this post was submitted on 08 Jun 2024
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There is no requirement that I am aware of for college professors to have any training in the fundamentals of instruction, and it SHOWS.
That's because professors are still intended to be researchers first, which makes sense for the cutting edge topics, but there's a ton of college level fundamentals you need to understand first.
Kind of off topic but mildy related. Have you seen the old Val Kilmer movie Real Genius? Just wondering if you find it a fun watch today or not
9/10 of my graduate professors couldn't profess their way out of a paper bag. The actually good teachers were limited because they didn't research enough. Fuck grad school.
I aspired to work in education in college and took a lot of courses on adult education and how to teach people. I recognized that my favorite teachers in K-12 used those techniques , while realizing none of it was done at the college level.
I don't work in education but I find myself using those techniques all the time in the workplace. And there's a clear difference between my department's onboarding and capabilities versus others.
I really noticed this once I found myself at the community college. The school liked to market that you were educated by "working professionals with industry experience." which translated to the school paying them less than their second, full-time job on top of all the stuff about them not knowing how to teach while they were in charge of the grading of 20+ classes per semester. Prior to that in my experience I had only ever come across professors who were incredibly passionate about what they were teaching or alternatively were incredibly passionate about teaching-itself. it was eye-opening in the most frustrating way.
This is kind of backwards in the aviation world: There's a whole separate certificate for flight instructors which involves training in psychology, lesson planning and all that in addition to stuff like flying the plane from the right seat, spin training and all that. Thing is, it's often baby's first aviation job. A lot of flight instructors are freshly minted commercial pilots and their first lesson is their first revenue flight. You don't get to go fly jets for the charters and airlines without experience, and where do you get experience? flying smaller, less expensive aircraft. What's the single biggest demand for pilots flying smaller, less expensive aircraft? Flight schools.