[Sca-cooks] Teaching in the SCA
K C Francis
katiracook at hotmail.com
Thu Apr 24 14:31:32 PDT 2008
Greetings,
Many years ago I was convinced by an A&S autocrat that I could teach a class so I did a walk through of my camp and shared all my camping 'secrets'. I now have the West teaching award, the Western Lily. I teach inkle weaving, Roman wire & bead jewelry, the camping class, and some classes on cookery among other things. Getting over the fear of feeling unworthy to share what I know was the big first step. After that it was easy.
As has been mentioned already, the West has three big teaching events. Two 1 day Collegiums at schools where most are lecture and non-messy hands on classes. And the camping A&S event where almost anything goes. Lots of local groups sponser their own collegium/A&S events as well, so there are many opportunities to teach and learn. I've even taught at local meetings.
I was at Urtatim's cookery class in the 100 degree heat. A stove and picnic table in a sunshade were all it took to do the class at this outdoor event.
Working closely with the autocrat is important to be able to plan well for a class. I was not sure about teaching a jewelry class outdoors on a flimsy folding table but after making my requirements clear, a sturdy table was provided and the class went fine. I ask that my inkle class be just before lunch so people can continue weaving beyond the end of the class time if they want. If the class periods are short, I ask for 2 periods. If my clean up is lengthy I ask for the last period of the day so as to not impact the next teacher.
My advice:
Be comfortable with your subject
Be prepared (handouts/materials)
Work with the autocrat for site and time requirements
Relax and have fun
Katira al-Maghrebiyya
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Back to work after baby–how do you know when you’re ready?
http://lifestyle.msn.com/familyandparenting/articleNW.aspx?cp-documentid=5797498&ocid=T067MSN40A0701A
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