
  • #127
For me, and I think many others, lectures are a very passive way of learning. A well-written textbook trumps a lecture every single time. That is of course if the lecture is just a rendition of the textbook, and most of the time it is.

Care to explain why a lecture is passive as compared to a well-written textbook?

There is one major difference between a lecture and a textbook, which is that the person writing the book is much more tied to formality. The person giving the lecture is someone you can actually watch think.

This doesn't really matter with really basic ideas, where the lecture is just summarizing things and working a few examples. But realistically, when you're listening to a lecture on an advanced topic from a person who could have written or did write the book you're reading, you'll often find watching them think and present the stuff, and seeing what they choose to focus on, will serve you better.

On an advanced topic, the ideal strategy tends to be to read some background from a book AND go to the lecture to absorb how the person thinks. Why? Because if you didn't read the book, you'd be sitting clueless, because that person thinks faster than you.

attending lectures all day and then going home with a very limited and shallow understanding of the material really benefit them?

You are talking of people attending lectures instead of reading the book. What about those who read the book first, are a step ahead of the game, and go to the lecture to understand how an expert on the topic thinks?

All your claims seem to apply only to situations where the lecture is just a summary of the book dumbed down for kids who won't read the book. There ARE courses like this.

But when arguing with someone like mathwonk, who probably teaches lots of advanced math classes, I don't think you should assume that all classes being discussed are going to be like that.

Most of these students are straight out of high school and have parents that are paying hefty tuition costs. I don't think the parents of these students would be too thrilled if their children stopped attending lectures. Most students in turn obviously will probably never stop attending. It's fairly sad to me that in this day and age we rely on something to medieval as our primary mode of learning.

You hit the heart of the matter. You're talking about classes "straight out of high school."

Sometimes, advanced classes don't even have textbooks, and at times, the reason is the professor can present the material better than any book on the subject can, because he's read all of them and is improving on them in his research.

You'll find that eventually, those poor chaps you speak of who don't read the book will flunk out of the hard subjects. Reading the book is the bare minimum to surviving the hard stuff, and realistically you have to use every resource you've got to get anywhere.
 
  • #128
coreluccio said:
Eh. But you have to understand that from the student's point of view, their goal should be to make the most efficient use of their time so that they can learn as much as is possible. For me, and I think many others, lectures are a very passive way of learning. A well-written textbook trumps a lecture every single time. That is of course if the lecture is just a rendition of the textbook, and most of the time it is. I realized pretty quickly into my university career that I was not getting much from lectures, and that I should focus on textbook reading (which has always been the way I learn best.) In the engineering school I attend, most if not all of the students that came in are perfectly capable of doing the work, perfectly able to perform at a high level, and for the most part many of them do work quite hard. The problem is, most people don't do very well. But are they really working efficiently? Does attending lectures all day and then going home with a very limited and shallow understanding of the material really benefit them? Most don't read the textbook in addition to attending every lecture, because quite simply with the shear number of lecture hours and assignments each week, there really isn't time. Working inefficiently is I think reflected in exam averages. In the courses I took last term, exam averages hovered in the mid/high 50s. Average course GPAs were around 2.7. I tend to wonder what those statistics would look like if everyone else studied the way I do; by simply skipping every lecture and reading thoroughly every single textbook passage instead. But there in lies the dilemma. Most of these students are straight out of high school and have parents that are paying hefty tuition costs. I don't think the parents of these students would be too thrilled if their children stopped attending lectures. Most students in turn obviously will probably never stop attending. It's fairly sad to me that in this day and age we rely on something to medieval as our primary mode of learning.

I disagree, I'll get more out of a good lecture vs a good textbook. I do, however, scour the internet for good textbooks and references but that's only because I want to be able to make good notes out of them. Most books have useless tidbits and read on and on without getting to the heart of the matter, so lectures and notes are more efficient to getting to the big picture more quickly.
Mathwonk tends to forget that not every teacher is like him, I have a professor or two just like him; who practice the material in preparation for the lectures but some guys just walk in and read off power points and think they've done their jobs as teachers for the day. The only real value in a lecture like that is knowing specifically what material to go over.
 
  • #129
coreluccio said:
Does attending lectures all day and then going home with a very limited and shallow understanding of the material really benefit them? Most don't read the textbook in addition to attending every lecture, because quite simply with the shear number of lecture hours and assignments each week, there really isn't time.

I attended nearly every lecture for every class I've taken over the last year (I could count the number of absences on my fingers) and never read a textbook except to supplement the lectures. Not once have I ever sat down and read an entire chapter out of a textbook. Often I did not read the textbook at all.

I have been the top student, or among the top students, in literally every class I have taken over this time period.

I don't say that to brag, but rather point out that some students really do get a lot out of lectures. I'd also like to thank all the professors out there for helping us students learn, especially the hard-working ones that really take educating the future bright minds of our society seriously.
 
  • #130
deRham said:
Care to explain why a lecture is passive as compared to a well-written textbook?

There is one major difference between a lecture and a textbook, which is that the person writing the book is much more tied to formality. The person giving the lecture is someone you can actually watch think.

This doesn't really matter with really basic ideas, where the lecture is just summarizing things and working a few examples. But realistically, when you're listening to a lecture on an advanced topic from a person who could have written or did write the book you're reading, you'll often find watching them think and present the stuff, and seeing what they choose to focus on, will serve you better.

On an advanced topic, the ideal strategy tends to be to read some background from a book AND go to the lecture to absorb how the person thinks. Why? Because if you didn't read the book, you'd be sitting clueless, because that person thinks faster than you.



You are talking of people attending lectures instead of reading the book. What about those who read the book first, are a step ahead of the game, and go to the lecture to understand how an expert on the topic thinks?

All your claims seem to apply only to situations where the lecture is just a summary of the book dumbed down for kids who won't read the book. There ARE courses like this.

But when arguing with someone like mathwonk, who probably teaches lots of advanced math classes, I don't think you should assume that all classes being discussed are going to be like that.



You hit the heart of the matter. You're talking about classes "straight out of high school."

Sometimes, advanced classes don't even have textbooks, and at times, the reason is the professor can present the material better than any book on the subject can, because he's read all of them and is improving on them in his research.

You'll find that eventually, those poor chaps you speak of who don't read the book will flunk out of the hard subjects. Reading the book is the bare minimum to surviving the hard stuff, and realistically you have to use every resource you've got to get anywhere.


The fact of the matter is, universities are filled with professors that can't teach. That's the real problem, and that's why many students, myself included, prefer a good textbook. Professors that are good teachers are few and far between.


I myself prefer a textbook over a teacher.
 
  • #131
kylem said:
I attended nearly every lecture for every class I've taken over the last year (I could count the number of absences on my fingers) and never read a textbook except to supplement the lectures. Not once have I ever sat down and read an entire chapter out of a textbook. Often I did not read the textbook at all.

I have been the top student, or among the top students, in literally every class I have taken over this time period.

I don't say that to brag, but rather point out that some students really do get a lot out of lectures. I'd also like to thank all the professors out there for helping us students learn, especially the hard-working ones that really take educating the future bright minds of our society seriously.

Getting good grades doesn't mean much.
 
  • #132
@ EngCommand: what do they do wrong? Professors give lectures as part of their career, even to nonstudents. They seem perfectly able to communicate.

Nobody says don't read the book. I myself learn more easily via books. That does not mean there aren't benefits that are unique to hearing someone explain something on the spot. If it is regurgitating the book in a muffled voice, do not go. But that should not be the case in most advanced classes.
 
  • #133
EngCommand said:
Getting good grades doesn't mean much.

When did I mention grades?
 
Last edited:
  • #134
kylem said:
When did I mention grades?

You said you came top of your class which implies good grades.
 
  • #135
deRham said:
@ EngCommand: what do they do wrong? Professors give lectures as part of their career, even to nonstudents. They seem perfectly able to communicate.

Nobody says don't read the book. I myself learn more easily via books. That does not mean there aren't benefits that are unique to hearing someone explain something on the spot. If it is regurgitating the book in a muffled voice, do not go. But that should not be the case in most advanced classes.

It was the case at my university. TBH, even if it wasn't the case, I still wouldn't have bothered to get out of bed in the morning to go to a lecture at 9.00 am.
 
  • #136
clope023 said:
I disagree, I'll get more out of a good lecture vs a good textbook. I do, however, scour the internet for good textbooks and references but that's only because I want to be able to make good notes out of them. Most books have useless tidbits and read on and on without getting to the heart of the matter, so lectures and notes are more efficient to getting to the big picture more quickly.

From the perspective of being a lecturer, I agree that one purpose of lecture is to help guide students to the most salient points in the text, and to explain the major concepts and overarching themes that can get lost in the details of the textbook. It doesn't bypass reading portions of the book, but makes the book more useful as an efficient reference for looking up the details.

Mathwonk tends to forget that not every teacher is like him, I have a professor or two just like him; who practice the material in preparation for the lectures but some guys just walk in and read off power points and think they've done their jobs as teachers for the day. The only real value in a lecture like that is knowing specifically what material to go over.
This is one of those damned if you do, damned if you don't aspects of lecturing. There are a lot of students who want or expect to have the book read to them and summarized in powerpoint bullets. If you don't do that, they complain that they had to teach themselves by reading the book *gasp*, but if you do that, then another group of students complains the book was a waste of money and you didn't teach anything they couldn't just read in a book. It takes a good deal of experience to find the right balance.

As for the perception that lecture is a passive learning experience, how would you know if you don't attend? The biggest challenge I encounter is just getting students to show up after they've gotten that idea set in mind from previous courses so they see that my lectures are not passive experiences. I don't just read slides to my students. I presented them with some case studies this week that are not in their books. The slide had the signs and symptoms, and a probable diagnosis...those reading from home could get that much from a text, but what they wouldn't get was the next slide with additional patient history, and being told the probable diagnosis is wrong, then exploring through discussion why the initial information wasn't sufficient for a diagnosis, and how to think about and apply other things they'd learned so far to recognize the need for more information, and which information to ask for, and ultimately come up with the correct diagnosis.

What they also won't get from home is seeing me perform movements that still photos can't demonstrate. I put up a slide with two illustrations from their textbook and ask what's different about them. The answer is nothing. Yet, they illustrate, supposedly, two different movements. It's very difficult to illustrate a movement in a single photograph, or adequately describe what it involves for someone who has never seen it. Not only do I perform the movements, I ask the students to do it too. If they do it with me as I demonstrate, they're more likely to remember it later. Next week, they're going to learn why I disagree with the standard definitions of origins and insertions of muscles (I don't use those terms, I just call them attachments). To do this, they're going to have to stand up and do a little stretching with me. At the same time, this should get the correct definitions of foot flexion and extension to stick, because they often mix those up (it's exactly the opposite of what seems intuitive). My med student lecture will be a bit like Romper Room next week (for those who remember that show)...flex, extend, and reach for the stars...or something like that.
 
  • #137
I wonder who's writing all of these wonderful textbooks?
 
  • #138
Choppy said:
I wonder who's writing all of these wonderful textbooks?

Researchers?

The same researchers who see teaching as a burden.

What is your point?
 
  • #139
EngCommand said:
Researchers?

The same researchers who see teaching as a burden.

What is your point?

Most general textbooks that I have come across are written by lecturers. Only very specialised ones seem to be written by researchers.

I am only basing this on what I have seen :approve:
 
  • #140
Things could have changed a lot in ~40 years, but most of my textbooks in engineering were written by people with no talent in teaching. The presentation was uniformly awful. If you didn't bother attending lectures, you'd have little chance of grasping the portions of the texts that your profs wanted to accent and amplify. Skipping lectures wasn't an option back then, anyway. Even in large lecture halls, many courses required assigned seating, and proctors recorded your absences.
 

Similar threads

  • STEM Academic Advising
Replies
1
Views
929
Replies
7
Views
1K
  • STEM Academic Advising
Replies
2
Views
825
  • STEM Academic Advising
Replies
14
Views
665
  • STEM Academic Advising
Replies
17
Views
2K
  • STEM Academic Advising
Replies
7
Views
10K
  • STEM Academic Advising
Replies
11
Views
1K
Replies
13
Views
2K
  • General Engineering
Replies
13
Views
1K
  • Sticky
  • Science and Math Textbooks
Replies
10
Views
5K
Back
Top