Teaching Student to DRIVE Their Learning
Pages 44-57
Take a moment to number the students you have in each column. Which column has the most students? What Best Practice would help the majority of those students move closer to Driving? Explain.
Educating Gen Zs is a whole new world.... but educators, we are up to the challenge!
Teaching Student to DRIVE Their Learning
Pages 44-57
Take a moment to number the students you have in each column. Which column has the most students? What Best Practice would help the majority of those students move closer to Driving? Explain.
The most challenging students I have this year need to progress from Passive Disengagement and Engagement to Active Engagement. To do so, the Best Practices I want to focus on most are conferencing with students about their interpretation of data; identifying success criteria and inviting students to identify which of these will be difficult for them (and why); and, creating a climate of risk-taking and understanding that learning occurs across a continuum. I want to try more deliberate one-on-one conferencing so students can understand their own learning paths and self-assess their current progress with my guidance. This will help them gain the confidence they need to embrace challenges in strategic thinking and build stamina.
ReplyDeleteLooking at my homeroom class breakdown, I have 0 students Disrupting, 4 Avoiding, 6 Withdrawing, a majority of 10 Participating, 6 Investing, and currently 0 in the Driving category. Since the bulk of my students are sitting right in the middle at "Participating," it tells me they are generally compliant, following instructions, and completing the assigned work, but they haven't quite taken ownership of the learning process. One way I could shift this group closer to the “Driving” stage would be to implement structured student-led goal setting combined with self-assessment routines. Right now, these students are great at waiting for my direction. By shifting the responsibility so they have to articulate what they want to achieve on an assignment and monitor their own progress, I can help them transition from passively complying to actively steering their learning.
ReplyDeleteI have found unless I have the correct activity my students tend to vacillate between withdrawing and participating. This year I have used Wayground more to shift my students into participation. I have found when I can present bite sized chunks of material followed by questions we can talk about, they tend to engage a little more fully. I have more students In participation with assignments and projects. I struggle to move students into investing and driving their learning. A few will invest and ask probing questions or are willing to go looking for answers and report back to the class. I have done a few activities using collaborative slides with questioning, putting students in groups, and letting them collaborate to find better responses. This activity can sometimes push some students into investing. There will always be a few who attempt to avoid altogether, even in the virtual setting. I would like to build out better blends of information gathering (notes) and questions that prompt discussion. I would also like to work on more collaborative work that can deepen engagement in the classroom.
ReplyDeleteI have a total of 23 students in my homeroom. They are known as 8-1. If anyone knows 8-1, this group for the most part is smart, quiet, and completes all assignments. I do have 1 student that falls between avoiding/withdrawing. The remaining 22 are so quiet, I can't tell if they are invested or driven, because they won't talk - not even in the chat really! But they do care about their grades; so, I would label them as participating. One area that I would like to work on more with my students to move them to driven is "SEEK" feedback, rather than "RECEIVE" feedback. I do send immediate feedback from Curipod or Writable, but they know that the feedback is AI-driven and not me (personally), so I try to watch them in Go Guardian as they write to give them instant feedback from me. On the other hand, me providing feedback may not change a thing, but students "SEEKING" feedback are much more likely to accept and act upon it. The key to great feedback is: Was the feedback "Heard", "Understood", and "Actioned". l also want to integrate more use of Graphic Organizers (0.62), which there is an array of them, but this serves as one tool that will allow the students to drive their learning by recording their ideas into story maps, Venn diagrams, and Frayer models (I use for voc. journals) etc. This does introduce the students to a range of tools, provide opportunities for them to practice using these tools, structuring learning tasks for students to decide which GO they want to use, and having student provide feedback that reflects on the effectiveness of the strategy that they choose. Me hearing their feedback can help or "Drive" me in improving instruction!
ReplyDeleteLooking at students in my homeroom class, I have found that there are two columns that have the most students - Withdrawing and Participating. While most students are in the Participating column, there is a fine line between it and Withdrawing. Students may be focused, paying attention, and doing work in one class or on one day, but then by the next class or by the next day, they can be distracted, focused on another assignment or reading, or sleeping. The Best Practice that would help the majority of these students move closer to Driving is having my students understand the goals I have for them and let them set some goals for themselves to help them invest in their learning, and then allowing them to have opportunities to self-monitor and evaluate how they are doing in reaching their goals.
ReplyDelete