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Teaching in the Church


by Kandice Carnahan

Dear Sisters,
With the recent reorganization of the Gig Harbor Stake Relief Society Presidency, my responsibilities have changed. As part of my new stewardship, I am over education/teaching. A few weeks ago we had stake leadership training for those women who have leadership positions in the wards, instructors, and sisters who have humanitarian responsibilities. My focus during this training session was teaching in Relief Society. Initially, we discussed how a teacher can prepare for a lesson.  The following information can be applied to any teaching position, not just Relief Society instructors. Below is a brief summary of some of what I presented during this training. I hope that what I have shared will be food for thought, and it can help you to consider how you approach lesson preparation and teaching in the future.

*Be Prepared*

Great teaching begins with great preparation.  Our goal is to change lives rather than just pass the time.
*Elder Oaks notes that today “teachers can down load bales of information on any subject.” But the result of such research can be “stacks of supplementary material [that] impoverish rather than enrich, because they can blur students’ focus on the assigned principles and draw them away from prayerfully seeking to apply those principles in their own lives.”

How much time should I spend preparing my lesson? A guideline that is used is to spend twice as much time in preparation as you do teaching, at least the first time through the curriculum.
Start preparing early so that ideas have time to simmer. That percolating gives teachers a chance to see or hear or read or experience something that triggers a prompting from the Spirit that they can be used to improve their lesson.

Does preparation get in the way of teaching by the Spirit? Elder Oaks said, “If we slavishly tie ourselves to our own preparation or to someone else’s wisdom or text—our teaching is not of God.” Sometimes if we over-prepare it can get in the way of inspiration. However, “Preparation is a prerequisite to teaching by the Spirit.” So following the Spirit doesn't mean winging it.

Focus on two or three doctrines rather than trying to cover every verse in every chapter. One of the keys to great lessons is to narrow breadth and allow for depth. Elder Richard G. Scott emphasized this. “Remember, your highest priority is not to get through all the material if that means that it cannot be properly absorbed. Do what you are able to do with understanding….Determine…what is of highest priority.”