Richard G
Veteran
I think Simon and Will have really helped you here, Dave. Intent and structure are crucial. It has taken me years of teaching to get to what is the core message I want to get across. In parallel was refining the methods of my own teachers to find the way to do it. Like with an essay or a scientific paper or a photograph it is necessary to be very focussed about what your message is. Taking them for a spin in the MG won't cut it. And the pressure with just a very small group is greater, on you and them. The clearer you are about lesson 1 and what that is going to achieve the easier it will be to get them on board and participate and grasp your core message. If I were doing this I'd be thinking about the volume titles of the Time-Life series and the chapter headings of Szarkowski's Looking at Photographs for ideas, but the first lesson would be exposure, aperture and shutter speed, and metering and EV values and Sunny 16. You need to keep it very simple, while foreshadowing the wonders ahead. A Socratic method of asking questions and exploring together is always productive. Good students ask difficult questions.