[[Comment by Pete Whitridge on October 8, 2009 at 5:44pm --- Glad to see a group for instructors here. Let's talk education. Skills, classroom behavior, testing strategies, body mechanics. Some of the other groups seem too focused on political stuff. Let's talk about the process of being in the classroom teaching the folks. P>]]
Thanks for the comment, Pete! I totally agree...I teach at a Career and Technical Public School in Arizona, where I teach Massage Therapy to High School Students...if you can believe it!!!! It is awesome, but I assure you and everyone else reading this discussion, that it is COMPLETELY different than teaching adults. And I know because I used to teach adults as well---VERY different. Not only that, but I teach two classes that are 4 hours long. So, making sure that your high school seniors pay attention, don't get bored, and are enthused, you have to continuously switch it up within that 4-hour time block.
Regarding testing strategies, I actually just tested my students a couple of days ago with both a written exam as well as a practicum. I am lucky enough to have a disarticulated skeleton in my classroom, and I labeled the different bones...numbering the bony landmarks. Each bone was at a different "station" within the classroom, and students were to take their sheet of paper and sit at a station. They were to find the station on their sheet of paper, as there were the exact number of spaces under that section. They sit answering the questions, and are timed so they focus their attention on answering as correctly as possible. Students are given the go ahead to all rotate stations at the same time, and it is repeated until all students have been to all of the stations. Both adults, as well as my high school students, find that this kind of testing is fair, very hands-on, and almost FUN, especially when they know the answers:-)
Repetition is key regarding all aspects of what you are teaching your students. When students take a test, they should be able to hear your lessons in the back of their head...the repetition that you have practically been drilling into them for the past couple of weeks. The same is true for body mechanics. I nip bad habits in the bud before they become consistent. I constantly tell my students to bend their knees, and I am hopeful that when they become Licensed Massage Therapists, they will still hear my voice telling them to bend their knees when they lose focus with their clients:-)
I also make sure to instill in them the highest level of professionalism, and am sure to teach them all aspects of the book, The Educated Heart, by Nina McIntosh. I absolutely love that book and I find it is invaluable.
Let's keep this discussion going! Thanks for being a member of this awesome group! :-D
~Amy O'Connor, BA, LMT, NCTMB