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STUDENT ENGAGEMENT November 29, 2016 Wow! My students were really engaged in this lesson! On a note card, write about a time when your students were highly engaged in learning. Underline or highlight the elements of the lesson and environment that resulted in this high level of engagement. Marzano and Pickering’s Essential Components for Engagement The 4 Questions Students Ask Themselves How do I feel? Am I interested? Is this important? Can I do this? Learning Targets and Success Criteria Learning Targets Learn about the four essential questions a learner internally audits before they engage. Success Criteria I can articulate the role emotion plays in engagement I can articulate the role interest plays in engagement I can articulate how relevance contributes to engagement I can articulate how self-efficacy contributes to engagement 5 Strategies for Addressing “How do I feel?” 1. Using effective pacing 2. Incorporating physical movement 3. Demonstrating intensity and enthusiasm 4. Using humor 5. Building positive teacher-student peer relationships Learning Relationships “Students show increased effort in classroom activities when teachers take an interest in students as individuals, get to know them by name, and talk to them not only in the classroom but during other activities in the school as well.” -Dr. Richard Jones, “Strengthening Student Engagement,” 2008 High Five Line Students record "brags" on slips of paper and place in the "High Five" bucket. The "brag" can be either for themselves or a classmate. Students line up in two lines facing each other. The teacher then draws out a "brag". The recipient steps to the head of the walkway as the teacher reads the "brag". The student then walks or dances between their peers while receiving high fives. Am I Interested? It makes logical sense that if a student finds the material presented in class boring or irrelevant, he or she will most likely not attend to classroom activities. The content of instruction though is not always obviously interesting to students. Teachers can help trigger and maintain situational interest by utilizing academically based games and turning questions into spontaneous chances for inconsequential competition. Talk a Mile a Minute Game Project a subject with a list of related vocabulary. Participants are in pairs. Participant A will face the screen and Participant B will have his/her back to the screen. While facing the screen, Participant A describe each word on the list by giving clues. Clues may not include any of the words or the subject. Participant B will guess individual vocabulary words and will name the general subject. Vocabulary may be skipped and returned to later. We need two volunteers to model this game. Round 1 You have 15 seconds to find a partner who is not at your table. Partner A is closest to the ceiling! • Partner A faces screen & gives clues. • Partner B has back to screen and responds to clues. Subject: Types of Animals Mammal Reptile Amphibian Bird Insect Fish Spider Round 2 – Exchange Roles • Partner B faces screen & gives clues. • Partner A has back to screen and responds to clues. (Partner A is closest to the ceiling!) Subject: Abraham Lincoln Civil War President Emancipation Proclamation Gettysburg Address Assassination John Wilkes Booth Ford’s Theater Intriguing Picture Activity 1) What facts & details do I notice? 2) 5 Senses: What do I taste, hear, see, touch, smell? 3) What questions/ideas 4) Class Application: do I have when I view How can I use this type this picture? of activity with my students? Picture Round Robin 1st participant shares a single fact or detail from section 1. Rotate clockwise for each participant to share a single fact or detail from section 1, not shared by another team member. Participants may add to graphic organizers as the team shares. Repeat for Sections 2-4. (Share only one item from each section.) Games in Centers 3 Main Ways to Insure a positive response to “Is it Important?” 18 1. Connect to students’ daily lives Make comparisons to student interests 2. Connect to student’s life ambitions 3. Encouraging application of knowledge Provide Choice Real World Application Encourage Personal Projects Interactive reading! Videos https://www.flocabulary.com/unit/area-andperimeter/video/ Choice Assignments I’m talking the Civil War! I’m talking North and South. I’m talking slavery and states’ rights. I’m talking states seceding, Union loyalty, and Americans fighting each other. I’m talking bloody battles. I’m talking Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address and the Emancipation Proclamation. I’m talking Johnny Rebs, Billy Yanks, Blues, and Grays. I’m talking death. I’m talking the war that almost destroyed our country. I’m talking the Civil War! Making Lessons Meaningful What are some approaches you take to ensure that learning is meaningful to students? Examples: Decide which lessons would hold more meaning for students Try it! Pick an upcoming topic and brainstorm how to make the lesson meaningful Question 4: Can I Do This? 24 If yes, students are more likely to engage. If no, students might lessen or abort their involvement- even if they have positive feelings about the task, are interested in the topic, and perceive it as being related to their personal goals. If students believe they can do something, they can. If they believe they can’t, they can’t. (Mindset) “Learning is risking. Every time we venture to learn something new, we take a big risk beyond our comfort zone.” Deporter, Reardon, Singer-Noirie 1999 Teacher Actions “Teachers can foster an environment conducive to student engagement by practicing small, seemingly unimportant activities: greeting students at the door, making eye contact, allowing enough “wait” time when expecting a student to answer a question before moving on to another student, dignifying wrong responses, repeating a question, or giving hints that will encourage students to try again.” -Marzano, A Different Kind of Classroom, 1992 Fixed Mindset Belief that your intelligence and abilities cannot be changed Talents are carved in stone Fear making mistakes. Growth Mindset Belief that your abilities and intelligence can change through effort and learning View mistakes as learning opportunities. Dweck, Mindset: The New Psychology of Success,2007 Guidelines for Effective Praise Sort the cards into two categories: Effective Praise Ineffective Praise Discuss: How can praise affect student motivation? In which instructional method is cognitive engagement the highest? Engagement Rank Laboratory (Hands-on work) 1 Group work 2 Presentation 3 (creating/making) Individualized (seat) work 4 Class discussions (whole 5 group T-led) 6 Teacher lecture Active for all Active for all Active for all Passive for all Passive for most Passive for all Sources: Yair, Educational Administration Quarterly, Vol. 36, #4 (October 2000); Valentine (NSDC Conference (December, 2010) Take responsibility for student engagement practices “It is primarily the teacher’s responsibility to engage the students, as opposed to the teacher expecting students to come to class naturally and automatically engaged.” -Dr. Richard Jones, “Strengthening Student Engagement,” 2008 Reflection Questions Ask Yourself: Are Students Engaged? Question 1: Do I provide a safe, caring and energetic environment? Question 2: Do I make things interesting? Question 3: Do I demonstrate why the content is important? Question 4: Do I help students realize that personal effort if the key to success? Marzano, March 2013, ASCD Educational Leadership EXIT TICKET PLAY, PAUSE, REWIND