In our new "how can we help you?" thread, a reader asks:
As we approach the next academic year, I'm wondering: do you read all of your assigned texts in advance of each class? And if so, in what level of depth?
I'm in the habit of reading each text very closely. As a junior philosopher, I'm anxious about getting "caught out" in the classroom. But sometimes I read / hear of philosophers doing only 30-60 minutes of prep per class. And surely one can't properly digest 1-2 papers in that time…?
I do, but for classes I've taught many times where I'm using the same readings that I have before, it's usually just a quick refresher. For courses that I'm prepping for the first time, I read everything very carefully before each class in putting lectures together–and given my course load (normally 3/3), this usually takes a full day of prep. But I also know people who do things very differently, prepping all of their lectures before the semester even begins (I don't do this in part because I set aside summer and winter breaks for rest and research).
What does everyone else do?
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