Be a Course Instructor

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Revision as of 00:14, 22 March 2022 by Kent.brockman (talk | contribs)
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Protospace thrives on members stepping up and being instructors.

Protospace can always use more instructors. Especially courses that gatekeep access to tools and the space:

New Members Orientation

Laser I: Basic Cutting and Engraving

Laser II: Trotec Course

Woodworking Tools 1: Intro to Saws

Basic CNC Wood Router

Woodworking Tools 2: Jointer, Thickness Planer, Drum Sander

Metal: Metal Cutting & Manual Lathe

Tormach: CAM and Tormach Intro

TODO: programatically generate list above from Spaceport

What do YOU get out of running classes?

Your Makerspace stays financially solvent

Members who use tools stick around longer. Members stick around = more recurring revenue

Students often pay money to access training. Protospace uses that money for tool repairs and even new tools. You made that happen!

Your Makerspace community uses tools better

Makerspaces with knowledgeable makers have tools use tools properly. Tools will break less, are maintained better and may even be actively improved by those that want more out of them.

Your network gets bigger and serendipitous

Protospace attracts a bunch of neat people. Running courses is a great way to meet many of them. This makes coming to space more fun and friendly.

Better yet, you're immediately in their good graces by helping clear them on a tool and making their projects a reality. The effects of reciprocity are real - maybe they can do something to help you that you don't know about until you meet them.

Your Makerspace gets cooler tools

Tools that no one uses can't justify the space they take up. Those tools end up falling into disrepair and end up being sold or junked.

By having a reliable and robust group of trainers and knowledge sharing, we can justify getting cool new tools because the training infrastructure is in place to teach members how to use it. Members who use tools will demand they stay around and in good working order.

Teaching makes you more knowledgeable

Teaching well requires a strong grasp of the subject. Forcing yourself to teach forces you to understand the subject better - simplifying your own understanding, articulating it to the less experienced, concocting new ways to describe ideas are all ways that deepen and broaden your understanding of a subject.

Every now and again, someone you trained will continue down the path you set them on and teach you something you didn't know. This has happened numerous times at Protospace already!

Your Makerspace gets better in ways we can't conceive of

Member training is an essential element to acquire new members and keep Protospace running as churn inevitably happens. Historically, training has fallen to a small group. That group is quite passionate about Protospace, which is why they do so much training. But those members have fun ideas for Protospace too. If they are stuck training courses, they have no energy doing another improvement - maybe they want to build or improve a tool we already have, contribute and setup a new tool or build an improvement to the space.

The more members that take on training, the lower the opportunity cost is for all members.

Ego boost

Nothing keeps down imposter syndrome like empowering a bunch of people to use a tool they never thought they could before. Not just anyone is capable of using said tool, let alone showing others how to.

Create a Class

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Create or Update a Course

A course

Common challenges, FAQs and solutions

Where can I access course materials?

Slidesets are available here on Protospace's Google Drive. Please try to keep up to date versions of slide sets here.

As of 2022-03-21, several slightly more up-to-date slide sets exist on the classroom computer.

OK, I'm interested in running a class - how do I get started?

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Running classes take a lot of time

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Life is hectic and I don't think I have time for this

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Teaching is its own skill

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Public speaking makes me nervous

This is natural. Unfortunately, the only way to get over this is to jump in. Fortunately, as you build positive experiences, these nerves will disappear over time. Here are some suggestions to make those first few times a positive experience:

  • Start by shadowing or co-instructing a course. Having a copilot takes the spotlight off you. You can also see how other folks do it and get comfortable
  • Book your first couple courses for a smaller audience. Load those courses with people you already know and are familiar with
  • Take a deep breath and speak slowly. Part of anxiety and nerves is the positive feedback loop between your heartbeat and your nerves. The faster your heartbeats, the more nervous you get, which causes your heart to beat faster, etc etc. Fortunately, this works in the reverse: take a deep breath to slow your heart down, which will help calm down your nerves.
  • Get comfortable with the material you are presenting. Being well prepared reduces nerves

What if a student is more knowledgeable than me?

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I don't feel qualified to run a class

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I don't want to deal with disruptive jerks that may be in my class

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This subject is too complicated to cover in one class

Reframe what you're teaching: You’re not here to train people to master a tool, you’re here to teach them how to safely operate a tool. You aren’t teaching them to cook, you’re teaching them how to operate the stove. It’s up to them to practice and experiment safely, and get better as they go. you're not trying to teach mastery here.

Students bailing or no-showing are a buzzkill

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I get rusty not having done a course for awhile

Do it regularly - even once every 2-3 months is great.

Students are missing prerequisite information

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Someone is using a tool that I need to run a class on

Classes take priority over projects. Politely let them know you're about to run a course on it and to finish up. If they give you any difficulty on that, contact a director.

Make it easy to run classes

Protospace is not-for-profit and relies on volunteers to operate. ANYTHING that reduces the barrier-to-entry and ongoing-costs for instructors should be prioritized over running classes. When we take care of instructors, classes and courses will follow.

Use existing course materials wherever possible

Existing course materials are available here. Existing course materials could extend to many things - a youtube video that's particularly good, an article, an animated gif that explains how something works or even a book.

It isn't cheating to use what already exists, either. Part of being a good teacher is curating good sources of information!

Using existing materials saves you from having to cover ground others already have. Instead, you can use your energy to answer questions, connect concepts, put your own spin on things or do hands-on practical demonstrations.

Shadowing and Co-instructing

Shadowing = Attending a course and seeing how it functions. You don't pay for these courses and you don't get certified from them.

Co-instructing = Attending a course to help answer questions and teach it, with half or the bulk of instructing going to the "primary instructor"

This is a great way to get exposed to teaching courses at Protospace if you have never done it before. It is also a great way to help others gets exposed so we can expand our roster of trainers.

Invite people to shadow or co-instruct courses that you are running or shadow/offer to co-instruct classes they are running. It makes the classroom sessions more collaborative, conversational and it’s a great way to demonstrate the quality of community at Protospace for those angling to get involved.

It also is a great way to make classes less tiring - having two people to field questions or explain concepts means twice as many chances to take a breather or drink your water.

Prioritize your comfort

Take breaks - 5 minute break for every 55 minutes is a good recommendation.

Drink water.

Don't do so many courses you burn out. Pick your cadence and stick to it. If you're willing to run one course a month, that's great! If you're willing to run once a quarter - that's also great! Beggars can't be choosers, and Protospace is the beggar here - pick what works for you, stick with it and encourage other members to fill in the gaps.

Encourage students to self-study

Good teachers inspire others to learn. Link people to training materials. You're a volunteer, classes at protospace are for the self-motivated.

Find what motivates people to self study:

  • Perhaps they have a project they are keen to do
  • Perhaps they are closer to knowing a subject than they think and a prompt of "This is actually pretty close to _____" is what they need
  • Perhaps they are daunted by how challenging or difficult a subject is and need a beginners guide with a beginners mind

And try to speak to those motivations that while you direct them to training resources.

Do classes online

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Run classes on your schedule

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How can Protospace support its instructors better?

If you have a way to improve the instructor experience, please shout about it on the forum

Keep the classroom and tools in good orderand ready to use.

Some ideas that have been suggested and/or require development: