Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Why We Wrote This Book
- A Psychological Tips for Teacher Wellbeing
- B Psychological Tips for Leading With Compassion, Authority and Skill
- C Psychological Tips for the Socio-Emotional Climate of the Group
- D Psychological Tips for Learner Engagement
- E Psychological Tips for Learner Self-Esteem
- F Psychological tips for Empowering Learners
- Index
F - Psychological tips for Empowering Learners
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 October 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Why We Wrote This Book
- A Psychological Tips for Teacher Wellbeing
- B Psychological Tips for Leading With Compassion, Authority and Skill
- C Psychological Tips for the Socio-Emotional Climate of the Group
- D Psychological Tips for Learner Engagement
- E Psychological Tips for Learner Self-Esteem
- F Psychological tips for Empowering Learners
- Index
Summary
Empowering learners means giving them voice, a sense of control, and a feeling that they can make a positive difference to their learning. When teachers empower learners, they enable them to take an active role in directing what and how they learn.
86 Help students break long-term goals into short-term ones
87 Show students how to use if … then strategies to reach goals
88 Make learning progress visible
89 Give questioning over to students
90 Help learners understand their role in achievement
91 Inspire your students to engage in deliberate practice
92 Welcome desirable difficulty
93 Praise effort and process, not product and person
94 Prompt students to be proactive about their learning
95 Show students how drawing can enhance their learning
96 Build in brain breaks
97 View feedback as a dialogue
98 Encourage your students to keep a portfolio
99 Help students learn how to learn
100 Embrace all learners’ languages
101 Integrate life skills
86 Help students break long-term goals into short-term ones
Students may feel overwhelmed by complex long-term goals. Help them set short-term goals in addition.
The behavioural science literature shows that goal setting significantly increases performance compared to an approach where students are simply told to do their best. However, if the goals are long-term and complex, such as, for example, I would like to gain some work experience in an English-speaking country, teachers need to give students additional support to help them reach such goals. This is because long-term and complex goals may feel unattainable and it is hard to feel a sense of progress, which can lead to loss of motivation. In contrast, short-term goals offer more opportunities to check progress and gain a sense of achievement, which in turn can boost students’ work morale. They also enable students to try a different strategy more readily if they notice that they are not successful in achieving a shortterm goal before it is too late.
• Talk to your students about their learning goals. Ask them to share their goals and discuss whether they are more short- or long-term goals, and reflect on how easy they are to achieve and why.
• Ask them to categorise the reasons.
• Working with their reasons, explain that long-term goals are best supported with additional short-term goals.
• Challenge them to break up their long-term goals into short term ones without losing sight of the long-term goal.
- Type
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- Information
- Sarah Mercer and Herbert Puchta's 101 Psychological Tips , pp. 91 - 107Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2023