Note: You can comment on this or any past posting by going to:
http://amps-tools.mit.edu/tomprofblog/
Folks:
The posting below looks at how you can learn all, or most, of
your students' names. It is one of the best things a professor
can do. The article is by Dr. Mary McKinney of Successful Academic
Coaching. Feel free to visit her web site at http://www.successfulacademic.com
for additional tenure track tips and dissertation writing strategies.
Copyright ©2006. Reprinted with permission.
Regards,
Rick Reis
reis@stanford.edu
UP NEXT: Making Teaching and Learning Visible
Tomorrow's Graduate Students and Postdocs
---------------------------------------------- 853 words ---------------------------------------------
Learning Your Students' Names
What's Your Name Again?
"I'm terrible at names," complained my friend Steve.
He's a respected professor of entomology who is fascinated by
ugly bugs that make many of us shudder. "Really?" I
asked. "How many species of beetles can you identify by name?"
"Thousands," he said.
Obviously, he can remember some names.
Like Steve, many of us struggle to remember the names of acquaintances,
despite being able to remember a great many names or details in
our field of interest.
What about you?
* Do you forget the names of people at parties five minutes after
they've been introduced?
* Do you dread making introductions for fear of drawing a complete
blank, even if you know the people quite well?
* Do you have trouble keeping track of student names even at mid-semester?
Psychologists find that anxiety often interferes with people's
ability to learn and remember names. At parties, we're often pre-occupied
with the impression we're making. When teaching, we may be worried
about the content we're about to teach or how well we're presenting
the material. But whatever the context, be it cocktail party or
classroom, remembering names indicates respect and concern, and
can be essential to building a relationship.
I still remember the charismatic Professor Banchoff who taught
my freshman calculus course in college. On the first day of class,
he went around the room and asked each of us our names. When someone
mumbled, or had a name that was difficult to pronounce, he asked
us to repeat ourselves and then repeated the name himself. There
were over 100 students taking the course so this initial roll
call took a significant portion of the first class.
>From that day on, when we raised our hands to ask or answer
a question, Professor Banchoff called on us by name:
" Yes, Miss McKinney?" he would ask formally, when
I raised my hand to answer a question. And when returning quizzes
he might accompany my paper with "Good Job, Mary."
We were all awed by Professor Banchoff's memory (although we
sometimes wished that it was less sharp when we skipped class
or neglected homework assignments.). He regularly won awards for
teaching excellence and received high marks for his clear and
dynamic lectures. But I'm sure his impressive recall of our names
also boosted his ratings. It always felt great to know that he
knew who we were.
Do you know all of your students' names? If not, and your class
doesn't top 40 students, learn them. Even if you teach a large
lecture class, you can still learn many names - especially those
of students who participate regularly.
I'm currently coaching a junior professor - I'll call him Jim
- who is concerned about getting tenure, in part because of below
average teaching evaluations.
During one of our early sessions, I asked, "How large are
your classes?"
"About 30 students," he said.
"Do you know their names?"
"Well, some of them," he replied sheepishly. "I'm
terrible at names."
"Let's change that," I said.
This year, even before the first day of class, Jim had downloaded
the names and school I.D. photographs of each student enrolled
in his courses. By the second class of the semester he'd memorized
every name.
" What a difference," he said. "I can tell they're
impressed that I've learned their names so quickly. And I feel
much more confident during class discussions. Knowing their names
has even been helpful outside of the classroom: I used to feel
embarrassed when I ran into students in the hall, or they came
to office hours, and I didn't know their names."
How To Learn Student Names:
1. Make it a priority. Focusing on any goal is the first step
towards making it happen.
2. Read the registrar's list before the first class. Pay attention
to the names that may be difficult to pronounce.
3. Take roll call on the first day of class. Take your time,
pay close attention and repeat each student's name. Make sure
that you have the proper pronunciation. If a student's name is
unfamiliar be sure to ask explicitly if you've got it right. Students
who are shy, or from cultures where greater deference to authority
is the norm, may hesitate to correct you unless prompted and yet
will still find it grating to be referred to incorrectly the entire
semester.
4. Ask the students what they prefer to be called and be sure
to write down nicknames on the class roster. You may want to preface
your roll call with a request for nicknames: while you are likely
to wonder whether Elizabeth whether goes by "Liz" or
"Beth", you'll have no idea that Amy Jones goes by "A.J."
5. If you have access to students' photos, use them to familiarize
yourself with names as part of your preparation in the first weeks
of class. My client Jim had been unaware that he had access to
student I.D. photos via the "Facebook" until he checked
with the registrar.
6. If there are no photos available, consider taking your own
photographs. In Tools for Teaching, Barbara Gross Davis suggests
taking Polaroid shots of students and pasting them on index cards
with the students' names and other personal information. Creating
class "I.D. cards" is even easier with access to digital
cameras.
7. Often it is most difficult to remember foreign students' names,
which may be unfamiliar to Western ears. Be sure to write a phonetic
version of the name if needed. For example, in one of my classes
the name of a Chinese student was transliterated as Xiou - but
pronounced something like "Shaw."
8. A common memory trick is to link the name with something or
someone else - thus my student Xiou became the unforgettable George
Bernard "Shaw" in my mind.
9. Think of another person you know who has the same first name
as the student. Then make a link using a visual image. For example,
I imagine my short-haired brunette student Susan with the wild
grey mane of my cousin Susan, who hadn't changed the style of
her coiffure since the late 1960's. The incongruous image cements
the student's name in my cortex.
10. Use humor in your associative links to make a lasting impression.
I kept getting confused about whether a student was Egla or Elga
until I imagined her with a hard-boiled Egg of a head.
11. Find a rhyme to create mental associations: Is Jim slim?
Or an adjective that tips you off about the name's first letter:
Is Thomas tall? Can you visualize Sarah in a sarong? Again, humor
helps. Thus Slim Jim becomes a life-size stick of dried beef sausage.
And Sarah, well, sarongs fall off easily, right? (Need I admonish
you that the mnemonic devises should be kept to yourself?)
12. Use your students' names frequently both to call on them
to participate and to refer to previous points made in the discussion.
Davis points out that this technique can be used in even very
large classes: Ask students their name when they make a comment
and later refer to it as "Jeff's point" or "Audrey's
contribution."
13. When you take roll, consider creating a map of the seating
arrangement labeled with student's names. I'm always surprised
at how consistently students sit in the same seats, or at least
the same quadrant of the room. In my small classes, we sit around
a large table and for the first few classes I write down who chooses
to sit where as students arrive. Writing the names down also helps
commit them to memory. Some professors ask students to sit in
the same seats for a few classes, a request that communicates
their earnest efforts to learn names. I prefer to keep my mnemonic
methods mysterious. Either way works.
14. Using name tags for the first few class sessions can help
students learn one another's names at the same time it helps you.
I ask my students to write their first names in very large letters
so that I can read them from the front of the classroom.
15. When teaching very large classes it is tempting to give up.
Resist the temptation. Try learning five names per class and try
to use those names.
16. Use name tags or cards. One professor I know uses name cards
for her large classes. Students pick up the cards as they file
into class and place them at the front of their desks. This United
Nations style name card strategy is also useful because the tags
that aren't retrieved indicate absent students.
17. With any sized enrollment, between classes, look at registrar's
list during week and see how many faces you can recall.
18. Make sure you know the names of students who visit you during
office hours. Take a few minutes to ask the students about themselves,
their major, where they are from, etc. Personal contact is one
of the ways you can increase the effectiveness of your teaching.
Becoming an expert at memorizing names is a small but respectful
step toward demonstrating personal investment in your students'
well-being. Building a mutually respectful relationship with students
is as important as having an organized lesson plan, giving a dynamic
lecture, or encouraging enthusiastic class participation. Positive
student-teacher relationships foster engagement and achievement.
Learning your students' names quickly and well may also provide
a small boost of your end-of-term evaluations. The positive effects
on your teaching reputation, departmental reviews and chances
for tenure - vis-a-vis evaluations, future class enrollments,
etc. - are secondary fringe benefits that may provide pragmatic
motivation to invest your energy in the task.
Learning student names is just a minor, obvious task among the
multitude of steps required to become an excellent teacher. However,
like many basics of good teaching, it is often neglected. Being
able to identify a student by name may be the first step toward
cultivating a level of rapport that will make a difference in
your students' lives and your own career.
Do you have any additional tips for remembering students' names?
Let me know and I'll share them with other readers.
NOTE: This article first appeared in the on-line journal "Inside
Higher Education". Click here to read that version and see
the many helpful comments and responses from readers.
http://www.insidehighered.com/workplace/2006/02/13/mckinney
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
TOMORROW'S PROFESSOR MAILING LIST
is a shared mission partnership with the
American Association for Higher Education (AAHE) http://www.aahe.org/
The National Teaching and Learning Forum (NT&LF) http://www.ntlf.com/
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------