Tuesday, November 8, 2016

Look!!!! A Squirrel

As the weeks throughout the semester continue to fly by, I am trying to learn as much as possible about my CE, students in the classroom, and all of the routines implemented by my school.  A topic that keeps coming up in my CE and I's conversation is how we can reach the student's who just do not have the motivation and determination to give all of their effort when learning.  As I had my first observation last week, this is a topic that came up as well concerning one of my students in one of my groups.  My professor suggested that I switch around my seating chart for my small group instruction and have the more distracted, off task students sit directly in front of me to hopefully help this issue.

We all have those students in our class who just cannot seem to focus for more than two minutes at a time.  I often get really frustrated with having to constantly redirect their attention back to instruction. Some of my students have been put on behavior plans to address this very same problem.  My CE is constantly thinking of ways to reduce the amount of time she spends having to redirect the students' attention back to the focus of the lesson. She has taken the time to know how her students learn best, and so she has been able to incorporate rewards or consequences that are based off that particular student's interest. Which this, in return, helps the student to stay motivated to stay on task throughout the day. This week, I found an article on Edutopia that gave helpful tips on trying to help reach these students that I plan on sharing with my CE.  I found them to be really simple, yet very effective.  It talked about breaking up instructions into smaller sections.  Having the students create short checklist and this will help them to stay motivated to complete their assignments.  This is something so simple, yet has been proven to help students who struggle with staying focused.  Another tip that was given was to have the students set goals.  Maybe the student sets a big goal that will be for the week, or the entire day and then have them set shorter goals to help them reach that big goal.  I want to see if this would help some of my students in my class and am definitely willing to give these tips a try!

This blog post relates to facilitating students learning by having to know the strengths and weaknesses of your students in order to best address their issues.  Every student's situation is going to be different, and that is why it is important for the teacher and student to work together so the student can be successful and enjoy their learning experience!  

1 comment:

  1. Jessica,
    I am glad that everything in your classroom is going well, and that you got some great feedback from your observation! I have a student or two in my class that absolutely cannot pay attention, so this blog is super helpful! You do not want to be super strict when it comes to focusing, but you do want them to focus. I know that when my CE gets on a student for not focusing, they end up pouting and not focusing even more. These strategies will definitely help out!

    ReplyDelete