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It’s More Than Serving Pizza:

It’s More Than Serving Pizza:. Motivating Today’s Secondary Students. Rick Wormeli rwormeli@cox.net 703-620-2447. Motivating Students When Nothing Else Works. Teacher Assistance Teams Specialists Coaches or Pastors/Rabbis Alternative Instruction

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It’s More Than Serving Pizza:

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  1. It’s More Than Serving Pizza: Motivating Today’s Secondary Students Rick Wormeli rwormeli@cox.net 703-620-2447

  2. Motivating Students When Nothing Else Works • Teacher Assistance Teams • Specialists • Coaches or Pastors/Rabbis • Alternative Instruction • Strong relationship with trusted adult • Diet • Sleep • Doctor’s Physical Exam • Looping • Deal with poverty issues

  3. Motivating Students When Nothing Else Works (cont.) • Middle school concept • Teacher training in young adolescence • Videotaping • Behavior checklist • Use inertia • Deal with loneliness and/or powerlessness • Multiple intelligences • Ask the student

  4. Teachers who motivate students to think, make sure students: • Experience competence regularly. • Have a positive relationship with at least one adult in the building • Teach in a developmentally appropriate manner • Share their passion for the subjects they teach • Enable and inspire students to participate in their own learning

  5. Characteristics of Motivational Classrooms(Rick Lavoie, The Motivation Breakthrough, 2007) Relevance Control Balance of Support and Challenge Social Interaction Safety and Security Motivational Forces (Needs): To Belong To be Acknowledged To be Independent To Control To be Important To Assert To Know

  6. Carol Dweck (2007) distinguishes between students with a fixed intelligence mindset who believe that intelligence is innate and unchangeable and those with a growth mindset who believe that their achievement can improve through effort and learning…Teaching students a growth mindset results in increased motivation, better grades, and higher achievement test results.” (p.6, Principal’s Research Review, January 2009, NASSP)

  7. I = Incomplete IP = In Progress NE = No Evidence NTY = Not There Yet • A • B • C • I, IP, NE, or NTY Once we cross over into D and F(E) zones, does it really matter? We’ll do the same two things: Personally investigate and take corrective action

  8. Highly Motivating: Hope(Being Encouraged/Allowed to Recover from Failure, Stupidity, Irresponsibility, Impulsivity) If we do not allow students to re-do work, we deny the growth mindset so vital to student maturation, and we are declaring to the student: • This assignment had no legitimate educational value. • It’s okay if you don’t do this work. • It’s okay if you don’t learn this content or skill. None of these is acceptable to the professional educator.

  9. What Doesn’t Work? • Punishment • Removing students from p.e., fine and performing arts classes to double-up on math and reading classes for state exams • Considering LD, ED, Asperger’s Syndrome, Tourette’s, ESL the opposite of gifted • Unwavering adherence to pacing guides. • Homework that does not advance our cause. • Relying solely on talking to students as our primary way to get information across. • Limiting what students read this year because a teacher they may or may not have in the future may or may not use that book as well. • Watching videos for the whole class period. • Lecturing for the majority of the period – Lectures chunked works well, however.

  10. What Works at the Secondary Level? 1. Expertise in adolescents. Circle in our lesson plans where we see evidence of our expertise in teaching adolescents. We should find: • Structure and clear limits • Physical activity every single day • Frequent and meaningful experiences with fine and performing arts • Opportunities for self-definition • Safe and inviting emotional atmosphere • Students experiencing real competence • Meaningful participation in families, school, and communities • Basic of students met: food, water, rest, good health, physical presence.

  11. Expertise in Teaching Adolescents (continued): • Promotion of sleep -- Make it a regular homework assignment • Teacher Advisory • 9th Grade Academies • Students involved in their own learning, including assessment • Students’ knowing themselves as learners and becoming their own advocates • Abstract and symbolic concepts turned into physical representations • Teaming (particularly for grades 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9) • Outdoor Education programs • Patience with the emotional roller coaster • Stress on growth plates on the ends of bones relieved regularly – get them moving every 15 minutes!

  12. What Else Works in Secondary Schools? 2. Formative assessment 3. Formal reading lessons through 10th grade 4. Creating prior knowledge where there was none 5. Summarization 6. Priming for Structure: Our ability to retrieve information based on how it was structured when it first entered our minds, not how we studied it 7. Primacy-Recency effect 8. Battling Confabulation

  13. What Works in Secondary Schools? 9. Vividness in learning experiences 10. Examples contrasted with near examples 11. Service learning 12. Ample opportunities for articulating and defending thinking 13. Metaphors and analogies 14. Collaborative efforts among students 15. Flexible thinking among students; creating mental dexterity

  14. What Works in Secondary Schools? 16. Dramatic evolution of current grading practices into standards-based grading that yields accurate grades that can be used to accurately document student progress, provide feedback, and inform our instruction. 17. Teachers who know their subjects and how to teach them 18. Teachers who sincerely enjoy being in the presence of their students 19. Teaching students that compassion is among the more courageous and preferred qualities of mankind 20. Differentiation 21. Getting students to learn the material in terms of relationships, connections, and patterns, not individual discreet pieces 22. Homework and other assignments that are transformative rather than perfunctory, and stop using homework passes!

  15. Relating to Students • Relationships transcend everything. • They don’t care how much we know until they know how much we care. • Subject, teacher: It’s the same thing. • Let them know they make good company.

  16. Relating to Students (continued) • Affective versus academic is not a zero-sum. • Get them to like you? • Remember, they’re kids first. • Accept students as they are, not as you want them to be.

  17. Relating to Students (continued) • Model healthy responses to struggle and failure. • Use the power of wait time. • Affirm; create rites of passage. • Allow physical touch.

  18. Taking Positive Risks “The fellow who never makes a mistake takes his orders from one who does.” -- Herbert Prochnow “If I had been a kid in my class today, would I want to come back tomorrow?” -- Elsbeth Murphy “Nothing ventured, something lost.” -- Roland Barth

  19. Negating Students’ Incorrect Responses While Keeping Them in the Conversation • Act interested, “Tell me more about that…” • Empathy and Sympathy: “I used to think that, too,” or “I understand how you could conclude that…” • Alter the reality: -- Change the question so that the answer is correct -- That’s the answer for the question I’m about to ask -- When student claims he doesn’t know, ask, “If you DID know, what would you say?”

  20. Negating Students’ Incorrect Responses and While Them in the Conversation • Affirm risk-taking • Allow the student more time or to ask for assistance • Focus on the portions that are correct Remember: Whoever is responding to students is processing the information and learning. Who, then, should be responding to students in the classroom? Students.

  21. Be Inviting, Not Disinviting • Greeting at the door • Student work up in the room • Directing students to one another • Negating incorrect responses diplomatically • Location of the teacher’s desk

  22. Get Physical! • Attach content to a piece of the body • Post information high and to the right • Full spectrum lighting • Living graphic organizers • Ascending lines • Exercise/Stretching

  23. “All thinking begins with wonder.”-- Socrates Our job is not to make up anybody’s mind, but to open minds and to make the agony of decision-making so intense you can escape only by thinking.” -- Fred Friendly, broadcaster

  24. Two Factors Affecting the Pre-Adolescent and Adolescent Brain: Moral and Abstract Reasoning, Immediate, working memory Awareness of Consequences, Planning, Impulsivity control Input by-passes cognition centers; goes directly to emotional response centers Pre- Frontal Cortex

  25. Hippocampus and the Amygdala

  26. …AMYGDALA! Activate the… • Amygdala encodes emotion on to information as it’s • processed in the hippocampus. • Learning with strong emotion retained longer. • Don’t go too far – emotion can dominate cognition. • Purposefully plan for the emotional atmosphere.

  27. Neuron

  28. Oxygen/Nutrient-Filled Bloodflow When the Body is in Survival Mode Vital Organs Areas associated with growth Areas associated with social activity Cognition

  29. The Brain’s Dilemna:What Input to Keep, and What Input to Discard? • Survival • Familiarity/Context • Priming • Intensity • Emotional Content • Movement • Novelty -- Summarized from Pat Wolfe’s Brain Matters, 2001 The brain never stops paying attention. It's always paying attention.

  30. With hocked gems financing him, Our hero bravely defied all scornful laughter That tried to prevent his scheme. Your eyes deceive, he had said; An egg, not a table Correctly typifies this unexplored planet. Now three sturdy sisters sought proof, Forging along sometimes through calm vastness Yet more often over turbulent peaks and valleys. Days became weeks, As many doubters spread Fearful rumors about the edge. At last from nowhere Welcome winged creatures appeared Signifying momentous success. -- Dooling and Lachman (1971) pp. 216-222

  31. Perception • What do you see? • What number do you see? • What letter do you see? Perception is when we bring meaning to the information we receive, and it depends on prior knowledge and what we expect to see. (Wolfe, 2001) Are we teaching so that students perceive, or just to present curriculum and leave it up to the student to perceive it?

  32. Recall Success with Individual, Unrelated Items

  33. Visuals and Graphics are Powerful! Examples: When students are learning vocabulary terms, significantly more are learned when students portray the words graphically (ex: Shape spellings) instead of defining terms and using them in a sentence. Students can portray Aristotle’s Rhetorical Triangle (ethos, pathos, logos) by juggling.

  34. Sample Anticipation Guide Theme Me My Group Author “AQOTWF is not an accusation nor a confession, and least of all an adventure.” “War changes people.” “War forces people to reject traditional values and civilized behavior.” “Cruel trainers are the best instructors for soldiers about to go to war.” “True friendship endures all.” “Whole generations are destroyed by war.” “Nature is indifferent to mankind’s pain and decisions.” “To no man does the Earth mean so much as to the soldier.” “Every soldier believes in Chance.” C

  35. “The breathing of Benbow’s pit is deafening, like up-close jet engines mixed with a cosmic belch. Each new breath from the volcano heaves the air so violently my ears pop in the changing pressure – then the temperature momentarily soars. Somewhere not too far below, red-hot, pumpkin size globs of ejected lava are flying through the air.” -- National Geographic, November 2000, p. 54 Journalistic vs. Encyclopedic Writing

  36. “A volcano is a vent in the Earth from which molten rock (magma) and gas erupt. The molten rock that erupts from the volcano (lava) forms a hill or mountain around the vent. Lava may flowout as viscous liquid, or it may explode from the vent as solid or liquid particles…”-- Global Encyclopedia, Vol. 19 T-U-V, p. 627

  37. Components of Blood Content Matrix Red Cells White Cells Plasma Platelets Purpose Amount Size & Shape Nucleus ? Where formed

  38. T-List or T-Chart: Wilson’s 14 Points Main Ideas Details/Examples 1. 2. 3. 1. 2. 3. 1. 2. 3 Reasons President Wilson Designed the Plan for Peace Three Immediate Effects on U.S. Allies Three Structures/Protocols created by the Plans

  39. Cornell Note-Taking Format ReduceRecord [Summarize in short phrases or essential questions next to each block of notes.] Review-- Summarize (paragraph-style) your points or responses to the questions. Reflect and comment on what you learned. [Write your notes on this side.]

  40. Somebody Wanted But So[Fiction] Somebody (characters)… wanted (plot-motivation)…, but (conflict)…, so (resolution)… .

  41. Something Happened And Then[Non-fiction] Something (independent variable)… happened (change in that independent variable)…, and (effect on the dependent variable)…, then (conclusion)… .

  42. Provide Models Begin with the end in mind. Students will outgrow their models.

  43. Feedback vs Assessment Feedback: Telling a person what they did – no evaluative component Assessment: Gathering data in order to make a decision Greatest Impact on Student Success:Formative feedback

  44. -- Marzano, CAGTW, pgs 5-6

  45. Attention Signals • Movement • Sound • Rain stick • Power location • Speak quietly, requesting an action • Minimize light blinking

  46. Attention Moves • Using students’ names • Proximity • Redirecting • Startling • Pre-alerting • Prompts • Humor • Drama • Students as assistants • Vocal inflection • Unison task • Argue (Devil’s Advocate) • Props • Connect to student’s imagination or life • Praise

  47. Additional Differentiated Instruction Strategies • Whoever responds to students/classmates is doing the learning. Make sure the majority of the time it’s the students responding, not the teacher. • Teachers ask 80 questions each hour on average. How many do students ask? Two. That’s for the whole class for the whole hour, not two per student. Students learn more when they ask the questions. Find ways to make question-asking so compelling they can’t escape it.Consider your level of questioning: 80% of questions teachers ask are recall or comprehension quetsions. (Hollas)

  48. Logical Fallacies • Ad Hominem (Argument To The Man) -- Attacking the person instead of attacking his argument: “Dr. Jones’ conclusions on ocean currents are incorrect because he once plagiarized an research article.” • Straw Man (Fallacy of Extension) -- Attacking an exaggerated version of your opponent's position. "Senator Jones says that we should not fund the attack submarine program. I disagree entirely. I can't understand why he wants to leave us defenseless like that." * • The Excluded Middle (False Dichotomy) -- Assuming there are only two alternatives when in fact there are more. For example, assuming Atheism is the only alternative to Fundamentalism, or being a traitor is the only alternative to being a loud patriot. * From Jim Morton’s’ “Practical Skeptic” website http://members.aol.com/jimn469897/skeptic.htm)  

  49. Motivating Assignments… • Communicate clear expecations • Incorporate a cause. • Incorporate cultural references and students. • Provide an audience other than the teacher. • Allow choices. • Enlist students in determining how it will be assessed. • Are complex. They’re not “fluff.”

  50. Motivating Assignments(continued) • Integrate assignments with other classes. • Seem short. “1-page better than 4-page.” • Are returned with feedback in a timely manner. Specific Practices for Homework: • Eliminate homework passes. • Eliminate extra credit options. • Have everyone turn in a paper.

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