Your comment about always having the kettle on made me think of the social aspect of learning, which I'm very interested in. Do you notice interaction between your learners and they type of help they give each other? Are there questions they'll ask each other before they turn to you? Do you do anything to encourage this?
With the kettle on the simmer all the time, and at least a packet of digestives available, I find social interaction takes place almost automatically. It's exactly the same effect you get when a bunch of friends gather round the camp fire. Oh, and that's another aspect, the camp fire. I always take a fire tray, a tripod and have a central camp fire so everyone can gather, warm their hands, make a cuppa, talk to each other and exchange information, whether it's technical stuff about the course, or chit-chat, it doesn't matter so long as they are communicating.
What stems from that is questions. In many cases, less confident students who are perhaps scared of asking me something for fear of looking daft in front of their peers will ask the question of another student. They will in turn ask someone else and then they will ask me as a group what they want to know. Often it is something totally obscure, but often it'll be about the subject in hand. When that happens, I'll invite everyone to gather and we'll discuss it. I use open questioning so they are forced to respond with something other than yes or no, and I ask questions that get them thinking about their own questions. Mostly, with prompting from me, they'll figure it out for themselves. When they do it that way, they never forget.
As for helping each other, it's something I actively encourage. It gives confidence to the learner and confidence to the person helping. I do tend to hover a bit when this is going on though, just to make sure the helper knows what they are talking about and to be there if they get stuck.
I always have a decent debrief at the end of the course as well and tidy up any loose ends with a Q&A session. Then I tell them how well they've done and encourage them to keep practising.
Funny thing is, so many times people come as students and go away as friends. There's some I had on one course ten years ago, and I still get Xmas cards from and bump into them at events and demos from time to time.
Anyway Nicola if you're coming up to Chopwell in September with Robin we can have a proper chat then about teaching methods as I'll be there with the others from Friends of Chopwell Wood.
Eric