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In a week I will begin teaching an entry-level class that the local
radio club is offering. I would love any words of wisdom from experienced instructors of this material. I suspect that it has been at least a couple of decades since I last taught such a class, and things have changed a bit in that time grin. The basic issue I'm wrestling with is walking the tightrope between teaching the actual questions from the pool and teaching concepts. It's not fair to the students to ignore the existence of the pool; after all, one of the goals of the class is to prepare them to take the written exam. But another goal is to get them ready to actually be an active member of the ham radio community, and memorizing pool questions doesn't contribute to that objective. So I'll try to do both -- cover concepts and review the actual questions. Another issue is the scheduling of the class. There are proponents of the weekend method -- cover the material in a day or so. While there are advantages to that, I favor multiple shorter sessions. I think that learning is much better in that environment, but in today's hectic world, getting people to commit to multiple sessions is problematic. We've decided on six session spread over three weeks. Maybe that was a fatal error; time will tell. I wish we still had something like the Novice license. I'd like to be able to get past the pressure of the written exam and get prospective hams some real experience so they understand what I'm babbling about in class. For example, you can lecture about repeaters, but if the students have actually *used* a repeater, they have a whole different understanding of what you're saying. 73, Steve KB9X |
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