Nice thought provoking article ... please read and share your thoughts

regards
Guru


HANDS-ON, MINDS-ON LEARNING Indira Vijaysimha explains how teachers can
impart knowledge without becoming overly controlling and authoritarian

One of the most frustrating experiences that teachers face in the classroom
is not being able to get children to pay attention to what they are saying.
Many teachers resort to threat and punishment routines in order to
establish their dominance over their children and proceed to teach their
lesson to a silent class. This seems to be an effective way to teach and
traditionally, trainee teachers have been encouraged to establish control
over the children so that they can proceed with their teaching without
interruptions. School inspectors, too, have typically appreciated
classrooms where the children are sitting quietly in orderly rows and the
teacher proceeds with the lesson. The effectiveness of this tradition of
teaching has been under question for several decades now, although it is
still followed.

Let us take a quick look at the reasons why silencing children by threats
and punishment may not be a good teaching strategy. To begin with, it
should be rather obvious that just because children are silent in class
while the teacher is teaching it doesn’t mean that they are focused on what
the teacher is saying. If children are not allowed to speak in class and
are supposed to respond only to the questions asked by the teacher, then
the teacher has little opportunity to evaluate whether they have actually
understood what is being taught. Years of schooling where pupils have to
sit silently in class is likely to result in a population of adults who
unquestioningly accept authority.

Although such an ‘obedient’ population may seem desirable to some, it has
other consequences that should have us deeply worried. Blind obedience to
authority is not the preferred end of education.

Education is meant to develop creativity and critical thinking in order to
make progress and human flourishing possible. We also see that when some
children are coerced into submitting to teachers’ authority they become
rebellious and angry. In many cases, such children effectively dropping out
of learning by tuning out the teacher, being disruptive in class, playing
truant, or by actually dropping out of school itself. In addition to this
set of undesirable consequences, research studies indicate that getting
children to ‘shut up and listen’ is not an effective way to develop
conceptual understanding.

Pointing out to some of the undesirable consequences of classes that
require children to sit quietly and listen does not of course, solve the
teacher’s problem of having to manage children’s attention. Recent
conversations with teachers indicate that the problem of attention may have
become worse due to children’s exposure to mobile phones and tablets. The
process of getting students’ attention without getting frustrated, shouting
or issuing threats is challenging. In fact, a 2014 study reveals that 40%
of teachers leave before completing one year of work. One of the top
reasons cited for quitting is difficulties in “coping with and responding
to student behavioural issues.” What can teachers do to find reasonably
satisfying ways to hold children’s attention? How can they get important
messages and instruction across without becoming overly controlling and
authoritarian?

Build rapport

In order to manage children’s attention, it is helpful to think of the
classroom from the child’s view point. A friendly approach will help
teachers build a rapport with students and this in turn can enable the
teacher to discuss some basic rules about classroom behaviour. Soft
conversation between students should be tolerated and there is no need for
a teacher to put an end to all forms of student talk in the classroom.
However, if on entering a class a teacher finds children talking loudly and
being boisterous it is not advisable to try and talk louder than the
students. Some other way of drawing the students’ attention can be tried —
things like writing or drawing on the blackboard, starting a clapping
rhythm, or simply standing quietly and waiting for children to notice them
are some ways that teachers have successfully tried.

Have a plan

It is important to have a plan about how to proceed once children’s
attention has been gained. After getting the children’s attention, the next
step would be to have an engaging activity, game task or story related to
the lesson that is to be taught. Sometimes an object or experiment can be
used to spark children’s curiosity and they can be encouraged to voice
their thoughts and questions. With a little patience, children can be
helped to understand that it is preferable to take turns while talking and
that it is important to listen to each other.

Social learning theories in psychology indicate that teachers need to model
the behaviour that they expect from children. For example, by listening
carefully, without interrupting, to what an individual child has to say,
the teacher herself models the kind of behaviour that is expected from
children.

Sometimes in the interest of proceeding with the lesson, the teacher may
have to stop a child from talking about something that is not related to
the topic being discussed. Rather than abruptly asking the child to stop
talking, the teacher could gently request the child to meet the teacher
later to continue that particular conversation. By doing this, the teacher
acknowledges the child’s need to communicate but is also being responsible
towards the learning needs of other children in the class.

Make it interactive

By making the class interesting and providing plenty of opportunities for
children to participate through games, problem solving, experimenting,
researching or exploring, teachers can retain children’s attention. If
classes are interesting for children, they are more likely to pay attention
and listen to the teacher and to each other.

Nowadays, children have easy access to information and knowledge through
television and mobile phone. In this scenario, it no longer makes sense for
teachers to merely transmit information to children. They need to engage
with children’s thinking and help children reason and analyse information.
They need to do this in interesting ways or risk losing children’s
interest by boring them.

Teachers too can use technology as aids to make the classroom more
interesting. With or without technology, teachers can keep children
interested if they make their lessons cognitively challenging by including
games, puzzles, case studies or problem-solving. This actually means that
teachers must see themselves as problem posers rather than answer
providers. In this age of information overload, teachers should take on the
role of getting children to think beyond smartly packaged information
capsules. Children need to be helped to see how data or evidence is
obtained and encouraged to develop the habit of reasoning and
interpretation based on data.

This need not necessarily be a daunting exercise. Simple survey and
graphing exercises can form part of lessons. Children can challenge each
other’s interpretation of data in so doing develop reasoning skills. They
can relate their class work with newspaper or media surveys and think about
the evidence presented.

This is just one example of how classroom teaching can be made meaningful
and relevant to children. If lessons are interesting, teachers will not
have to use coercive methods to make children study. Indeed, children will
become eager and excited about their school work and so will the teachers.
All this does require planning and preparation on part of the teachers and
a genuine interest in the subject that they are teaching.

(The author is with Azim Premji University, Bengaluru)

source-
http://www.deccanherald.com/content/631769/engaging-young-minds-meaningfully.html



IT for Change, Bengaluru
www.ITforChange.net

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