Lecturing Doesn't Work
Mike Hawkins
Author, Speaker, Executive Coach, President Alpine Link Corp, Chairman Comprobe LLC
Have you ever lectured your kids, students, friends, or employees? You’re probably saying “yes, of course I have.” We all have. But why do we do it? Is it effective? No. Studies on learning confirm what we all experience when being lectured. Whether training, teaching, coaching, or correcting someone, telling people what they did wrong, what they need to do, or how to do something isn’t the best approach. Telling actually has the least retention and impact of all learning methods.
When you are doing the talking, especially for extended periods, is your audience really listening? How do you know? How do you know they aren’t thinking about something else? Or doing something else if they are remote? You don’t. In fact, if you assume anything you should probably assume they aren’t fully attentive. Studies on people’s attention find that many people’s attention span is only a couple of minutes. After a couple of minutes, people’s minds wander.
The only way you know if your audience is engaged is if they are actively involved. The only way they are actively involved is if they are participating and talking. How do you get people involved, engaged, participating, and talking? Perhaps the most powerful and simple way is to ask questions. When you ask questions, people pay attention. They start thinking and if requested, they know they will have to express their ideas and understanding.?
You can make any point and share any thought through a monolog or a dialog. On any topic, you can lecture or have a discussion. As a leader, parent, teacher, trainer, or coach, you get to decide. The difference is that when you start a dialog, people get enrolled in the conversation in contrast to being bystanders to it. They are participants in the content rather than spectators to it.?
Discussions require that people turn on their brains. So, when helping someone learn in some way, why wouldn’t you start with a question? This is often referred to as the Socratic method of teaching. Asking questions not only helps the teacher know what their students know, but also helps the students know for themselves what they know. The process of answering questions increases learning which includes increasing self-awareness.
You may be thinking that having a conversation makes total sense for one-on-one interactions, but isn’t possible in a group setting or presentation. Actually, having conversations with groups, even large groups, is still possible. Great presenters and meeting hosts get their audiences engaged in almost the same way as in one-on-one interactions. They might not always ask people to respond verbally, but they ask questions that make people think and react within themselves.
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Technology also enables presenters and meeting facilitators to ask questions that get people thinking as well as capture people’s answers. Interactive polling applications like Mentimeter allow even large audiences to provide their answers and thoughts. Additionally, technology allows anonymous input when anonymity is important.?
Listed below is a highly interactive approach to presenting a learning topic or training you might consider if/when given the opportunity. Technology can also be incorporated into this, minimally or extensively, to increase interactivity to whatever level is desired.
Interactive approach to teaching or leading a training session:????
Give these ideas a try instead of lecturing next time you are in a position to share your knowledge and see how much more people learn when they are directly engaged in the learning content.
PDF version of this article: https://alpinelink.com/docs/Lecturing_Doesnt_Work.pdf.?