• The Scientist by Richard Grant

    Life and Times of a permanently bemused post-postdoc. Nature Network's answer to the paparazzi.

    • De do do do, de da da da

      Monday, 04 Jun 2007 - 21:35 UTC

      Someone wrote to our ‘academics’ mailing list just now,

      I’m behind in my email, but I noticed that Biochemistry at USyd got a poor mention in yesterday’s Column 8.

      My reply:

      Do you mean this bit ?

      “Further on the subject of “actually, like, you know” etc (Column 8, for some days), we warn exponents of sloppy discourse that some listeners are not only appalled, but keeping notes. “In first-year medicine at Sydney Uni a couple of years ago,” recalls Belinda Errington, of Mortdale, “a nervous rookie lecturer managed to say ‘basically’ 94 times and ‘essentially’ 63 times within one hour. Biochemistry is still fundamentally boring, though.” With lecturers like that, it’s hardly surprising."

      There’s a serious point hidden in there. I lost count of the number of ’um’s a guest speaker said during his preamble. As far as I can see, there is no formal training for lecturers or researchers in giving lectures or seminars, and the failure to speak clearly and articulately in front of hundreds of people never gets addressed. In the School we do at least get Honours Students to give talks, and start training them from then, but I suspect most of us have had no formal training, no chance to have someone sit down with us and say “you need to /must not do such-and-such” and then have another go at it.

      And then we get to the stage where we’re too busy for training courses.

      What do you think?

      Last updated: Monday, 04 Jun 2007 - 21:35 UTC

      • Comments

        • Date:
          Tuesday, 05 Jun 2007 - 01:10 UTC
          Richard Grant said:

          Update. Someone replied to the list with the following:

          “Ignoring the issues of nervousness which very likely caused the overuse of certain words by a new lecturer I agree that there is a fundamental point here raised by Richard and the student. Training is required in how to teach at university level as well as at school level then students would not have the perception that topics are boring if a more appropriate and student centred teaching approach was used. Ask vet science academics who all must now hold a teaching qualification. Their clinical pathology course originally perceived as boring by students is now a very popular course because a change in teaching approach was used which was a more engaging approach for students.”

          So, do the rest of you have any mechanisms in place to train lecturers and researchers in giving talks?


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