A typical classroom
The following is an computer-generated summary of the video transcript.
So I quickly sneaked into this classroom pretty much. I came here for an event one time for a scholarship. Chairs are teachers or professors usually put their computer and the screen of their power point on the TVs. If not, they always communicate their lessons through the white board. Ah, lot of the opportunities that students have here is really great. These classrooms are extremely expensive, and not to mention that it's a really good environment here in this building and you learn a lot. So one thing I do want to say is the experience here is literally a discussion based class. Well, most of the classes that I took and meaning with that being said, pretty much teachers ask questions, they go through their lessons and they really, really want the students opinion. You are able tto raise her hand or just communicate with students around your desk and the group and pretty much discuss the topic that you're talking about in class. What your opinion is because your opinion really matters and the teacher really takes that feedback and elaborate it to the class. It's more of a sit down and discuss what you've learned and what you don't know as well the students. Sometimes it ranges from thirty, sometimes even up to one hundred students, depending on what class it is. For my Bible class, it was around, I believe, like fifty students. It wasn't that big of a class, but it was a pretty big class. The teacher is not going to remember your name unless you go to her office hours, which I truly recommend. I went to a lot of my professors, especially the ones where I wasn't getting a good grade in and talking to the professor's. You really get to see the inside of what they're trying to say since the teacher knows and what they know what they expect from you. That literally helps you because the teacher now remembers your face. Hell no that you care about the class enough to get a better grade by going to his office hours and trying to figure out the lesson even more.