대학원 조교 @ 버클리
GETTING STARTED
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Welcome to Teaching at Berkeley!
At any given time, approximately 1,600 GSIs are teaching on the campus. They lead discussion sections and labs in large enrollment courses; they guide student work in studios and stand-alone foreign language and reading and compositions courses. In these small-group settings, GSIs guide the intellectual growth of undergraduates by planning and executing section activities, mentoring students through research projects and paper writing, and evaluating and giving feedback on assignments, exams, and papers. No undergraduate leaves Berkeley without having been influenced by numerous GSIs.
As a GSI you play an indispensable role in shaping the undergraduate experience. When undergraduates come to Berkeley, they often find themselves in large courses and experience a degree of anonymity that can be overwhelming. The small-group setting of the section, lab, or studio enables students to be acknowledged and assisted as individuals in the learning process and to work in a learning community with their peers. Research shows that students learn more and have a greater chance of succeeding when they have one-on-one contact with instructors, when they have a chance to learn from peers, and when they actively apply what they are learning to meaningful and relevant problems and situations. You are the individual who will understand what students are learning and what they are not. You will be the person who will be able to determine what types of interventions are needed in order to motivate students and enhance the learning process. Simply put, your teaching is central to the learning process in any given course.
As a national leader in preparing graduate students for teaching, Berkeley is one of the few universities in the country that have a comprehensive policy on GSI mentoring (see summary of the policy's provisions for GSI preparation for teaching). This policy supports your professional development as a teacher and prepares you for the teaching you will do here at Berkeley and in future academic and nonacademic careers. Research suggests that graduate students who work on developing their skills as teachers have an easier time staying on track with their research as they pursue tenure as junior faculty.
The role of the GSI Teaching and Resource Center is to support your professional development as an instructor. In the first semester, you will be introduced to the fundamentals of teaching through the Center's Teaching Conference for GSIs and the semester-long 300-level course on teaching and learning offered by your department. You will also benefit from the Center's online course on professional standards and ethics that will lay the groundwork for your teaching for many years to come. The skills that you begin to develop in your first semester can be enhanced in future semesters through various programs offered by the Center such as workshops on teaching, research groups, individual consultations, classroom observation, and workshops on developing a teaching portfolio.
This online Teaching Guide is regularly updated with new materials to help you with your teaching. It supplements the print Teaching Guide for Graduate Student Instructors (available at the GSI Teaching and Resource Center) and the Teaching Conference for GSIs sponsored by the GSI Teaching and Resource Center. Together with these resources, the site is intended to support the needs of first-time GSIs while also providing valuable advice, materials, and links that you can use throughout your teaching at Berkeley and well beyond.
Taking the time to carefully prepare for the semester before classes begin will save you many headaches, reduce anxiety, help make the first day of section go smoothly, and decrease the amount of work you will have during the semester. In addition, undergraduates appreciate well-organized and informed GSIs.