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jlees | 10 years ago

I did the same for my classes last year - beginner/intermediate Python, SQL, web development at a part-time night school for adults. Wrote a long detailed tutorial and let the students self-pace, with a bit of an intro at the start of most classes. Then the TA and I jumped in to help when students needed it, mostly by looking over their shoulders - I like the post-it idea.

A couple of issues with this approach:

- Make sure your material is good. Bugs in the material led to me repeating myself 1:1 a lot, and having to pause the class occasionally. Which leads to:

- Pausing the class is hard! People are at different stages of the material, so it's hard to find a good stopping point, though I did it a few times when something was either not resonating, or folks were going too fast and I sensed they were copy-pasting rather than fully understanding the point.

- The solution to this is to have 'core' material and then 'extra credit' stuff, but people feel behind if they haven't done all the material; nobody's happy only doing the core. In general, fear of "not keeping up" was a big issue in my class.

- Finally, some folks do learn differently, and you have to account for that. I spent a lot of time 1:1 with a couple particular students who weren't getting the tutorial format. Another felt like class was just "doing homework" and dropped out. I got around this by sending videos in a flipped-classroom approach between classes, but my students didn't have a lot of spare time and I couldn't rely on them doing anything outside class.

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