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Make 鈥檈m laugh: why university teaching needs humour

First international conference on how jokes can improve teaching in higher education was inspired by a lecturer鈥檚 drab college course

Published on
May 23, 2024
Last updated
July 26, 2024
A fly with a human mouth, laughing
Source: Getty Images montage

Sitting in a painfully dull biochemistry class as an聽undergraduate, Alex Koon often imagined how he聽would have pepped up the lecture with a聽few jokes.

Twenty years later 鈥 with a聽PhD, a聽postdoc and several lectureships under his belt 鈥 the Hong Kong-based scientist is聽making good on his vow to聽bring laughter into the classroom wherever possible.

On 24聽May, he is also co-hosting the , with speakers from the US, Europe and Asia talking at the event about how to enhance university teaching with comedy.

鈥淭hose lectures were just terrible 鈥 the professor would usually photocopy a textbook, project the transparency to the front of the class and read it line by聽line. My soul would leave my body,鈥 recalled Dr聽Koon, a senior lecturer in the Chinese University of Hong Kong鈥檚 School of Life Sciences, on his uninspiring lectures at a leading US university.

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Although his research into neurological diseases using fruit flies might not exactly lend itself to comedy, Dr聽Koon said he was always keen to plant gags, wordplay or light-hearted anecdotes聽in his teaching.


Campus resource:聽How to use humour to boost student understanding and creativity


鈥淚t鈥檚 sometimes said the best humour is spontaneous 鈥 and maybe it is 鈥 but, as educators, we don鈥檛 need the best humour. We聽just need something that connects,鈥 he said, adding: 鈥淭here鈥檚 nothing wrong with planning jokes well ahead, which is聽what most comedians聽do.鈥

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For instance, he will illustrate his microbiology class on gram staining 鈥撀燼 process involving the dye safranin, which identifies bacteria 鈥 by making a link to the saffron used in Michelin-starred restaurants to flavour food. 鈥淭hat safranin-saffron pun isn鈥檛 a聽laugh-out-loud gag, but it鈥檚 enough to get students to remember it,鈥 said Dr聽Koon, whose classes also compare amino acids to Disney characters. 鈥淲hen students can see these links, it makes them motivated to聽learn.鈥

Even a joke that fails to land can be a useful talking point, Dr聽Koon continued. 鈥淚t聽doesn鈥檛 need to be the funniest joke 鈥 just something that is humorous and applicable to the teaching,鈥 he聽said.

In the age of remote learning and recorded lectures, however, humour can be a risky thing, admitted Dr聽Koon. 鈥淒ark humour and even sarcasm might work for a stand-up comedian, but it can often offend students 鈥 you don鈥檛 really need to take those risks,鈥 he said, adding that slapstick and toilet humour were also dicey territory.

鈥淎nalogies, puns and absurdity are generally the best way forward,鈥 he聽added.

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Having won a HK$1.6聽million (拢162,000) grant to examine how humour might improve university teaching in Hong Kong, it seems that Dr聽Koon鈥檚 brand of comedy is gaining more than laughs.

鈥淚 was surprised that jokes could get funding, but why not if it makes university teaching more effective?鈥 he said.

jack.grove@timeshighereducation.com

POSTSCRIPT:

Print headline: Funny stuff helps to lift a lecture

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Reader's comments (1)

Humour pedagogy sounds great but the risk is that a joke or pun can easily be misinterpreted or taken out of context. Something to be wary of.

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