Teachers wear many hats- counselor, nurse, disciplinarian,
teacher and so many more! How can one
person do so much at one time? How can you make sure your students are learning
and growing, as well as following state standards and district curriculum while
making parents happy and administrators happy with your job? For me, the key is to focus on student
engagement. If my students are engaged,
everything else falls in place. My
classroom manages itself, my parents are happy because their children are happy
and learning, my administrators like what they see when they look at my
classroom and my data, and I’m able to cover the curriculum required by the
state and my district. Really! For me, here is how I work to keep my
students engaged.
ABC’s of student engagement
A – Activity Keeping students moving is key! The more you can have them moving, the more
engaged they will be in an activity!
B- Brain Breaks Short brain breaks are key. Here are some great ones that I like to use
in my class when I see that glazed over look in the eyes of my students ( or
hopefully before the glazed over look sets in!) http://www.thehappyteacher.co/2012/08/brain-breaks.html
C- Caring If your
students know that you really care about them and that their success is
important to you, they will “buy in” to your lessons and stay engaged.
D- Dojo! I love to use Class Dojo to keep my students
engaged. I find it is most beneficial
when students are working independently and I am with a small group or
conferencing one on one. It is one of my
favorite web tools! Check it out at
classdojo.com if you aren’t already using it- you won’t regret it!
E- Exciting It
doesn’t take much to make your lesson exciting for your students. If you are excited about the lesson, it will
be contagious. J
F- Flexible seating I’m so
intrigued in this idea! For years, I
have let my students move around the room and work where they want during
independent working time, especially while I’m meeting with small groups. They love the “power” of they have to sit where and how they
want. I’m researching this concept
online now (mainly through Pinterest and researching educational blogs) to
build the choices and time used in flexibly seating in my classroom.
G- Growth Mindset Help your students understand the power of
determination, perseverance and learning.
For years, I used competition to drive my students. While it worked for some, it didn’t work for
everyone and in fact, it squelched the spirit of some of my students. L I still use it at times (very carefully)
because I love it and some of my students thrive on it! However, it is imperative that your students
have a grasp of the “growth mindset” in order to have them still engaged even
though they aren’t winning. Check out
the “Big Ideas” videos in Class Dojo for a great start to building this in your
classroom.
H- Happiness Be as happy as you can every day. It is contagious. Fake it til you make it. Your life will be better, your students will
love you, your coworkers will love you, and your students will be engaged and
learn more. It really is that
simple. J
I-Independence
Students thrive on independence. It
takes time to build, but it is worth it!
You must set or review expectations EVERY time, hold students
accountable and build on their growth mindset.
Keeping students engaged will build independent learners. Isn’t that what we want? Lifelong independent learners? You must build it in baby steps.
J-Joy Find joy in your classroom! Watch https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZAmZucyzyZM
if you are having a rough day. A joyful
teacher creates a joyful classroom where students are engaged and excited to
come to school and learn!
K- Kindness Be kind to your students, train them to be
kind to each other, and always honor kindness shown to you or others. Building a “kind” climate will make students
feel safe. If they feel safe to take
risks and grow they will be engaged in learning! The two may not seem connected at first, but
believe me, they are! If students are
worried that others will make fun of them for failing, they will be more
worried about others watching them than the lesson being taught. You must create a “safe” climate in your
classroom for authentic student engagement to occur.
L- Laughter Laugh with your students and at yourself. See
“K” and “H” to understand why!
M- Memories Share
special memories with your students.
Listen to special memories that they tell you. Getting to know your students and letting
them really get to know you will build a trust amongst you that will enhance
student engagement!
N- Notice Notice what works in your classroom and what
doesn’t! Be flexible and change
accordingly. If you find an activity
that your students love and work hard at, find a way to alter it for different
skills. Also, if something doesn’t work
for you, don’t do it again! You should
reflect on the WHY it didn’t work- maybe
you could change it slightly, or maybe it just isn’t a good fit for your
classroom. You might even find that
things that worked for one group of students, doesn’t work for another! Or, sometimes students get tired of an
activity and you have to mix it up!
Constant noticing and reflection is key.
Don’t feel defeated if you find that you have to change up an activity-
instead, feel the opposite! Embrace the
growth mindset for yourself and understand that learning is a process. As lifelong learners, we have to continue to
change to grow!
O- Open Be open
to ideas that are working for others.
Listen to your colleagues for successes they are having, have learning
walks in your school to find new ideas that are successful. Always be looking
to improve!
P- Procedures,
procedures, procedures… If you haven’t read Harry Wong’s The First Days of School, read it! If you haven’t read it in a few years, read
it! His advice is spot on! You can find it here- https://www.amazon.com/First-Days-School-Effective-Teacher/dp/0962936022
Q- Quality Make sure the work you provide for students
is quality work. Remember Bloom’s
Taxonomy from college- it really is important to vary the level of
questioning! With quantity they become
bored and unengaged. They will learn
more from practicing 10 quality problems than from 100 questions that are just
pure monotony.
R- Relationships
Foster the relationships with your students and the relationships they have
amongst each other. Students will
encourage each other when you build a classroom community!
S- SeeSaw My
favorite app to use in the classroom. My
students are excited to share their work with me and their parents. Students can make projects through other apps
(some of my favorites are pic collage, tellagami, kidpix, book creator, imovie)
or they can make a movie or explain their work with digital drawings in the
app. One of my favorite things is when
they are doing a simple activity with dry erase markers or card sorts while I’m
working with a small group. In the past,
I wouldn’t have been able to monitor that their work was quality in this type
of activity. However, when they post a
pic of their work, their parents and I can see (and comment) on the
quality. This promotes engagement in
independent activities. To start a class account, go to seesaw.me
T- Talking Research proves that the people
who are talking the most are learning the most (as long as they are listening
to). Allow your students opportunities
to talk to each other and to practice their academic vocabulary. Students will be engaged in their
conversations!
U- Uplifting Create an environment where all students are
uplifting to each other. They will
follow your lead and your expectations.
Create a classroom where all students feel safe to share their ideas and
questions and you will have a class of engaged students learning and growing
together!
V- Variety The
most exciting activity becomes mundane when repeated too much. Watch for cues from your students to decide
when to retire an activity. Put it in
your toolbox to use again next semester or next year, but don’t wear it
out. Use variety to keep students
engaged.
W- Wonder
Using “I wonder” statements can give students opportunities to
explore their thoughts and delve into those higher order thought
processes. Once those levels of higher
thinking are reached, students are hooked!
Their engagement goes beyond a superficial level and who knows where
their thinking will take them! Look for
ways to give your students the platform for these types of “I wonder” statements!
X- Xylophone (ok, maybe not an actual xylophone), but
incorporate a catchy song or two into your lesson and watch the whole class
join in the fun!
Y- You! Be yourself, have fun and let your students
learn a little bit about you and your life, family, etc. If they know you, and you know them, they
will listen to you and work hard for you!
Z- Zing
Put a little zing in your lesson with a song, catchy phrase, gesture,
anything! It doesn’t take much, but a
little effort to put “zing” in your lesson
These are great suggestions! Perfect timing to begin getting excited about the upcoming school year!
ReplyDeleteThese are great suggestions! Perfect timing to begin getting excited about the upcoming school year!
ReplyDeleteLove your ideas, Manda! You are so creative! I love working with you!
ReplyDelete