Movement

Movement

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Data with new students

I was excited to see how my new students reacted to my style of teaching.  So far, the data I have collected from them has been pretty similar to what I saw with the groups I had during the first trimester.  We did a lot of active learning this week.  One activity in particular allowed us to head down to the lobby of the auditorium, where we worked on learning verb conjugations.  This deals with the memorization of subject pronouns and a verb chart.  We used masking tape to make a chart on the floor.  From there, I quizzed them by asking them to move to particular boxes of the chart.  It helped them visualize things and it was a productive way to use their energy (better than writing the chart on a worksheet).  Of the 100 students I had do this activity, over 90 were actively engaged.  Today, we did a lot of seated work and it was more of a struggle to hold their attention.  I think students have become accustomed to my active style and expect interaction.  I believe this has created some difficulty for me to calm them down and get them to focus during our whole-class lecture time.

In a survey I gave, I asked, "Describe a learning activity we have done in class that has been very helpful."  Some of the responses were:  "the chair game," "when we do actions with the words," around the world," "standing up and doing actions" (there was a lot of this one and the chair game).  I also had a few responses that said "quiet time," "working in our seats."  I had one kid say that he gets bored and doesn't listen if he has to sit for the entire hour."  There is some mixture in the results, but a strong majority prefer the interactive ways.  At the same time, my job is to reach ALL my students, so I need to find quiet activities that cater to the interests of some of the students.

1 comment:

  1. I really like the graphs for data. I am definitely going to use your great idea for my blog. Nice work.

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