1 / 12

Outside the comfort zone Getting comfortable with challenging your students

Outside the comfort zone Getting comfortable with challenging your students. Geoff Hardy-Gould Director of Education, OISE. Aims. I have considered my beliefs on challenging learners I feel more comfortable with challenging learners

mave
Download Presentation

Outside the comfort zone Getting comfortable with challenging your students

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Outside the comfort zoneGetting comfortable with challenging your students Geoff Hardy-Gould Director of Education, OISE

  2. Aims I have considered my beliefs on challenging learners I feel more comfortable with challenging learners I have some techniques to challenge learners and to help learners challenge themselves I know what I need to do to make my lessons more challenging

  3. Believing you can do it 1. Approach difficult tasks as challenges to be mastered, not threats to be avoided 2. Set themselves challenging goals 3. Heighten or sustain effort in face of failure 4. Attribute failure to insufficient effort, or lack of knowledge and skills which are acquirable next time

  4. Sources of self-efficacy Mastery experiences Vicarious experiences Social persuasion Danger of undermining Structuring situations Reducing stress reactions

  5. How teachers mediate challenge Fostering an internal need: to respond to challenges to seek out new challenges Appropriacy of challenge Fostering a sense of always wanting to go one step further Setting your own challenging goals

  6. Learner Needs Matrix AFFILIATION Acquiescence AUTONOMY I want to contribute Acquiescent autonomy Restricted autonomy Apathy AGENCY Antagonistic autonomy Crushed autonomy Distorted autonomy Anger Anxiety Motivating Every Learner: Alan McLean, Sage 2009 Alienation

  7. Learning stances and reactions Affiliation Acquiescence Quietly engaging Autonomy Mutedly engaging Harmoniously engaging Exasperating Apathy Hiding Energetically engaging Agency Alarming/draining Threatening Anxiety Opposing Anger Motivating Every Learner: Alan McLean, Sage 2009 Alienation

  8. How teachers motivate their pupils AFFILIATION Engagement (care) Stimulation (enjoy) AUTONOMY Structure (trust) AGENCY Feedback (believe) Motivating Every Learner: Alan McLean, Sage 2009

  9. Teaching styles Valuing Protecting Soothing Allowing Attuning Colluding Blocking Pushing Pestering Encouraging Crushing Coercing Crushing Provoking Trashing Motivating Every Learner: Alan McLean, Sage 2009

  10. Levers for the challenging teacher Context and classroom culture Quantity of work in time available Difficulty of task (language, desired outcome) Assistance given Environmental adjustment (affect) Feedback (close monitoring; coaching)

  11. Conclusion Ts can shy away from challenging sts Be the “challenging” teacher who fosters successful habits of mind Use differentiation techniques Show care, enjoyment, trust and belief in learners Build agency via coaching and mediation

  12. geoff.hardy-gould@oise.com References Psychology for language teachers, Williams and Burden (CUP) 1997 Self-Efficacy, Albert Bandura 1994 (in VS Ramachaudran (Ed) Encyclopedia of human behaviour vol 4 New York: Academic Press) Motivating Every Learner Alan McLean, Sage 2009 Art Costa, Habits of mind across the curriculum 2009

More Related