I like to hear of students who have had a good experience with teachers. I
started teaching lace in the early 1970s, I knew little and had to work had to
keep ahead of my students. Being a teacher by profession I started by
arranging patterns, I did not have many - they were like gold dust then - into
a stuctured course. I then found that the other teachers, of other crafts at
the centre, would ask students what they would like to make and find suitable
patterns for them to work. As I had had not experience of adult education,
only school teaching, I thought this was what I should do and changed. The
following year I was taken to task, very politely, by two maths teachers who
had experienced the different systems and they agreed that the structured
course was by far the better, as second to start learning didn't know what she
didn't know and could not ask for it so that she could learn all the
techniques. I then revised all my teaching schemes and built up a file of
patterns and teaching notes covering all the major techniques in the English
laces and have found my students prefer to follow them. I'm not rigid about it
and I always say they are welcome to change laces or do any other patterns at
any time but most work throught the schemes knowing that they will end up by
being able to make almost any pattern they like and have a good chance of
drafting paterns and even designing.

Happy lacemaking

Alex

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