This powerpoint accompanies a presentation on the need to reach students as individuals before any significant teaching can occur. It reflects the material in the book by the same name to be published in November, 2010 by Mary Kim Schreck.
3. RIPPLE EFFECT: YOUR SMALL ACTIONS CAN YIELD HUGE RESULTS BUILD UP THEIR ACADEMIC CONFIDENCE . USE NOVELTY AND CREATIVITY FIND OUT THEIR SAT-SUN KINGS/ QUEENS CONVEY YOUR EXPECTATIONS .
5. WHEN STUDENTS AREN’T CONNECTED THEY CAN TEND TO EXPLODE Image: Francesco Marino / FreeDigitalPhotos.net
6. VALIDATE THEIR CULTURE By adding content that reflects their backgrounds By using examples appropriate to their prior knowledge By having pictures in the room, school that show members of their culture By inviting speakers, presenters who are of their culture By your respectful speech and actions
15. CREATIVE ENGAGEMENT NEEDS: THE SEVEN C‘S CONTENT: needs to be rigorous, inviting, varied, meaningful. CHOICE: needs to present in every aspect of learning—projects, methods, strategies, modes of learning. CONFIDENCE: needs to feel capable of succeeding and experience success often. CELEBRATION: the beginning and end of any unit of study should be set up as an emotional celebration. CHANCE TO CHANGE: opportunity to correct work, re-do work needs to be built into the pattern—mastery. CREATIVITY: novelty, nonlinguistic representations, open-ended work based on multi-intelligence abilities. CHALLENGE: learning has meaning, real life connections, never boring, stimulates higher order thinking. 1 3 2 7 4 6 5
18. THE EDUCATION CONNECTION RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN TEACHER & STUDENT . CONTENT ACTIVE LEARNING MEANINGFUL ```CULTURAL CONNECTIONS ENGAGEMENT SUCCESSFUL ACHIEVEMENT
19. WITH STUDENTS OF MINORITY CULTURES OR IN INSTITUTIONALIZED POVERTY, THE EDUCATIONAL CONNECTION IS BROKEN IF RELATIONSHIPS ARE MISSING… NO RELATIONSHIP
20. First, kids are more concerned about how much you CARE than how much you KNOW… Image by Lisa Triefenbach www.lisatrief.com
21. MOTIVATION COMES FROM SUCCESS, NOT THE OTHER WAY AROUND! PRAISE AND POINT OUT REAL SUCCESS NO MATTER HOW SMALL!
24. According to 129 studies of the use of nonlinguistic strategies… the increase in student achievement was … Marzano, 2010, Educational Leadership, Vol. 67 No 8 p 84-86 Nonlinguistic representation
25. 17% Visuals, sketches, graphic organizers, dramatizations, flow charts, mindmaps, computerized simulations Not only images but smells, tastes, kinesthetic sensations= all nonlinguistics
28. OUR JOB IS TO HELP STUDENTS REACH THE OCEAN AND GET OUT OF THE FISHBOWL Image by Stanislav Odyagailo http://www.shutterstock.com/gallery.mhtml?id=168298
29. OUR JOB IS TO GIVE THEM OPPORTUNITIES TO SPREAD THEIR WINGS Image by Stanislav Odyagailo http://www.shutterstock.com/gallery.mhtml?id=168298
30. OUR JOB IS TO URGE EACH CHILD TO CLIMB AND PROVIDE THE SAFETY NET Image by Piotr Maciaszek http://pitpistolet.deviantart.com/
31. These slides are part of a hands-on, interactive presentation/workshop geared toward classroom teachersoffered byMary Kim Schreckmarykim@aol.com
Notas do Editor
Astudent’s ability to engage in a class is strongly enhanced bya nurturing relationship with the teacher.
One of the strongest soft skills a teacher can possess is the ability to influence the emotional state in the classroom.
We need to teach both methods of thinking so that students will have the ability to use both sides of their brains effectively.
Students need predictable ritual to feel safe yet within that ritual needs to be enough novelty to keep boredom from setting in and destroying any hope for engagement.