Mokiki
[IDK, teaching?] What do you guys think of the interrogative style? That one where the teacher just asks you questions out of the blue? :I
Mokiki
Teacher: WHAT DOES THIS WORD MEAN, JACK. /ancient greek
Me: I haven't done this for a year, so I haven't recommitted the tables to memory. I could look it up, if you'd like?
Teacher: ...
Me: ...
Mokiki
THIS IS MY PREDICTION FOR TODAY :C /terrified
Mokiki
/also up at 6 am, fuck everything
Mokiki
Normally I don't mind it, but the dude who uses it in this language class is know for being a bit... ugh
Mokiki
As in his halfway through something else and is all ROBERT, DECLINE THE PASSIVE MIDDLE ENDING OF [WORD]
Ⓛⓞⓡⓓ Ⓛⓐⓓⓡⓘⓐⓝ
LOLLL :C
Ⓛⓞⓡⓓ Ⓛⓐⓓⓡⓘⓐⓝ
Also ugh using it in a LANGUAGE CLASS?
Ⓛⓞⓡⓓ Ⓛⓐⓓⓡⓘⓐⓝ
SUPER DUMB >:C
bluecanary
eek D: i don't like being put on the spot like that
Mokiki
IKR apparently he does it to terrify people into learning stuff
Mokiki
And like... I LEARN AT MY OWN PACE GO AWAY
Mokiki
Ikr. And this is at university too, so he should be teaching us as adults and not as... idk, kids who've gotta be terrified into stuff :I
bluecanary
i am fascinated by psy's legs in that emote. they are like jelly.
pharadyne
I had a prof who did that. I described it as him going, "Student! I command you to say something brilliant this second! Go!" Student: ...uh...
pharadyne
Sometimes it was also "Student! I command you to read my mind!" Like the time the question was "I am thinking of five words that describe the theme of this section of Thucydides. What are those five words?"
pharadyne
(It turned out to be "Athens' treatment of her allies." None of us were able to successfully read his mind on that.)
pharadyne
That's what we thought. There was so much desperate and totally wrong guessing.
bluecanary
"i would like to buy a vowel pls"
zetsubou
actually I do this with my students, LOL
zetsubou
not the "read my mind" and not so much completely off-topic questions but I make them answer a lot
zetsubou
in language classes, horrors
bluecanary
i think there are good ways to use it!
bluecanary
i know great teachers who have
bluecanary
but i do not want to have to think of five exact words that you are thinking because what good does that do me
Ⓛⓞⓡⓓ Ⓛⓐⓓⓡⓘⓐⓝ
Idk I feel like maybe it's different with kids, but my sense with language is that it's something you're probably teaching within a context?
Ⓛⓞⓡⓓ Ⓛⓐⓓⓡⓘⓐⓝ
So like, something that you as a group are learning and BAM! QUESTIONS!
Ⓛⓞⓡⓓ Ⓛⓐⓓⓡⓘⓐⓝ
as opposed to: you need to learn all of latin for classical translation purposes now what is the correct word for AMPUTEE, JACK?
zetsubou
well honestly I think it's good to put people on the spot once in a while (but yes with things that are on topic)
zetsubou
my kids are used to a very rigid format where they don't actually have to learn or remember anything outside of the format so I try to mix it up and be like "no try it this way, yes now"
zetsubou
or like for a real world example I'll be like "we're talking about world cultures today -- by the way, what do you think globalization means?"
zetsubou
or the time we were doing a class on Israel and I spoke to them entirely in Hebrew for the first minute and made them guess what I was saying
bluecanary
that's actually really cool!
bluecanary
i would like to be in one of your classes chinhands
bluecanary
are you fluent in hebrew for reals? that's pretty rad
zetsubou
LOL no not even remotely, it was really basic "hello how are you"
bluecanary
aw. well you know at least two languages anyway, that is still 100% better than me
pharadyne
When I teach Latin, I do ask lots of parsing and grammar questions, but it's always in the context of whatever sentence we're translating. And if someone looks like they're struggling or terrified, I let them
pharadyne
pass the question on to someone else or I open it up to the whole class.
pharadyne
When I ask questions like, "What do you know about Virgil?" it's open to the whole class and it really is just me getting a gauge on how much the class in general knows so I don't bore them with stuff they
pharadyne
already know and/or to give students a chance to play teacher and explain stuff they know to other students.
pharadyne
I'm not fond of putting students on the spot with surprise questions. It's a bit terror provoking, and especially hard on extreme introverts (I think) who often have to spent some time to draw up courage to
pharadyne
say anything even when they're not put on the spot.
pharadyne
(Although if they haven't done their homework, I will put them on the spot by making them sightread what they were supposed to have prepared.)
Mokiki
As I know from my project, there's at least three words for amputee ;_; / Remembers none of them
zetsubou
The thing is, out in Japan we're faced with basically having entire classrooms of kids who will freeze up "on the spot," even if that "on the spot" is casually asking how they are or framing a question in a
zetsubou
slightly different way from the way they memorized it in the textbook, so if we completely refuse to inflict a little "terror" our options become limited
zetsubou
I play taboo with them, you know, having them explain words without using the word itself, and I've got a girl who froze up and almost started crying over the words "movie," "bed," and "ball."
zetsubou
even when being coached by me
zetsubou
and that's like... normal here
Mokiki
Oh man, that is kind of depressing :c
Mokiki
Also lol, me and the teacher.
Mokiki
Him: JACK, WHAT IS THE FEMININE PAST PARTICIPLE OF TO SEE
Me: /gets half of it, on the last bit
Him: this is really easy, you know this one
Me: I totally don't
Him: yes you do Me: I really don't Him: ...:|
Mokiki
Me: :0
zetsubou
yeah see at that point I would be coaching
Mokiki
To be fair, it was something I should have known, but after a year... what I've retained and what I haven't is really unequal
Mokiki
Time for epic revising on the weekend :0
載入新的回覆