Tag: International Baccalaureate

  • What I Think Makes Good Teaching

    Good teaching starts with a well-qualified teacher, naturally. But qualifications alone aren’t enough. For me, great teaching also depends on a healthy dose of self-confidence, which comes from knowing your subject inside and out and having planned lessons that are engaging, relevant, and well-structured. When you’ve put the work into preparation, confidence follows—and that confidence can make all the difference in the classroom.

    Confidence comes from careful planning and preparation as much as from self-belief.

    Another essential? Students who show up. Regular attendance is the bedrock of progress, and while life happens—visas, weddings, funerals, even pandemics—students who are there for (almost) every lesson give themselves the best chance to succeed.

    In terms of tools, I don’t need a flashy setup. A whiteboard, projector, and laptop are all I ask for. These basics let me bring the lesson to life with PowerPoint slides, the occasional YouTube video, and of course, whatever ends up scribbled (er… written carefully and neatly) on the white board during class discussions.

    One thing I emphasize with my students is the importance of creating personalized class notes. I’m a firm believer in hardback notebooks, rulers, highlighters, boxes, lines, and diagrams. There’s something uniquely effective about the tactile process of writing and organizing notes by hand—it helps students make the material their own.

    To keep the learning process on track, I use multiple-choice tests to quickly gauge how well students have grasped the content or a concept. These aren’t for grades—they’re to answer one question: Can we move on, or do I need to reteach something?

    Finally, a good textbook is invaluable. Students can use it to reinforce what we learn in class or catch up if life interrupts their learning. Real life has a way of doing that, and having a reliable resource at home makes all the difference in staying on course.

    So, for me, good teaching is about balance: confidence, preparation, flexibility, and keeping things practical and straightforward. It’s not about perfection—it’s about making sure the students learn. It doesn’t happen because of luck or wishing or hoping. Good teaching comes from hard work.


  • What is ‘The Collection’?

    As most IB Diploma Psychology teachers will know, a new Subject Guide will be published in mid-February, 2025. ‘The Collection’ is a set of books / teaching materials created to meet teachers’ every need for this new course:

    • IB Diploma Psychology – Subject outlines
    • IB Diploma Psychology – The Textbook
    • IB Diploma Psychology – The complete set of Powerpoint presentations
    • IB Diploma Psychology – Homework revision questions
    • IB Diploma Psychology – The internal assessment
    • IB Diploma Psychology – Ten mock examinations with model answers
    • IB Diploma Psychology – 70 multiple choice tests
    • IB Diploma Psychology – The extended essay
    • IB Diploma Psychology – The glossary of psychology vocabulary
    • IB Diploma Psychology – The 150 essential research studies
    • IB Diploma Psychology – Success at high school and college

    A new Subject Guide means a lot of very time-consuming work for DP teachers on top of their already-full schedules. Tom Coster has created The Collection to save DP Psychology teachers’ time (and summer vacations).

    The Textbook – covers the entire syllabus and also has sections on the Examinations and the Internal Assessment. Available in print or eBook format from Amazon.

    The complete set of powerpoint presentations – covering every aspect of the new syllabus including the assessments. These presentations are closely aligned with The Textbook. These are straightforward .ppt files so they can be edited by teachers using Windows or Apple computers.

    Homework revision questions – a complete set of homework writing tasks that students can work on independently through the 2 year course or teachers can set these as regular homework writing activities – perfect for exam revision.

    The Internal Assessment – a book (print or eBook, from Amazon) that describes in detail the IA requirements, gives advice from an experienced moderator’s perspective, and presents 16 high-quality examples of the Internal Assessment activity.

    It’s all here. Everything, and I mean EVERYTHING, the IBDP teacher needs to start teaching the new Subject Guide.

    Ten mock examinations with model answers – a book (print or eBook, from Amazon) with TEN complete examinations (Papers 1 and 2 for the SL & HL students and Paper 3 for the HLs). AND there are model/high-scoring answers for all questions in all 10 examinations

    70 multiple choice tests – multiple choice tests (30 questions in each) assessing knowledge and understanding of every aspect of the new course. MCQ tests mean whole topics can be assessed quickly and thoroughly answering the question, ‘have the students learnt the previous topic and so can we move on to the next topic now?’

    Subject Outlines Whenever a new course is created, teachers must submit a new Subject Outline to their DP Coordinator detailing the hours for each topic, how TOK, CAS and International mindedness will be integrated… Tom Coster has created two FREE (downloadable) Curse Outlines with different approaches to teaching the course. Download them both, read them, choose the one that’s right for you and your students, edit it to suit you and your school – and submit to your DPC – job done!

    The Extended Essay – the Extended Essay Syllabus has also been updated for Septemebr 2025, and this book tells it all – requirements, assessment criteria, how to manage the research and writing process. The book includes 100 possible research questions each with a suggested essay outline. And there’s an example of a complete and high-scoring essay.

    The glossary of psychology vocabulary – the new syllabus requires students to be fluent in ‘psychology’, which means to know and be able to use psychology-specific vocabulary. This book contains about 1000 psychology terms, designed in subjects/topics so that as student’s learn the Biological approach, they can also learn the Biological approach’s vocabulary.

    150 essential research studies – outlines of the 150 most essential research studies in psychology, with each outline including a brief critical thinking section. Psychological knowledge is based on scientific research. Students should know and refer to research when discussing theories and claims about behavior.

    How to succeed at high school and college – a detailed and practical, step-by-step guide on how to excel in high school and college. From attending every lesson to creating and curating a comprehensive set of class notes to preparing for and writing exams… this is THE book that we all wish we had when we started high school. No-nonsense, simple, clear advice.

    Click on the links to find these books on Amazon and use Amazon’s Look Inside feature to see more about each book.