Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Engaging your professor

On this blog, the first and third Tuesday of each month are dedicated to presenting discussion geared toward undergraduate students, in a series called, "Undergraduate Corner."


How do you perceive your class meetings? Boring? Seemingly pointless? A requirement that you know you have to fulfill in order to get the grade you need to get the degree you want so that you can have a job you don't hate?

How do you perceive your textbooks? Pedantic? Dry? Verbose? A waste of $100+ that could have bought you real food for two weeks?

How do you perceive your homework assignments? Long? Unclear? A waste of trees and ink (or electricity, if conducted on-line)?

Have you ever considered how they're perceived by your professor? They are points of contact---communication from one human being to another---about the one thing in the world that she finds most interesting. They are the opening lines of what is supposed to be a dialogue between you and her.

Another way of looking at it is that they are the foundation of your class's culture. Whether you feel it or not, you are part of your class's culture. In each class, you are a member of a unique subsystem of human civilization that has never occurred before and will never be repeated again.

And here's the thing about communication and culture: They are always two-way. If your professor is the only participant who engages, the communication/culture project is stunted. It fails to be all that it was meant to be, and therefore your experience as a student fails to be what it was meant to be. If this communication/culture project is to be fulfilled, you have to be an engaged participant.

That's right; you have to (gasp) engage with your professor.

Before I get into what this looks like, let me paint another side of the picture for you: Few students engage their professor. Those that do find themselves in a position of respect in the professor's eyes, because they've come and broken the silence that has otherwise existed between them and the students, and---regardless of how preoccupied they are with their own research---nearly every professor appreciates this.

Now think of what it means for you as a Christian student to be the one student in your class to engage the professor. Imagine what it means for your witness for Christ to earn that respect in his eyes, all because you treated another human being how you would want to be treated. (Which, you just might eventually remind the professor, is something that Jesus taught.) Imagine how the kingdom might advance just because you took the time out to visit an instructor's office hours---oh yeah, and you just might get an insight into what's on the exam.

So, how do you engage a professor? The easiest way is to find out how she wants you to engage her. You can find this out in the syllabus or by simply asking.
  1. Does your professor welcome questions in the few minutes before class while she is getting situated?
  2. Does your professor welcome questions during class?
  3. Does your professor welcome questions at the end of class?
  4. When are your professor's office hours?
  5. Does your professor mind if you continue to ask questions after the end of office hours?
  6. Is your professor welcoming to students dropping by during non-office hours?
  7. Is your professor willing to schedule an appointment with you outside of office hours?
  8. Would your professor mind if you read the textbook or worked the homework in her office so that you can ask questions as you proceed?
  9. What on-campus colloquia or seminars does your professor recommend?
All of these questions (which are all rather easy to ask and keep track of) will help you to understand the communication/culture paradigm that your professor has set up. And, asking them is your first (and easy) step toward engaging him. He'll already regard you with more respect and appreciation than before, and you just might begin to find class meetings, textbook-reading, and homework-completing more fulfilling and worthwhile.

How else have you found it to be beneficial to engage with your professor? If you're a professor or instructor, what tips would you give to students to help them engage better?

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