**********************************************************************************************************
A: Absolutely!
B: Almost.
C: I will be.
D: Final? What final?
⇒The statistics for the answers were as follows:
**************************************************************************************************************
They (whoever
they are) say that teaching is a crucial part of one’s academic life. And so I
thought it was a good idea that we as graduate students were being introduced
to such a crucial part in our first year of graduate studies itself. This was
in the form of a course called ‘Teaching’, which was worth some credits, i.e.,
we were graded; not just satisfactory/unsatisfactory but A/A-/B+/B/B- (B- is
equivalent to fail for graduates!).
First year teaching was mandatory as it is
a prerequisite for ‘advancing to PhD candidacy’. Most of us did it in second
year too because it acted as a source of funding till we found an adviser
willing to fund us as ‘research assistants’ for the rest of our stay. This
course mostly involved the task of ‘teaching’ Lab courses to undergraduates.
However, a few (un)lucky graduates got the task of ‘grading’ courses instead.
Let me first
give you a glimpse of what ‘teaching’ labs involved:
AIM: To take a
satisfactory 2 hour Undergraduate Lab Class at least twice per week for the
full semester.
SETUP: You, Lab
Room full of relevant equipment, Experiment Manual, Time.
PROCEDURE:
Everything is more or less set up in the lab room by the lab manager(s). You
glance through the manual and check (preferably before the class begins) all
the dozen or so experimental setups and verify that they are in working conditions.
(Note: This is different from KGP where there are different experiments
permanently set up and the students using those setups change bi/tri-weekly.
Here the students are permanently positioned and the experimental setup gets
changed every week.)
Take two or three readings to familiarize yourself with
the experiment. It’s better if you do that on all the setups so you can figure
out any quirks of the equipment and can impress the undergrads (but let the
undergrads do something too, ok)! Now, wait for the class to begin. After the
students settle down, explain to them briefly the theory behind today’s
experiment. And tell them to begin the experiment as they are supposed to have
read the manual themselves.
OBSERVATIONS:
Most of them haven’t read the manuals so you will have to explain what they are
supposed to do too. Finish that quickly because remember, the class is of 2
hours only and they are supposed to take all the readings by then so you can’t
go on explaining things for half an hour.
CALCULATIONS:
You can keep counting how many times you have to explain the same thing to
different groups of students even after explaining that same thing on the
blackboard at the very beginning!
ERROR ANALYSIS:
There will be many errors in their reports. Mark judiciously. And from next
time, tell them what you expect in their reports. That won’t reduce the errors
so next time, give them a generic template of the report you expect from them.
That will reduce some errors but that will increase your work-load as they will
now expect you to give them specific templates for every damn experiment.
DISCUSSION: Best
of Luck! See you after 2 years at the other end of the tunnel.
Let us now
discuss how ‘grading’ courses works. This job is a piece of cake compared to
the above but there are a few catches that you need to tackle very early on:
1) Do you have
to attend the classes too? That can be fun sometimes, but most of the time, you
should do your own HWs in there or just grade the HWs that you have just
collected.
2) It will take
a lot of time to grade HWs if there are ~150 students in the class even if the
HWs are multiple choice questions! And if the professor asks you to tabulate
the answers and show him the distribution that the students’ answers form, you
can forget there are 2 days in the weekend. Pray he doesn’t ask you to fit some
curve to that distribution. On the plus side, you will be able to read
hilarious ‘out of context’ answers even for ‘simple’ questions.
For example:
Q1: What do you
intend to gain from this course?
⇒ Tranquility
Q2: How many
hours do you intend to study for this course?
⇒ Million
Qn: Are you an
optimist or a pessimist about the existence of intelligent life elsewhere in
the Galaxy?
⇒ Pessimist but Moody
Q∞:
Are you ready for the final?
A: Absolutely!
B: Almost.
C: I will be.
D: Final? What final?
⇒The statistics for the answers were as follows:
A – 16; B – 37; C – 74; D – 15; E: I fear this final like a mother
fears for a newborn child – 1.
3) Undergrads
will definitely argue with you for more marks. But if you tell them the
increase won’t affect their grade, they somehow stop bothering you…
Unfortunately, that ‘trick’ can’t be used too often and works only around the
end of the semester!
4) Grading
graduate courses is a bit involved (esp. regarding the issue of partial
credits) but it has its own perks as grads aren’t too aggressive about getting
more marks.
5) Do you have
to solve the HWs yourself before you can grade the submissions? That is a real
time-burner… But do your best, you’ll learn something too in the process. If
not some Physics, let it be LaTeX!
6) Do you have
to proctor the exams and grade them too on the same day? You are in for a ‘once
in a lifetime’ experience… Enjoy!
So that’s what
one has to do for the first 2 years of graduate studies at SBU.
Full
Disclosure: I graded a UG course in the first year (same in both semesters) and
2 Grad courses (QM & SM) in the second year. I did teach a lab in the
summer of my first year so what I’ve written above is not sheer fabrication.
On
that positive note, here’s wishing you a
HAPPY NEW YEAR!
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