Three tips to PERSONALIZE your next learning experience

I have a beloved professor from college. 

He was the professor who welcomed first-semester freshmen into the AgEd major with NO BACKGROUND in FFA at all with open arms. 

He was the professor who encouraged me throughout undergrad as I did observation after observation and lesson after lesson.

He is also the professor who encouraged me to get my Masters and gave me an assistantship that led to getting my degree paid for, a paid instructor role and a Grad School teaching award. 

I also didn’t listen to him. 

I vividly remember being in one of my teaching methods classes and this professor was a stickler on the strategy of “Not smiling until Christmas”

Those of you who know, know. If you don't, basically it means that when school starts in the fall it is important to be stoic, solemn, and strict to get the kids to respect you. And then after a few months of “laying down the law,” you can loosen up around Christmas and “smile” again.

Well, hello my name is Sarah Nerswick and I am a joker. 

I am a middle child, and if you have ever seen a TikTok about the oldest, middle, and little siblings I fit the middle child demeanor to a tee. 

If you aren’t a middle child, here are some characteristics: Rebellious, Social, Easy Going, Attention Seeker, Prone to Levity. 

And you are telling me I need to be STOIC. Seriously?

When I yell the only thing that can hear me are dogs because my high-pitched voice just gets pitchier. 

This advice just doesn’t work with my DNA, my upbringing, and who I am at my core. 

So, I threw it out. 

And I think that this is advice we don’t hear a lot in the education field. The advice to “take it or leave it”. Sometimes advice is given as an absolute solution. 

And if you are like me, we don’t subscribe to “absolute advice” We know that absolutes are “a value or principle which is regarded as universally valid…without relation of other things.” 

And if we said “don’t smile until Christmas” is universally regarded then a class clown, always here for a laugh girly like me should be able to turn on the facade of a Buckingham Palace guard in a jiffy. 

When you go into a learning experience (maybe that is a grad school class, a school-dictated PD experience, or even a conference you pay to go to like Germinate Conference) it is important to focus on YOU. And have a filter to help you decide what advice to take and what to throw away. 

Here are three tips to PERSONALIZE your next learning experience

1️⃣ All Me Mindset

Does this sound selfish, maybe? And I’m willing to go to bat saying that you should be selfish when in a learning experience. If you are at a conference, class, or session and are only concerned about taking everything the presenter says you will take your focus off of the point of learning: Improving yourself, your craft, and your skills. 

When you step into a class, absolutely you want to hear new perspectives and be open to listening to people who think differently from you. That is what makes life and the world so beautiful. You can be kind and considerate when learning while still DECIDING what advice to take into your classroom. 

➡️If the class is all about integrating AI into your classroom and it is forbidden in your school system, you probably don’t need to focus on implementing this new content into your classes.

➡️If the class is all about integrating automatic waterers in your greenhouse and you only have raised beds in your program, you probably don’t need to go out and buy all the things they suggest.

Go into your next learning experience with an “All Me” mindset. Walk into that class saying to yourself “I am going to learn, be open-minded and choose what works for me”

2️⃣Do what suits you

This is tough advice for me to take. When I go to conferences I wanna hang out with my friends (can you blame me? Ag Teachers are so cool). And that makes me tend to want to do what everyone else is doing. Meaning I might go to a nursery/landscape CDE session just because my bestie is there, instead of the Agriscience session which would be much more beneficial for me. 

When in a learning experience, do what suits you. 

I’ve recently said “I hope no one at Germinate Conference has the same experience”

And I truly hope that rings true. I want every Germinate attendee to choose what suits them. 

If that means only going to the live sessions, amazing!

If that means only watching the classroom strategy sessions, cool!

If that means focusing solely on how to increase leadership and autonomy in students, go for it!

Don’t feel pressured by peers, friends, or even what you “think” you should do. Do what suits you at this moment!

3️⃣ Take what you need, and throw away the rest

This is the easy advice to take. Like we learned about “Don’t smile until Christmas” it is ok to say NO to advice you are given.

You better believe there is plenty of advice I have heard in conferences, grad school classes, and even conversations with my AgEd buddies I threw right in the trash.

It is totally valid to say “Good for you, not for me”.

This is YOUR learning experience. This is YOUR life. This is YOUR career. 

You get to choose what to try out. And even if you do try something out and it doesn’t work you can throw it away later. Or maybe you got advice as a newbie teacher that you couldn’t even fathom taking until Year 5. It’s totally ok to pick up advice later in life!

Our mission for G&G is to always learn. We hope you also choose to continue to learn throughout your career. We also hope you focus on yourself when you do!

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How to make personal development personal again