Easily Distracted | Red Herrings Overboard
1. A lecture is not the right vehicle for problematizing a subject,
exploring the finer points of scholarly debate on a particular issue,
or indulging in the kinds of qualifiers and asides that are a part of
scholarly writing in many fields. There might be a moment in a lecture
where a student’s question or comment catalyzes a useful digression
along these lines. You might build a lecture around describing two
major competing schools of thought. But a lecture is a compressed
format that requires clear, declarative statements. I know this was the
first lesson I struggled to learn coming out of graduate school,
because I felt like boiling issues down to some core principles was
committing some kind of intellectual sin. Discussion is a good format
for muddying the waters, lecture is not.
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