Dear all,
during a recent training course (not a SWC, but we used many of its
techniques while showing how to use few software for analysis), we had many
trainers and some of them had an approach to exercises that I found
strange. After the course we discussed that, since I was interested in
their point of view.

The lesson was something like that: less than 1 hour of explanation, then
exercises were presented and the students had 1 hour or a bit more to
complete them. Using colored stickers, students could attract our attention
when they needed help.

I was a bit skeptic about this approach: the students had no clue about the
content and the format of the input file provided, some of the steps
required knowledge about a couple of bugs in the software UI, and there was
no explanation on the expected output (or on the meaning of the output,
when there was more than one result). Also, given the length of the session
there was no way to adjust their pace: few finished almost all the
exercises, some were stuck at the first one and so on.

However, another trainer pointed out that in this way the students were
forced to think about the problems they were facing and to ask for help.

In my opinion, while error messages or wrong results are good for learning
(i.e. by showing an error message it is possible to explain the importance
of reading them to understand the problem, while running a software with
wrong settings is useful to introduce new parameters and options), I found
that frustration may be the most probable outcome.
Also, explaining the correct usage of a (bugged) software to each single
person that asks for help may be a waste of time.

Since the strategy of splitting the presentation in short chunks, exercise
often nad build from previous results is something I fell more familiar, I
would like to know your opinions about that.

Thanks in advance for your help.

Best,
Giuseppe
--
Adjunct professor - International Master's degree in Bioinformatics
Post-doctoral Research Fellow - Biocomputing Group
University of Bologna, Italy
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