A teacher can
enter the classroom . . . with severely misplaced expectations.
Having spent many years in a highly literate environment, we
tend to take a similar level of literacy in our students as
a given. Many of them, on the other hand, have gotten along
reasonably well without getting too entangled with the subtleties
of the written word.
--Robert
Leamnson: Thinking about Teaching and Learning:
Developing Habits of Learning with First Year College and
University Students (p. 31).
A common
complaint among students in the mid-semester evaluations I conduct
is that their professors' reading requirements are unrealistic--that
the texts are too hard, that there's too much to read, or that
the books or articles are irrelevant and never reviewed in class.
By now,
faculty know that students generally do not do everything we ask
them to do in order to prepare for class. In the latest National
Survey of Student Engagement report, 43% of full-time students
report spending 10 hours or fewer studying each week--a finding
consistent with NSSE surveys in previous years. (http://nsse.iub.edu/pdf/2005_inst_report/NSSE_overview_rev.pdf
p. 11.) While these numbers are troubling, no one seems terribly
surprised by the truth. In the faculty survey (FSSE) which complements
the NSSE, results show that "faculty members expect students
to study about twice as much as students actually reported,"
but that if asked to guess how much students actually do study
out of class, faculty perceptions are fairly accurate. (http://www.indiana.edu/~nsse/fsse/pdf/fsse2005_overview.pdf
p. 5.)
If we
assume that students are willing to put more time and effort into
their schoolwork (an optimistic but necessary assumption if we
hope to improve matters) then what is causing this lack of application--especially
in regard to reading before class? And what practical strategies
can we use to encourage greater attention to reading and study?
Many students
enter college with limited reading strategies--indeed most approach
all of their reading tasks the same way, and with one essential
goal: to get through the material as quickly as possible. Yet
we know that our own professional reading strategies vary tremendously
according to the time we have available and the goal we set for
the task. One focus of our teaching, then, should be to help students
develop readings skills and strategies appropriate to the kind
of material we're asking them to understand. As Ken Bain notes
in his study of excellent teachers (What the Best College Teachers
Do), "we found among the most effective teachers a strong
desire to help students learn to read in the discipline"
(p. 56).
Second,
many students haven't been trained in reading with a specific
set of goals in mind--for example, for arguments or in order to
distinguish the major issues from the details or examples; they
tend to approach all reading in the same fashion. Again, in disciplines
whose vocabularies and conceptual structures may be unfamiliar
to many students, we must provide assignments that help them develop
the capacity to read for specific reasons and finish assignments
with clearly outlined accomplishments.
Based
on examples I've seen at UMBC, here are some suggestions for methods
of encouraging more and better reading in classes.
(Other
useful suggestions are provided in Eric Hobson's article, listed
below, and available online.)
While
we might be tempted to blame students for not studying enough,
we must take some of the responsibility for their failure if we
are encouraging procrastination and avoidance by assigning difficult
reading materials without properly preparing students to understand
them. While students need to be challenged, they must have methods
of succeeding if they are going to continue to invest time in
arduous tasks. Asking under-prepared students to spend hours with
writing that is, to them, incomprehensible and inaccessible mostly
leads them to invest time in activities they consider to be more
productive.
Resources
Bain,
Ken. (2004). What the Best College Teachers Do. Cambridge, MA:
Harvard.
Hobson,
Eric. (2004). "Getting Students to Read: Fourteen Tips."
IDEA Paper. No. 40. http://www.idea.ksu.edu
(under "Idea Papers" in left column).
Leamnson,
Robert. (1999). Thinking about Teaching and Learning: Developing
Habits of Learning with First Year College and University Students.
Sterling, VA: Stylus.
Zimmerman,
Lynn. (2001) "Engaging Students in the Classroom." TLT
Brownbag lecture. http://asp1.umbc.edu/newmedia/oit/brownbag/presentdetail.cfm?ID=134