Effective Lecture Strategies Lecturalgia: painful lecture; cause of morbidity for both teachers and learners Lectures: promote student learning when used correctly Ⅰ. Remember the Attention Span of Students A. Students’ attention —the beginning of the lecture to ten minutes: increases —tenth to fifteenth minutes: (1) (1)______ —during lectures: (2) (2)______ B. Prompts to reawaken your attentiveness 1. Organizational prompts: — (3) main points (3)______ —pausing for questions or discussions —outlining key points via the white board or PowerPoint 2. (4) : using appropriate humor, anecdotes, stories and factoids to flesh out concepts. (4)______ Ⅱ. Incorporate (5) to Reinforce Key Concepts (5)______ A. Reasons: Students do not learn much when learning (6) . (6)______ B. Ways to do it: —group work —one-minute papers —think-pair-share activities —discussions Ⅲ. Segment the Lecture into Smaller Blocks A. Meaning: try dividing your class time into several mini-lectures that are interspersed with discussions, worksheets, group activities, etc. B. Benefits: — (7) (7)______ —engages students and increases learning. Ⅳ. Make Course Material Relevant A. Meaning: communicate teaching material in a way that students can relate to (8) (8)______ B. Hodgson’s Example: —Extract from the lecture notes: clear and vivid —What the lecturer actually said: trying to (9) what happens (9)______ —Student’s recall: thinking what happens while listening C. Ways to arouse students’ interest: — (10) (10)______ —the medium of a vivid example or illustration