Monday, May 24, 2021
Learning Loss?
That being understood, though educators acknowledge this year is different and have identified a gap in the learning from what would normally be covered, students are not searching for the learning. I say that because when any of us lose something of value, it is a loss because we care. If we lose our car keys, we immediately begin searching for them. To that behavior, we can add our wallets, purses, cell phones, and anything else that we care about. When we lose something we care about, we begin searching for it. Why isn’t education the same way? Students don’t seem to care about the loss, because we have not made it valuable to them. Yes, everyone cares about learning, but to a certain extent do they really? Do they really care about how they excel in academia? Because if they did, then the learning loss would trigger an emotional response.
For me, education has always been about the search for knowledge. A quest for developing knowledge. When I lost learning because of my behavior or such, I never really cared about it because I never owned the knowledge in the first place. In the post-pandemic education world, we have to change our thinking about learning. Our students are hungry for knowledge and it is incumbent upon us to cook up the feast that the students cannot refuse. To borrow a sports analogy, our goal should be to meet the students on their turf and play a better game. We cannot continue to deliver our lessons the same way in the post-pandemic world.
Excitement breeds desire. If we can build excitement with the students about learning, they will have a desire to learn more. If we place them on that path, then if we find ourselves in troubled times again, our students will never lose their learning simply because they care.
Until next time...
Friday, May 21, 2021
Grit and Resilience
Monday, May 17, 2021
Cultural Relevance
The best way for teachers to embrace cultural diversity in their classrooms is to start with learning about the cultures in the room. Reach out and understand the background of students. Learn about their experiences and their families. Through listening and actually understanding where students are coming from will be a great first step toward building an inclusive classroom.
Follow that with building on the strengths a student brings to the classroom. All students have dreams and personal goals. When a teacher understands those goals, they can help them by channeling their strengths. This will assist the teacher to build rich learning experiences for both teacher and student.
Finally, the culturally responsive classroom really does keep the student at the center. Student-centered activities and learning should always be the focus. The idea that a subject was taught can no longer be the benchmark. Did the student learn the concept? That should be the primary objective. If the student does not learn the material, then instruction was not successful. We should always concern ourselves with student learning.
Teachers and schools that embrace cultural relevance and are culturally responsive while keeping student learning in clear focus report higher academic achievement. The bottom line is that students don’t care how much you know until they know how much you care.
Until next time...
Friday, May 14, 2021
"Normal" May
Monday, May 10, 2021
Critical Thinking is not a Luxury Good
Friday, May 7, 2021
Schools are a Constant
After a long hiatus, the weekly communication is back. During my time out, I had plenty of time for reflection and I kept coming back to one thing: Schools are a constant. When schools closed, we had chaos. Parents had to figure out what to do about their work schedules. Kids had to figure out what to do with their spare time because activities were gone. The disruption in society was and continues to be, significant. Therefore, my thoughts kept returning to the idea that schools are one of the few constants we have in life. Just to define it further, I am not talking about the building or even the curriculum, but the people. We are in the people business, therefore the people in the business are what matter the most. When it comes to schools, the people are what make the difference. The people rise up every day for the students. Before COVID, teachers would rather come to school a bit under the weather than create a sub-plan, because it is easier and better for the students. Though post-COVID is different, the desire to rise up is present. We all know the rubber meets the road in the classroom and I am comfortable with the idea that our staff will rise up daily to meet that challenge. Have a most excellent weekend...Go PUPS! (cue Andra Day - Rise Up.)
Until next time...
Tuesday, May 4, 2021
Communication and Comprehension
Our ability to communicate is one of the most important life skills we can develop. As we all know, we can communicate in many ways, and all of them are important from body language to the written word. If we are not effective, it can lead to misunderstandings or worse, even confrontation. This is why communication skills are essential.
In order to improve our communication skills, we have to work on the details of good communication. Primarily, being a good listener. It is the most important of any skill and basic to good communication. Add to that the body language and eye contact. If you are interested in what someone is saying, look them in the eye, and watch your body language. A message can be conveyed in your body language and your eye contact, so be careful.
Additionally, the best communicators are concise. They can get to the point quite quickly. Making the point clear and avoiding rambling will keep the listener's attention. It also makes the speaker sound like they know what they are talking about. To be a good communicator you need to avoid speaking too much and use words that will not confuse the audience. An aspect of good communication is confidence in your message, open-mindedness, and respect. The best communicators have confidence but respect others around them. By extending respect to others, the communicator looks even more confident and in control.
All that being said, developing good communication skills is only one part of good communication. The ability to increase the comprehension of the audience is vital. Communication is nothing without comprehension. When we think about comprehension, our minds drift to reading comprehension tests from back in grade school. Though that is also comprehension, we are simply talking about understanding. As a good communicator, if our audience does not understand or comprehend the words or concepts, then we have done our job. Communication takes the words, the presentation medium, and adds to it the comprehension level of the audience.
As advocates for ourselves, our students, and our families we all need to work on comprehension. Yes, communication is important, but the key is comprehension. With good communication skills and even better comprehension, we can be empowered to make decisions to positively change our lives and world.
The bottom line is that communication without comprehension is worthless.
Until next time...