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Learn innovative strategies to keep students engaged in lessons, such as using fruits like grapes as symbols. Get inspiration on attention spans, shift ideas, talking research, and deeper thinking exercises. Discover unique ways to ask questions, use props like an egg or a deck of cards, and fun activities like Dollar Store ideas and summarizing games. Enhance engagement through brainstorming, technology, role-play, and group work. Energize your classroom with participation strategies and interactive learning.
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Help!My Students Are Falling Asleep Dr. Rachael S. Rudinoff Presented at Faculty Development Day March 2015
What techniques can we use to help students engage in our lessons?
How do the grapes relate to student engagement? • Think, then share with your partner. • You can use different types of fruits, vegetables, or objects and ask how they relate to your topic. • Think for a minute about how you would relate grapes to your area of study.
Now think about how the apple, kiwi and grapes are all different symbols of engagement? • This can help students think deeper about the topic. • It’s a great activating strategy! • Other novelty ideas by Anne Beninghof • Ideasforeducators.com
What We Know About Attention • Children can attend approximately their age plus maybe 2 minutes. • In general, no one can attend for more than 15 minutes without some spark, some change. • These “shifts” can be minor. • Feel the flow of the lesson, know when to shift.
Shifts • In a PowerPoint – • Place a funny photo • In a Video – • Stop the video and have a discussion – plan this ahead of time • Have students get up and move – • If you agree go to one corner, disagree, go to another corner and then allow for the inbetween • Tell your partner another shift idea
Talking Research • Person who does the most talking, does the most learning. • Lectures are necessary, but pause for discussion. • Best to use partners, because then everyone gets a chance to talk. • Assign 1 & 2. 1 tell 2 your thought, 2 report. Then shift. This way you guarantee everyone talks.
Thinking Deeper • Open an egg – What would your person say about student engagement? • You could have students pick the dollar store sunglasses and write the names of people on them. • Think – adults like to play. • You could also use an egg to discover any question. • How does the stock market impact your daily life? • Okay, now place in the eggs variables that may be impacted by the stock market or impact the stock market – price of gas, world economy, people’s perceptions.
Asking Questions • Throw the caterpillar – and answer the question • How many classes can a student miss before they are dropped from the course? • What’s one of the formats of classes at WilmU • You can use a beach ball and have a question that they need to answer based on where they catch the ball • It’s good if these are generic and you can use them over and over • If working on vocabulary or concepts – Give a non-example, provide a description, come to the board and draw it.
Deck of Cards • Use to find a partner • Pick a number (and only select Ace through 5) • That’s the number of examples you need to give to tell how Martin Luther King Jr. impacted our society. • What ideas do you have for using a deck of cards?
Dollar Store Fun • Show the hand post-it • How could you use this post-it note with your class? • The Dollar Stores are always changing and can spark novel ideas.
Other Engagement Strategies • Brainstorm • Technology • Role Play • Group Work • Requiring Participation in Presentations • What else do you do?
Summarizing Activities • Cover the desk • Use scraps of paper or post-its • Your group needs to write all the benefits of working at WilmU • Any group who comes up with a unique answer, gets 1,000 points • Don’t tally points – just make it fun for the groups
Pass the Plate • With your group, write a technique that can be used to boost student engagement? • Again, you can do the 1000 point score. • These wash off and can be reused. • Use Vis-a-via
Why I Think About Engagement • I am trying to model for my students, so that they will engage their students. • I might fall asleep if I have to listen to myself for 5 hours. • I know it has a positive impact. • Sometimes, my students are building towers from newspaper, but they will tell you how it relates to the topic I’m teaching.