But I don’t’ have TIME!

We realize that all this stuff takes a LOT of work, and it’s time you may not think you have.  But we're actually lucky in that we can usually skip much of the most time-intensive phase:  the front-end analysis.  That's because as a professor, your front-end analysis is largely done for you:  When you're asked to teach a class, someone somewhere has already decided that there's a problem, that the solution to that problem involves instruction, and so on.  We've just cut out a lot of work right there!

But there's still a lot of work to be done. That doesn’t mean you can’t do it---it just means you can’t do it unless you "leverage your person-hours".  That is, whenever possible, use or adapt existing materials rather than create your own from scratch. 

Most professors, when it comes to developing instruction, are time-wasteful in a way they would never accept in their research careers.  Instructors are forever “reinventing the wheel” by developing all of their lecture notes and many of their transparencies from scratch, when they could be adapting (not stealing!) materials from the web, colleagues, or publishers.  By adopting a “leveraging” mindset, you can reclaim dozens of hours and every hour you save is another hour gained to do the other work we advocate.

Tips for developing instructional materials

Tips for developing student materials

Tips for developing testing materials

Other ways to leverage your person hours:

Take a long-term view

It's also important to take a long-term view (as the saying goes, Rome wasn’t built in a day).  Improve classes in small steps, and before you know it you’ll have made numerous tiny improvements to different areas of the system.  Remember that any time you make the slightest improvement in any area, you're improving the entire system.  

Tiny improvements here and there may not seem like much, but incremental improvements add up over time to make your course superlative.