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As much as I love teaching developmental psychology, there are some topics that prove challenging. At the top of that list is developmental theorists.
I joke with my students that the first chapter of all development textbooks is set up the same way. First, a few pages about how cool development is and why we should study it, followed by some overarching themes that make little sense out of context. Then, a chunk of pages about how a bunch of dead white guys (truly, not a woman or person of color in the bunch -- thanks, history) explain development. Finally, if the book hasn't already lost you, the rest of the chapter covers research methods.
I used to teach the chapter in order but, over time, have fallen into a nice rhythm that takes things a bit out of order. I expand those first few pages into the first two weeks, creating a contextual framework. Then, I leap over all but one of the theorists and spend a week on research methods.
Which leaves me with the rest of those dudes.
I've tried at least six different ways to tackle this content. First, I used a traditional lecture method, following up with a traditional (mostly multiple choice) assessment. You're probably not surprised (nor was I) that, after being tested on a big blob of theory, students really don't remember who's who for more than a few days beyond the test.
So, I changed the methodology, moving from Plan A to Plan B to Plan C....
You get the idea.
While each plan was an improvement over the one(s) that came before, none checked all the boxes. What I needed was a plan that made the theorists interesting and memorable (at least as much as possible). Selfishly, I also wanted something easy to grade. Lecture and multiple choice tests, which fulfilled the second criteria, did not meet the first. Creative projects, which fulfilled the first criteria, did not meet the second.
So, this semester, I tried something new (again). I assigned each student one of the theorists, making the student responsible for reading a section of Chapter 1, along with some narrated slides and any other resources they might want to use (including ChatGPT, as I'm working on finding its place in the classroom). Then, at some point in the semester, they'd dust off their notes, and begin the conversation about their assigned theorist. I'd facilitate, and create slides with the key points so everyone could access the basics about every theorist.
Read about one, learn about a bunch.
Yesterday was the fourth class we spent on this incarnation of learning about theorists, and it was about as wonderful as a lesson could get. In short order, my students were applying contemporary concepts to 20th century theorists, and we were having an actual conversation about what is among the most uninteresting topics in developmental psychology. We leaped from basic knowledge to application, weaving one into the other and developing a deeper understanding than any cursory reading of the text or classroom lecture could provide.
From my perspective, it was a huge win. And, while every single student was not completely engaged, most were, as evidenced by the connections they made and the questions they asked.
In the classroom, some days are a win, some days are not, and most fall in between. And so, when a win hits, we are wise to acknowledge it, but savor it as well.
And savor it I shall.