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Teaching Skills- How Do You Get The Message Across To Your Students
Dan Vandon
Successful teaching requires your students to have not only an interest in a subject but also an expertise in studying and learning skills. For that reason, I suggest taking the time to teach your students some simple but highly effective studying and learning techniques.

To give you an idea of what studying and learning techniques can do for your students, let me offer a peek at what I call The Big Picture Tool. This tool is about looking at information from a birds-eye perspective and developing an overviewunderstanding the basics of a subject before adopting a deeper, more detail-oriented perspective. Its basically about avoiding that overwhelming phenomenon of not seeing a forest for all the trees. My experience is that understanding and applying the Big Picture Tool is of paramount importance for being both a successful student and a successful teacher.

When I look back at my own studies, I often see that new information was not presented from the big picture perspective. Instead, I was exposed to unrelated parts, which were not presented as parts of anything bigger. No overriding structures or detail-embracing and umbrella-like concepts were explained. (Yet, to be fair, I didnt look for the big picture myself, either.) Consequently, my journey for knowledge was difficult or impossible at those timestoo many pieces of the puzzle to see the picture.

Its a bit of a tragedy that some of those teachers whose classes I attended were truly desperate to make their students understand. If only they hadnt started off using a purely detail-oriented, specialists-perspective teaching style right from the first class. Maybe it was their way of demonstrating how much they expected from their students. Maybe they were not aware of the importance of the big picture perspective for their students.

My experience also tells me that most students are indeed willing to invest time and effort into their studies. But many lose interest too early if they cant relate the details to a big picture theyve never been exposed to. Such classes often appear as if neither side can communicate with the other, and bad exam results are the ultimate consequence. As a result, students blame their teachers (The guy simply cant explain!) and teachers blame their students (Theyre lazy, uninterested, unwilling, and undisciplined!).

Again, these comments are from my personal experiencesmany years of formal studies in different fields, educational centers, and countries. What I can conclude from them is that whenever the teacher took time to start with the big picture, I found the learning process incredibly easier, especially in new fields of study. And if I had known and understood the Big Picture Tool, I could have taken that part of the process into my own hands.

So, if you are in a teaching role, what does all this mean for you?

My first recommendation is that you incorporate an element of preview into your teaching style, especially when you start off teaching information that is new to your students. Regardless of your students level of expertise in the subject, you should first try to give them an idea of the whole thing before you deal with the details.

Second, teach your students how to look at information from a birds-eye perspective and how to develop an overview.

Doing so will make getting the subject message across to your students much easier.

About the Author: With a background in intellectual property law, Dan Vandon has earned law degrees in several countries, a chore that led to perfecting the tools and techniques presented in Red Rubber Duck’s Learning & Study Skill Guide. Teach your students simple but highly effective study skills!

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