Current location - Education and Training Encyclopedia - University rankings - What does a teaching assistant do?
What does a teaching assistant do?
What does a teaching assistant do? Let's take a look:

Responsibilities of teaching assistants:

1. Assist the lecturer to maintain classroom discipline.

2. Be responsible for communicating with the teacher before class.

3. Listen to the lecturer's arrangement and actively cooperate with the lecturer's teaching work and daily management.

4. Be familiar with the course content, enrich teaching and improve personal teaching ability.

5. Collect and feedback students' opinions and suggestions.

6, complete other work assigned by the leadership.

The requirements for teaching assistants are:

1, lively and cheerful, good at communicating with people.

2. Have good learning acceptance.

3. At least 18 years old and above.

4. Strong organization and coordination ability and analytical judgment ability.

5. Love the teaching profession and have a strong sense of responsibility.

Expand:

What is a teaching assistant?

Teaching assistants belong to the lowest rank of university teachers' titles, and they are junior titles among university teachers below lecturers. In principle, teaching assistants cannot give lectures alone, nor can they teach all the courses of a subject. They should follow the lecturer or professor to correct their homework and assist in teaching.

Generally speaking, teaching assistants are all graduates in the same field (note: not necessarily from the same institution), some of them are part-time graduate students in master's or doctoral programs, and of course some of them are employed. In some schools, if you want to be promoted to lecturer, professor and associate professor, you must first be a teaching assistant.

In addition, the rank of teachers' professional titles from low to high is teaching assistant, lecturer, associate professor and professor.