Re: Student wants advice about professor from Nurse Educatiors
I suggest that 2 of you go talk with her (two is enough so one brain will remember what the other doesn't, she won't be as intimidated as if everyone lands in her office, and the two can be witnesses for each other as to what is said). The concerned students could "elect" who is to go talk to her.
Tell her what the problems are:
As I see them, from what you wrote, they are:
1. she talks too fast
2. her handouts aren't adequate
3. she doesn't accept questions until the end
4. she's resistant to writing on the board
Tell her that! As a new, inexperienced instructor, she's harried. I suspect she makes each lecture during the few days before class, and it's tremendously time-consuming. She feels pressure to get through a topic during the time alloted in a class. But, she's not remembering that getting through things isn't helpful if people aren't understanding what she's saying. I bet she's nervous. I also bet she wants y'all to succeed and learn, and she wants to be an effective instructor.
Ask her to...
1. slow down both in speed of speaking and in drive to complete a topic
2. provide an outline with more detail (she could just do some variation of the notes she's speaking from, deleting the things she wants just for herself--I've done that and it works well)
3. accept questions as they jump into people's minds, even if the topic doesn't get finished that day
4. write important things on the board if they aren't on the outline--they could be on the outline though
5. anything else you want her to do
Are any in your group teachers? Most nursing instructors don't have education in teaching. Maybe some of you could help her!
By all means don't go to her boss about this unless you've done all you can to work with her to get what you need. You're her clients, though, paying her salary, and have a right to an education that is what you need it to be.
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