How being a Teacher made me a better Game Master - D&D / TTRPG

Ойын-сауық

Teachers know a lot of things. Like tips on how to keep players engaged, for example. That's why we should always listen to teachers... No I'm not biased.
Join the discord here! / discord
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Sometimes I write adventures, you can find them for free here: corkboardsandcurio.wixsite.co...
www.drivethrurpg.com/browse.p...
Want to support me?
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Music used (KZread Audio Library License & Creative Commons) & assets:
The Plan's Working - Cooper Cannell
Dead Forest - Brian Bolger
Skeleton Dance - Myuu
A Fool's Theme - Brian Bolger
Song for Michael - Magic in the Other
Sprightly Pursuit - Cooper Cannell
Spiral Swirl effect by @Loopy Toons
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Timestamps
00:00 Intro
00:49 The Chaos problem
02:08 Warm ups and Cold Opens
04:28 The Magician
06:27 Tell, Show, Do, Apply
08:43 Outro

Пікірлер: 474

  • @TheADHDM
    @TheADHDM4 ай бұрын

    color coding the teacher perspective and the gm perspective with different color lights is mesmerizing

  • @corkboardsandcuriosities

    @corkboardsandcuriosities

    4 ай бұрын

    glad to hear it, because attempting to color grade nearly killed me hahahahah

  • @salmontan

    @salmontan

    4 ай бұрын

    ​@@corkboardsandcuriositiesI think you did great! But then teachers often are good at grading ;)

  • @Justadeathgod

    @Justadeathgod

    4 ай бұрын

    @salmontan or at structuring visuals. @corkboardsandcuriosities You did a good job, which program are you using?

  • @josec.6394

    @josec.6394

    4 ай бұрын

    I use colors to highlight important things like loot (magic items), traps, or certain actions the pcs are likely to take.

  • @joerutkowski3621

    @joerutkowski3621

    4 ай бұрын

    Ah shit, I just learned I’m colorblind

  • @mapcrow
    @mapcrow4 ай бұрын

    I am a college professor in game design and I’ve found a lot of cross over between teaching and GMing! I think that “magician mode” is something I’ve got to read more about too!! Wonderful video!! Cheers!!

  • @thomasjdurfee

    @thomasjdurfee

    4 ай бұрын

    Great video! I once did the reverse trick, using TTRPG in my education setting. I'm in university, and we wanted to make a reading club for our classmates to go over things that are not in our classes. I suggested we host a Session Zero to set norms, expectations, and boundaries. Very helpful tools!

  • @rafaeljoseph3951

    @rafaeljoseph3951

    4 ай бұрын

    Love your channel

  • @mutantmoth

    @mutantmoth

    4 ай бұрын

    I teach at a college as well, and I agree. There's so much crossover! I'm finding that teaching is helping my DMing and vice versa.

  • @timothygutierrez

    @timothygutierrez

    4 ай бұрын

    Greeting professor!

  • @frazonicentertainmentservi4533

    @frazonicentertainmentservi4533

    4 ай бұрын

    Teaching college is performance art.

  • @tslfrontman
    @tslfrontman4 ай бұрын

    I've heard said that the Venn diagram of teachers and tabletop gamers in nearly an eclipse 😌 Also THAT NOTE ON "THEY PULL YOUR NOSE BECAUSE THEY'RE BORED" IS TIMELESS.

  • @corkboardsandcuriosities

    @corkboardsandcuriosities

    4 ай бұрын

    clowns are vessels for all the wisdom in the world !

  • @danomorrison8839

    @danomorrison8839

    4 ай бұрын

    This is incredibly helpful! Fascinating to learn more about teaching through GMing as well

  • @GinnyDi
    @GinnyDi2 ай бұрын

    This is such a fantastic video - great points approached in a new way, paired with really clean production and fantastic storytelling! I can't wait to see where your channel goes, if this is what you're accomplishing within your first ten uploads 🙌

  • @MrWi1y

    @MrWi1y

    Ай бұрын

    Seriously. She has fantastic insight, and great presentation

  • @WatchItPaintIt
    @WatchItPaintIt4 ай бұрын

    I am also a teacher and a GM. During the pandemic, I convinced a group of teachers to try D&D. They became instantly obsessed and we have been playing every week for 4 years now :) I used to be the "forever DM" - but no longer :D

  • @BlaxeFrost-X
    @BlaxeFrost-X4 ай бұрын

    I love when people make crossovers of... anything really, this is a *Hobby × Profession* crossover

  • @corkboardsandcuriosities

    @corkboardsandcuriosities

    4 ай бұрын

    hahaha, i think that's just my impulse to relate literally everything in my life to ttrpg

  • @turoni314

    @turoni314

    4 ай бұрын

    @@corkboardsandcuriosities That's such a relatable impulse.

  • @BornToBeUai
    @BornToBeUai4 ай бұрын

    Are you KIDDING ME? I JUST came across your video and I have been a teacher for 18 years and one of the few things I have been going for longer than the classroom is Dungeons and Dragons. And I love both. And I have ALWAYS thought there's a huge connection between doing one well and that improving the other! Masterful approach!

  • @corkboardsandcuriosities

    @corkboardsandcuriosities

    4 ай бұрын

    aaah amazing! I didn't expect to see so many teachers in the comments, and it is absolutely delightful to hear that this resonates!

  • @danielk269
    @danielk2692 ай бұрын

    "Don't comment me, I'm a beginner teacher. Just... pray for my students." That was fantastic! And thanks for the excellent video!

  • @asaucedude
    @asaucedudeАй бұрын

    "...people are always going to remember something they experienced or achieved better than something they witnessed" this is phenomenal advice. The challenge of conveying lore and plot effectively is a big one. Putting your players at the center of that experience is such great way to build momentum.

  • @whoismyult
    @whoismyult4 ай бұрын

    I will be using the "what are you thinking as you wake up?" open with my session tonight! I have done in the past a "what are you doing to prepare for the day?" open, but I really love the thoughts/feelings angle...better to get them into RP mode. Thank you!

  • @trollsmyth

    @trollsmyth

    4 ай бұрын

    Me too! I'm really curious to see how it goes.

  • @corkboardsandcuriosities

    @corkboardsandcuriosities

    4 ай бұрын

    happy you like it! I feel it also helps for the player, they get more used little by little to really consider the impact that a game event may have on their character

  • @Akalim

    @Akalim

    4 ай бұрын

    Same, I'm yoinking

  • @jamesscullion3034

    @jamesscullion3034

    4 ай бұрын

    I might do "What woke you up?"

  • @corkboardsandcuriosities

    @corkboardsandcuriosities

    4 ай бұрын

    oooh that's a cool one @@jamesscullion3034

  • @Cheskaz
    @Cheskaz3 ай бұрын

    I'm not a GM, but the "kids pulling on your nose because they're bored" concept really resonated with me. It feels analogous to focusing on tasks when you have an attention disorder. So, thank you!

  • @kiryls1207
    @kiryls12072 ай бұрын

    a warmup i use at my table is asking everyone who was the most badass and the bigger loser npc/pc moment from the last session. they always start describing every single detail about hilarious stuff and how cool it was. i also prepare a top 3 "things" and reveal them one by one letting the players guess what's in the first position

  • @kylejordan5615
    @kylejordan56154 ай бұрын

    I'm a High School teacher in the USA and I run the Tabletop Gaming Club, with a focus on DnD. As far as warm-ups go, having players introduce their characters/what they did last session, take notes about their party mates/their actions, and share out a connection or feeling the characters have about at least 2 of their party mates is a good way to get them into the roleplaying mindset while having them focus on the table in the middle of a loud room. It also leads people to "defending" their character or explaining their actions better, which leads to better characterization.

  • @SusCalvin

    @SusCalvin

    3 ай бұрын

    We found that a chronicle or log helps to maintain continuum. The current team looks up what happened last time and decide what they want to work on from there. The players write what they think was important.

  • @rrupt
    @rrupt4 ай бұрын

    If you master your subject (or your gameworld!), improvisation is key, too. It is vital for a GM, but it also serves me well as a teacher! Makes lessons more lively and students more involved (you're adapting to them). Cheers!

  • @JR-ld2xx
    @JR-ld2xx4 ай бұрын

    Hi! I find that people who are professional teachers, have advantage since they know how to prep, and discuss the subject to a classroom of students. You also learned to communicate and explain things better. I find the KZread people, that are teachers, are the ones I listen and learn from. Some KZreadrs are selling, and entertaining, but I don't need that. Would you be open to have people, like me, to watch one of your game sections? I would pay for it. I learn from watching and taking notes. I don't need to be a player character. I think you are in France, I would watch it on your schedule. No pressure. Thank you for doing this episode. 😀

  • @corkboardsandcuriosities

    @corkboardsandcuriosities

    4 ай бұрын

    haaaa you flatter me so much! I will soon be playing online with a few really cool people to test out a new game called Archeterica, i'll make sure to send you the link! Thank you for all the encouragement!

  • @tribak5074

    @tribak5074

    4 ай бұрын

    @@corkboardsandcuriosities I'd also be super interested to watch if that's okay! Your persona here is very fun to just listen to, so I wonder how you are when GM'ing (assuming you are).

  • @froggyboi132

    @froggyboi132

    4 ай бұрын

    me too, if that’s alright! i love playing ttrpgs, but also…i’m a magician myself! i’ve found that there’s lots to learn from any source of drama, be it a performance or a game!

  • @leonmacleod763
    @leonmacleod7634 ай бұрын

    From a didactical standpoint, I think we need more inventive Teachers just as yourself, integrating more luddism into teaching.Your students are just in the right hands.

  • @user-fj3su9hp6x
    @user-fj3su9hp6x4 ай бұрын

    THIS! IS! EPIC! I used to teach. When I got into DMing, it quickly dawned on me how running a table wasn’t much different from teaching! You are absolutely spot on in every aspect of this video. I’ve been out of the classroom for a couple years now, and I would miss it if it weren’t for DMing. This time, there isn’t the pressure of managing a classroom and I get to work and teach (because D&D has many educational benefits, especially social skills) to children and adults alike!

  • @corkboardsandcuriosities

    @corkboardsandcuriosities

    4 ай бұрын

    aaah this is so lovely to hear, especially from a teacher! YES! there's so much that feels so similar to running a game, and tbh, I feel like even as a beginner teacher, being a GM gave me a lil bit of a head start on a few things.

  • @user-fj3su9hp6x

    @user-fj3su9hp6x

    4 ай бұрын

    @@corkboardsandcuriosities absolutely! And being a teacher taught me skills for running a table. They overlap in group management, communication, planning, multitasking and other skills.

  • @cadenceclearwater4340
    @cadenceclearwater43404 ай бұрын

    So many youtubers seem to be teachers. Must be a natural connection 😊

  • @corkboardsandcuriosities

    @corkboardsandcuriosities

    4 ай бұрын

    the real challenge is making sure my high schoolers don't find my youtube channel hahaha

  • @danielzarkos

    @danielzarkos

    4 ай бұрын

    @@corkboardsandcuriosities I'd be psyqued if I knew my teacher plays D&D!

  • @corkboardsandcuriosities

    @corkboardsandcuriosities

    4 ай бұрын

    @@danielzarkos I've not yet had a student who was into TTRPG... but it's only a matter of time until they join our ranks!

  • @susiduo3438

    @susiduo3438

    4 ай бұрын

    lmao :D@@corkboardsandcuriosities

  • @BornToBeUai

    @BornToBeUai

    4 ай бұрын

    I was gonna ask where you're from, but the way you pronounced Dominique's (?) names gave it away!

  • @FindingFiddlersGreen
    @FindingFiddlersGreen4 ай бұрын

    The greatest boon to me as GM, was when I became a flight instructor. Those fundamentals of instruction and how people learn and engage made everything fall into place so I know exactly what you mean and you are exactly correct (in my experience at least)! Literally every beat you touched on here I learned as an instructor and applied in my games to great effect. I also have "the class" open up with a player-led session recap and it sucks us all in every time. I'm loving your videos after just discovering your channel and can't wait to see what you've got coming up. Keep up the great work! P.S. If you ever figure out how to make lesson plans that aren't absolute chaos or absolute inane bullet points please share with the class. Send help.

  • @fredericgagnon8205
    @fredericgagnon82054 ай бұрын

    I'm a teacher myself and have been playing dnd for 30 years and I love your point of view! It's so easy to join the to concepts! Bravo!

  • @JulnirIzdrage
    @JulnirIzdrage18 күн бұрын

    I am a public high school teacher/coach with twenty eight years in the books. You did a very good job with your video. I am just getting into TTRG/D&D and, I appreciate you "activating my prior learning"!

  • @leonmacleod763
    @leonmacleod7634 ай бұрын

    From a writer's perspective, you get the Narrator premise: "Show, don't tell...". If you actually show it properly, you don't need to spoil anything in anticipatìon (unless you want to purposely build anticipation, most commonly to avoid the expected effect in the end... The former is surprise, the later builds suspense...). So, skip the "telling" part right into the "show" one, and your formula simplifies to "Show (don't tell) - Do - Apply". I like your video. Pretty cool content. Keep going!

  • @cruise9457
    @cruise94574 ай бұрын

    I'm also a teacher and a GM! One of my first thoughts when I was being introduced into teaching theory and general lesson structure was "Wait... this is just D&D with less dragons". I love this video - thank you!

  • @feywildfiend
    @feywildfiend4 ай бұрын

    I've also used my teaching experience to reel my players back in when they get distracted. No one likes the teacher who snaps their fingers and shouts, especially when all you have to do is lower your voice to a whisper and say something intriguing. It sparks that curiosity again, and boom, they're back.

  • @zenaudio108
    @zenaudio10814 күн бұрын

    This is some of the most original TTRPG content I have seen in some time. Thank you! I can imagine you are a really good teacher.

  • @Xacris
    @Xacris4 ай бұрын

    feel like I've stumbled upon most of these things you talk about through happenstance. When I GM, I'm constantly throwing mysteries and whatnot at the party- usually because they see something weird, or something weird happens to the players they can't quite understand yet. Dangle a question in front of your players and watch them tear your world apart trying to find the answer. Very satisfying!

  • @jsmith9213
    @jsmith92134 ай бұрын

    As a fellow teacher and GM; this was helpful on both sides of the coin! Thank you for this! 😄👍💯

  • @Zectifin
    @Zectifin4 ай бұрын

    doing a level up at the start of a session is genius. They're going to be excited to use new abilities and whatnot, immediately pulling them into the game.

  • @angelkite7410
    @angelkite7410Ай бұрын

    Awesome video. I'm a teacher too and I started applying techniques to my players without noticing it. It was until one of them said "He's using his teacher powers against us" when I was like "uh, he is right, it is similar"

  • @konatelassina5301
    @konatelassina53014 ай бұрын

    DMing is teaching. That's why after a long day of class, I can sometimes resent having to DM that night.

  • @kolardgreene3096

    @kolardgreene3096

    3 ай бұрын

    Same here. Also why I dread my friends saying, for the umpteenth time, "Can we play on Sunday night?" I go to sleep teaching and wake up teaching lol

  • @PaddyCapDice
    @PaddyCapDice2 ай бұрын

    Fellow teacher and GM here! I love this video! Both the warm up and cold open are great for classroom and table engagement, and I often find myself comparing notes between what I see at the table vs the classroom. I’ve found that both players and students will often default to socializing with their friends unless I take the reigns. It’s the same in kids and adults! Of course it’s less stressful at the game table where the stakes are lower lol. I loved what you said about Doing! Giving your players a more unforgettable experience and I feel silly I didn’t make that connection myself sooner haha. I guess sometimes I’m just too much in my own head. Excellent video with excellent info!

  • @Digital_Ether
    @Digital_Ether4 ай бұрын

    As an experienced GM, I use everything I know to enhance my classroom.

  • @michaelgoldberg4000
    @michaelgoldberg400017 күн бұрын

    My players have never heard about the concept of: deescalating heated interactions Everything always ends in a fight

  • @barge489
    @barge4894 ай бұрын

    High School Game Development Teacher chiming in, 10 years in (7 as a DM). A lot of this is good advice, but in both mentoring new teachers and new GMs. I find the focus on "engagement" to be a bit unhealthy at times. Young teachers really put a lot of pressure on themselves to be the driving force of energy and engagement in a classroom and unfortunately this can lead to a lot of burn out, as you point out, DMs (especially new DMs) feel similar pressure. The hard fought wisdom that is learned over time is that yes, you have an important role to play in engagement, but over the long haul, the teachers/DMs that make it over the long haul are the ones that understand that they cannot be a constant font of learning. As one of my mentors put it "There are classrooms where the math teacher does a lot of math and there are classrooms where the students do a lot of math. Guess which teacher makes it to year 5."

  • @corkboardsandcuriosities

    @corkboardsandcuriosities

    4 ай бұрын

    Oh, this is a very good point, and quite reassuring to hear tbh? I do tend to feel that exhaustion, especially since I'm just starting out, and when you're starting out, you can't help but be so aware of all the skills you have yet to build! I think perhaps what also drives me (and likely others, recently I was talking about it with a friend of mine who is a young teacher too) to this kind of pressure is the image of the teacher in media, in movies.. This idea that in every movie the teacher is a life changing figure for their students. People talking of teaching not as a job, but as a vocation, because for a "good teacher, there is no real work/life balance". That's a lot of pressure to put on a person! I know that realistically, this is not the expectation, only the mythology built around teaching, which makes a lot of teachers feel like they are not doing enough, like they could give even more. So these days I'm trying to loosen up. Hearing this from an experienced teacher helps a bunch!

  • @art_out_of_despair
    @art_out_of_despair2 ай бұрын

    If only we were taught pedagogy like that!!! I learnt more useful things in 20 minutes than in a semester at Uni! I am one of those crazy ones who dared to combine DnD and teaching (English), so it was crazy helpful, thank you, will follow you

  • @shivershins3730
    @shivershins37304 ай бұрын

    English Lit teacherling of 1 month and GM of 18 months. There’s a good bit of crossover for sure. I’ve been thinking about this idea for a while!!

  • @garyburnett1977
    @garyburnett19774 ай бұрын

    @QuestingBeast is also a teacher, and has mentioned that there are a lot of people running games who teach. Your video makes it clear why that would be such an asset. Love your videos!

  • @sadzpea
    @sadzpeaАй бұрын

    gosh, you kept me engaged for the whole video, now I even want more! at least for me, you're doing a terrific job at being a teacher/GM :) your voice is soo pleasant, and the light tricks and editing are just chef's kiss, definitely subscribed

  • @ivaniii9707
    @ivaniii97072 ай бұрын

    Loosely related to engagement I would like to share my proudest moment of derailing a campaign. Me and my group were playing a pirate AP for pathfinder which wasn't the most interesting thing ever. We were doing our pirate stuff and we came across an item which the DM off handedly remarked that Dwarves would find it valuable. So as good enterprising traders we asked where we could find some dwarves and the DM mentioned that they are high up in the mountains obviously not expecting us to bother going there. Queue the next 6 to 7 sessions of the party dragging a sailing ship up a maintain so we can find some dwarves to sell items to.

  • @StornCook
    @StornCook2 ай бұрын

    I've been GMing since 1977. And I freakin' LOVE: "What is the first thought upon waking" as a question for the players/pc. I am swiping that. Also, not a teacher... (I've dabbled in teaching illustration classes... but that is so much about demonstration and almost going directly to the "Apply stage")... so I had not heard these techniques in these terms. Very cool. I AM going to share this with 2 of my players, one of which, IS a teacher in NYC. I subscribed after this one video and I look forward to sifting through your back catalog and any new videos you end up doing.

  • @reedbeazley3914
    @reedbeazley39144 ай бұрын

    A warm up technique I recently used that yielded good results was getting the player's to share a fun fact about their characters. This video had a ton of good information, surprised i have just happened upon this channel.

  • @CallMeArda
    @CallMeArda4 ай бұрын

    Beginner teacher and GM here, thanks for compiling all this insight to a short video! Also love your hair 😊

  • @Trekiros
    @Trekiros4 ай бұрын

    New C&C video about D&D, gonna get myself some E&E (education & entertainment)!

  • @TheSeaItIsStillViolent
    @TheSeaItIsStillViolent4 ай бұрын

    I don’t know whether my students are going to ace their upcoming test, but you’ve aced this video. Super-well explained and super-interesting, as ever. Thanks, Val!

  • @quirkthekenku
    @quirkthekenku4 ай бұрын

    Succinct, quirky and humorous, and insightful and informative! Thank you. Please continue making more content!

  • @Digital_Ether
    @Digital_Ether4 ай бұрын

    With regards to The Chaos Problem... there is a balance between the health chaos of learning (or role playing) and the decent into true uncontrolled CHAOS! The challenge is identifying which is currently happening, and having good clear ground rules of expected behaviours and conquences. About Warm Ups. DO Nows are excellent. Since I would with digital lesson plans in IT & Multimedia classrooms, I set the expectation that they'll check the lesson plan and set themselves set up. As a way of checking I'll ask a student, "What are we doing today?". Also there are Kahoots and Quizlets, which allow for a bit of a game in the class. For "Tell, Show, Do, Apply". Have you read Bloom's Taxonomy which is a tangental take on the concept? I found the book Improv for Gamers to be good for both gaming and teaching.

  • @OgamiItto70
    @OgamiItto704 ай бұрын

    To be a better DM, try teachers' methods! What a novel idea! That never occurred to me before. Maybe I'll try it next time I DM. I'll bring a wooden ruler for rapping my players' knuckles when they talk out of turn or start to become unruly. When they arrive and want to waste time talking amongst themselves, I'll tell them to sit down at their places and be quiet. I'll take roll. I'll make them raise their hands if they want to say anything. If one of them seems to be too hyper, I'll have him or her put his or her head down on the table and be quiet. Anyone who brings me an apple will get extra credit--uh, I mean experience points. This is gonna work out great.

  • @ChazzKaskes
    @ChazzKaskes4 ай бұрын

    Teacher/GM here, and this is a brilliant video. I learned a little about teaching AND running games! Great video

  • @MemphiStig
    @MemphiStig4 ай бұрын

    Sorry if tldr, but I promise it's worth it. My mother was an elementary school teacher, and she taught me a lot: to be a good student, to love to read, and to love to learn. And she taught me a great deal about children, teaching, and behavioral psychology (tho not in that specific sense). I even got my degree in Music Education, tho I knew by the end I did not have the gift for being a proper teacher. You have an excellent understanding of the basics, and I'm sure you'll be a very good teacher too. I would love to spend hours with you talking about teaching and its relationship to gaming. Or to be a member of your gaming group. But I will tell you this little thing about my dear Mom. She was very religious, and when I discovered D&D in high school, she was unconcerned about it at first. But unfortunately, her religiosity made her gullible, and vulnerable to the slander and lies of the "Satanic Panic." So I did not get to play until college, and even then she worried for my soul. She never understood the positivity or the potential developmental benefits of rpg's, and I was never able to talk with her meaningfully about it. One last thing. I was in her class in 3rd grade, and I kept trying to address her like the other kids, "Mrs. H~" but always caught myself, and ending up frequently calling her "Mrs.... Mother." Bless you, dear Val. Good luck in the classroom and at the table. ❤

  • @shieldphaser
    @shieldphaser19 күн бұрын

    Generally good ideas, apart from the point about leveling up at the start of the session. That kind of thing can take a while at certain class levels, particularly for spellcasters. You don't want to start out your session by having most of the players be bored whilst waiting for that one last player to finish leveling up. Better they get the level-up at the end, then do the practical work between sessions.

  • @hexadecimalpickle
    @hexadecimalpickle4 ай бұрын

    Ah! You were looking for becoming a better teacher and found something to become a better GM and now I'm going to use that to become a better game designer. It will be fun re-adapting all these concepts to videogames :)

  • @torek1337
    @torek13374 ай бұрын

    I really like the idea of the video and the execution of it! I agree the most with the magician. Be it as a student, player or GM, this is how you can get my attention. Though as a GM I really like to start my campaigns or one-shots seemingly simple, so the group can assemble and get comfortable with each other enabling also usually some roleplay. Then as soon as they are on their mission, they find more and more hints leading to different background knowledge growing their curiosity into what has been and how this correlates to what or who is still around here awaiting them. With the "Tell, Show, Do, Apply"-method I'd personally narrow it down to things have consequences, be it the things players did or the ones your world does. Also as a student, I had problems with this method, since I didn't learn much of it. Yes, I used it myself a couple of times, but basically I just copied a template and if it didn't work, I still didn't understand how it should work. Finding your own way to the solution is always how I learned the things that works best, especially (returning to GM view) since every single table plays different and has different interests and develop individual dynamics with the flow of the adventure. Thus it's nothing unusual for me to adapt mid-campaign new systems into our rulesets and it be it just for a single character, who wanted to dig in a specialty of theirs more. The warm ups/cold opens are a nice idea to which I can't say not too much, as I'm (no matter the group) always the main notetaker and thus always run around thinking about our campaigns and give most of the time the recap of last session xD And with the warm ups: The first thoughts after a rest is a nice little thing, which again has the potential to create chaos discussions among the players (speaking from experience), but it's still a nice thing to activate the players, if they are fine with revealing their characters true thougths and don't want to keep them a mystery for a later reveal. With the level up at the beginning of a session, I'd actually advice against. This breaks immersion, since everyone speaks out of character and there could be a lot of rule questions coming up and especially spellcasters can potentially need quite a while to do a full level up. Also the mechanical process takes time away from the actual game time, which is a reason, why players could be torn between making it quick and giving things an actual thought, they'll be satisfied with. But what you could do, after you ended last session with a level up, is to give each character a chance to tell how things felt different now with more power or how they reflect things or gained their level up in the first place. For a warlock player of mine always talked with his patron, when leveling up, which we actually played out. These are my personal experiences and thoughts about this. I can't really say in what regard my points are an individual or actually general thing. Either way I thank you for your video and that you decided to share your findings and thoughts. It was especially interesting for me to see, what theory is lying behind the education I went through and what similarities the two POVs actually have!

  • @MrTwrule
    @MrTwrule4 ай бұрын

    As both a GM and beginning university professor myself, I appreciated your thoughts. I certainly know the importance of maintaining engagement in both realms, and am far from mastering it in either, but I happened to be working on implementing a lot of these same strategies in the classroom just prior to watching this video. Good luck with your teaching efforts; my command of my students' (or players') attention is tentative at best, but based on how this video held mine, you're already likely to do well in both arenas.

  • @0num4
    @0num44 ай бұрын

    I'm a senior IT professional, and I find *loads* of skills which cross the gap between Game Mastery and professional communications. Time management, focusing the spotlight on individuals in measured ways, researching topics, managing expectations, and much more. Practicing GMing in a methodical way makes me a better professional, and vise versa.

  • @0num4

    @0num4

    4 ай бұрын

    This is also how RPG Elite has framed his "RPG Elite philosophies for your life" series of videos, which are pretty great too.

  • @famousAmos90210
    @famousAmos902104 ай бұрын

    As a teacher I always felt like DMing felt very natural but I couldn't tell you why. Now the connections are obvious. 👍

  • @sorabrend5274
    @sorabrend52744 ай бұрын

    Im currently writing a paper on how being a gamemaster can make people better teachers through the abilities they learn dm-ing so seeing this video is super funny

  • @corkboardsandcuriosities

    @corkboardsandcuriosities

    4 ай бұрын

    omg I would be so interested to read that paper

  • @sorabrend5274

    @sorabrend5274

    3 ай бұрын

    @@corkboardsandcuriosities I would have to translate it and its more than 25 pages so I'm sorry I won't be able to do that probably 😅 If you know german I can provide it to you after grading if I'm happy with it :D

  • @cernunnos_lives
    @cernunnos_lives4 ай бұрын

    With you as my teacher, I think I would continue to have a love for learning.

  • @sleepinggiant4062
    @sleepinggiant40624 ай бұрын

    Secret? "Keys to player engagement" is on the thumbnail! :) Great advice!

  • @Simone-bc2fo
    @Simone-bc2fo4 ай бұрын

    As a fellow teacher (teaching assistant, to be exact) and D&D noob, this video couldn't be more perfect

  • @20storiesunder
    @20storiesunder4 ай бұрын

    Table culture is very DM dependent and it's almost like a dance - keeping people engaged. For a popular example there was a thread with people complaining that the CR players are getting more and more rowdy during the game - and it's true due to not having their attention kept.

  • @Daiwie44
    @Daiwie444 ай бұрын

    Yeah, this is great!! Pedagogy fits perfectly with storytelling. I'm not a dm (I might try some day), but as a player, I will still keep these tips and methods in mind. We are all writing the story, after all!

  • @aaronrickard4675
    @aaronrickard46754 ай бұрын

    As a new DM and new teacher myself, I found this video very intriguing on both fronts!

  • @colin6691
    @colin66913 ай бұрын

    I'm yet another teacher and long time DM. Honestly, I'm probably better as a DM, but it is good to see that crossover highlighted so clearly. Time for me to bring more DMing magic into the classroom.

  • @dedemastra1799
    @dedemastra17994 ай бұрын

    It is so easy to gloss over those obvious patterns you mentioned, the way teachers try to get the students engagements. Thank you for the reminder. While I'm quite seldom in experiencing Tell Show Do Apply in class, it is a basic in video games. Thus, that is also one more thing to be aware of. Though I find the magician part is quite overlapping with this one. Time to apply these. Thanks, teach!

  • @greenthi
    @greenthi4 ай бұрын

    Beginner DM and working on my education degree. This was a really insightful look into both worlds and their overlap. I adore this video, thank you for sharing!

  • @alejandrogarcia6187
    @alejandrogarcia6187Ай бұрын

    Golden content. So much to learn from this academic approach to RPG’s.

  • @ManglingMinis
    @ManglingMinis4 ай бұрын

    I'm an amateur rules writer for tabletop wargames and finding ways to increase player engagement is something I'm always looking to keep at the top of my list. You've got a load of great stuff in here that I think will be super applicable outside teaching and TTRPGs alone. Thanks!

  • @GingerGM01
    @GingerGM014 ай бұрын

    I cannot thank you enough for this addition to my Kit. Incredible!

  • @MIbra96
    @MIbra964 ай бұрын

    What you said in the beginning made me want to give you a hug.

  • @JeffsGameBox
    @JeffsGameBox4 ай бұрын

    You are an absolute treasure! Please keep making videos. You're doing great.

  • @xanderxjsstudios9653
    @xanderxjsstudios96532 ай бұрын

    AAAAAAAAAAA, this actually helps me so much. I feel like this is info that more DMs should know, cause I wish I knew about this when I started. This channel really is helpful, thank youuuuuu.

  • @clickbait6646
    @clickbait66464 ай бұрын

    this is a perfect channel to binge watch at 4AM

  • @unseensounds

    @unseensounds

    4 ай бұрын

    How funny it just got recommended to me for the first time at 4am

  • @BottomTableTyrants
    @BottomTableTyrants4 ай бұрын

    Love it. I run a lot of convention games and I’m always terrified of being a “bad teacher” leading to new players having a bad time in my sessions. Thank you for the tips! They inspired a few ideas im going to try out at Adepticon! 😁

  • @daviddiaz-sierra2640
    @daviddiaz-sierra26403 ай бұрын

    Great approach!!! I am just starting my teaching journey and have been GMing for a while now. Going through my classes I've noticed some connections between how I run my tables and how I'd run my classrooms. I love how you've set up the video and how you've validated this connection. Applying these concepts to my tables immediately!!!!

  • @UltanMcDonnell
    @UltanMcDonnell2 ай бұрын

    Excellent video with great content in a very short space. I'd love to hear your teacher's take on helping the quiet players to engage and teaching the loud ones to take a back seat sometimes.

  • @theokogod6711
    @theokogod67114 ай бұрын

    Your videos are always great! The juxtaposition in how you framed this was excellent. Plus, I loved the invocation of the Magician Tarot card here.

  • @blacksigma5018
    @blacksigma50183 ай бұрын

    As a GM one thing I really like to do and received good feedbacks from my players is having a small music like the opening credit of a show. It's a small time during which everyone turn off their mics and at the end of it we directly engage on the game. It gives them a bit of time to put their feet in their character and being a recurring thing help it a lot.

  • @user-id5mh4ov7o
    @user-id5mh4ov7o4 ай бұрын

    this was fascinating, i felt as though I had hit an echo chamber with gming content on yt but this was a way of looking at gming I had not considered, and will now adapt into my way of play

  • @katzencowboy2313
    @katzencowboy23134 ай бұрын

    before seeing this video i always thought there had to be a crossover between gming and teaching, its cool to finally hear someone talk about it

  • @phoenixdzk
    @phoenixdzk4 ай бұрын

    This is so cool! I was a TA in college for 2 years before I was a GM. Used to have a brainstorm session with them to give them ideas of what they'd like to go on & major in. Honestly, my students were as chaotic as my table. Their research ideas were nuts!

  • @corkboardsandcuriosities

    @corkboardsandcuriosities

    4 ай бұрын

    oooh i love that you didn't choose the chaotic crowd, the chaotic crowd chose you

  • @MathewsonMedia
    @MathewsonMedia4 ай бұрын

    Loved it! Your delivery and video production, Fabulous!!

  • @StephanneZillions
    @StephanneZillionsАй бұрын

    I love every video I’ve seen of yours so far. If I might provide some feedback, I’d love to see the graphics onscreen at least twice as long so I can read them as you’re talking. They look neat and I often pause so I can take them in. Thanks for making unique connections and making well-thought-out content! 🎉

  • @marcelomena113
    @marcelomena1134 ай бұрын

    This was great, so glad KZread is finally refining my recommended section. That last bit about putting players at the center of action is something I tend to struggle with, and you really nailed the importance of that with the example you gave. Great video, hope to see more soon.

  • @sampigman479
    @sampigman4793 ай бұрын

    Amazing video! Inspirational advice, and great production value!

  • @spacecentergames
    @spacecentergames4 ай бұрын

    Agreed. Different kinds of teachers with different skills equal different kinds of DMs. The worst is a lazy teacher that DMs, because it carries over.

  • @corkboardsandcuriosities

    @corkboardsandcuriosities

    4 ай бұрын

    :o hopefully my students don't think that of me!

  • @spacecentergames

    @spacecentergames

    4 ай бұрын

    @corkboardsandcuriosities I'm sure they enjoy your lessons if your channel content is any indication!✌️

  • @beanmafya
    @beanmafya4 ай бұрын

    Subscribed! Looking forward to watching this channel explode in popularity. Fantastic stuff :)

  • @ImVeryOriginal
    @ImVeryOriginal4 ай бұрын

    Well, I didn't want to pull on your nose once during this video, so you must be doing something right. More seriously, as a beginner GM, I really appreciate this perspective. It's helping me crystalize and put focus on some stuff I was already instinctively doing. And your presentation is excellent!

  • @chrisming4017
    @chrisming40174 ай бұрын

    Man I love the fresh perspective she gives for the gm. Keep up the awesome work ✌🏾

  • @TheIrishRev
    @TheIrishRev3 ай бұрын

    This was lovely! Im looking forward to seeing more of your videos 👍

  • @elmarcezen
    @elmarcezen4 ай бұрын

    Brings me back to the time I was a teacher, Great video as always!! I found there are strong similarities in prepping.

  • @corkboardsandcuriosities

    @corkboardsandcuriosities

    4 ай бұрын

    haha, prepping is not my strong suit as a teacher, I just take too long with it, but I'm getting better, finding a method helps!

  • @elmarcezen

    @elmarcezen

    4 ай бұрын

    @@corkboardsandcuriosities well you can go the other way around, just apply your RPG prepping skills on the classroom.

  • @malnorath4252
    @malnorath42524 ай бұрын

    This video is underrated. Amazing new perspective about GMing I've never heard in all my years of enjoying the hobby! Thank you!

  • @rudinipl4012
    @rudinipl40124 ай бұрын

    That was very helpfull and delightfull, thank you very much! I was blessed by the algorythm with another rpg channel I can bingewatch insted of preparing my campain, yes...

  • @ieatbolts
    @ieatbolts4 ай бұрын

    I just found your channel this morning. Thank you so much for your fun and informative content.

  • @user-pt1tm2fo6p
    @user-pt1tm2fo6p4 ай бұрын

    I just wanted to chime in and say that you have an amazing channel and a unique perspective to what goes in to being a DM that I have not seen on other channels. I am so excited for where this channel will go in the future and wish you all the best!

  • @alexanderwizardjar9540
    @alexanderwizardjar95403 ай бұрын

    Oh wow, the quality of both the content and the editing is incredible!

  • @breadqueen5351
    @breadqueen53514 ай бұрын

    I just binged your videos, I'm preparing a campaign of my own and everything you talked about has been tremendous help and inspiration! Definitely one of my favorite channels rn

  • @duttonjones6205
    @duttonjones62054 ай бұрын

    You have a great talent and i really appreciate the kind of roleplaying you are putting forward. I subscribed because your view is what we need for the future of roleplay. Keep it up!!!

  • @evanhmurphy
    @evanhmurphy4 ай бұрын

    What an awesome video! With so many wonderful insights, you seem like the kind of person i could talk to for hours about this kind of stuff :)

  • @bendekbotond4707
    @bendekbotond47074 ай бұрын

    This is awesome! You gave a lot of great advice that I can start using in my games. Thank you😃

  • @cordeliathedm
    @cordeliathedm3 ай бұрын

    Chaos is encouraged at my table. Hahahaha. It's my way of keeping players engaged. The more freedom I give them the more likely I find they are to listen to me when I do actually speak. I think having consequences also keeps them from getting out of line. So for me there is a happy medium. But your points are spot on and I think this is a great video for GM's and teachers alike.

  • @corkboardsandcuriosities

    @corkboardsandcuriosities

    2 ай бұрын

    Oh chaos is absolutely encouraged! And I can be a chaos player too hahahah! But I’d rather it be in-game chaos, where we complicate the storyline and raise the stakes! Rather than a kind of chaos where we lose immersion because we’re checking phones and chatting about stuff unrelated to game, this kinda thing. But a big enthusiastic YES to chaos!!!

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