Four Key Questions About
Large Classes
Here's a set of questions about large classes that I'm thinking we ought to be discussing more than we are.
1. How
many students make it a large class? Teachers who do and don’t teach large classes have their opinions, but
it’s not clear who has the right answer. Often faculty views seem related to
the size of their college or university. I once consulted at a small liberal
arts college where I was asked to sign a petition against classes enrolling
more than 35 students. At about the same time, I saw a list of the 10 courses
most often taken by beginning students at my R1 university. Only two—English
composition and physical education—enrolled fewer than 30 students, and most
had many more.
More important
than faculty opinions are their perceptions. If you think it’s a large class,
chances are good you’ll teach it that way. I’ve observed classes with 35
students being taught as if the enrollment were closer to 350, and I’ve seen
very large classes that looked and felt like they were being taught to 30
students.
2. Who
should be taking large classes?
We know who typically takes them—students in their first two years of college.
The largest classes at most institutions are introductory-level survey courses
that fulfill general education requirements, gateway courses to majors, or
first courses in a degree program. In those classes, beginning students often
don’t know many or any of their classmates. These are the courses where the
most lecturing occurs and where it’s very difficult for faculty to establish
relationships with their students. How well do these courses meet the learning
needs of beginning students? Do we ever we consider the possibility of offering
a large class to more experienced students who might be better equipped to cope
with these learning environments?
3. What
content is best suited for delivery in a big class? Of course, that’s a question best answered by those
who know the content. But I’m not sure it’s a question we ever discuss. Is it
foundational material, those disciplinary building blocks? Is it material that
students can master on their own without much teacher involvement? Is it
content that’s not really up for discussion? Is there more of the kind of
content that works in large classes in some fields than others?
4. Who
should be teaching the large classes? At many institutions, these introductory or first major courses are
traditionally considered less desirable teaching assignments. They are often
handed over to the new or beginning faculty who then work their way up to
teaching more highly prized courses, including those in their areas of
specialty.
Large classes are
more difficult to teach than small ones, especially if you’re committed to
active learning, classroom interaction, assignments that develop skills like
writing, and testing practices that promote thinking more than memorization.
They’re also more difficult because the classroom management issues grow right
along with class size. So, if these courses are more difficult to teach, should
they be assigned to those new to teaching and/or to the institution?
Are they good
places for adjunct, continuing contract faculty, or for teachers hired for the
express purpose of teaching them? Some think large classes are the perfect
venue for charismatic teachers, those who’ve mastered (and often relish) the
performance aspects of teaching. These are teachers who keep students attentive,
but how well do these dramatic styles promote deep learning and intellectual
skill development?
I’m pretty solidly
against big classes and the kinds of learning experiences they typically
provide, but I’m also a realist, so this post is raising questions about the
best ways to deal with them. Do we examine our use of large classes as
critically and creatively as we should? A lot of what we do in higher
education, we do because that’s what everyone else is doing. I think large
classes are a case in point. They’re a fact of life in higher education, and
their existence is not something most of us are in a position to change, but
many decisions about how they’re taught are under our control. What we decide
isn’t trivial. It impacts the learning experiences of large numbers of
students.
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