The classes that I've taught, or that I've worked on enough to be reasonably presentable, if possibly incomplete.
My favorite class to teach is Frame Drumming 101. We get together and bang on things. What's not to love?
Closely followed by the Hand Drum Petting Zoo, an interactive display where we have a bunch of drums and we hit them.
I'm sensing a pattern.
I taught the Bread 101 Workshop at Winter Revel. If I ever figure out a better fermentation solution in that space I may try it again, though perhaps better done at an event with an oven. It takes about three hours overall to teach, most of which you can be off doing other things.
Here's a paper on Propagating Sourdough Cultures that would be a great class if I ever got around to teaching it. It was part of my entry to a Baronial A&S Competition. For the other part I grew mold.
I did a delightful hands-on class on the Stages of Sourdough Development. The class went well, but it's a bit dry without bowls of starter to sniff and taste.
At Bardic Madness 2013 I did the Performance Workshop. Here's the handout describing what we were doing.
My Ukulele is a Guitar, first taught at the Online Bardic Symposium II, January 2021, talking about the Renaissance and its survival in the form of the baritone ukulele.
Everyone Tells Stories was first taught online as part of an online RUM event, and later at Armistice. I consider it a Youth class, but the Plague prevented that.