During the summer, I am sharing thematic posts bringing together responses on similar topics from the past 11 years. You can see all those collections from the first 10 years here.
Today’s theme is Student Motivation and Social-Emotional Learning.
You can see the list following this excerpt from one of the posts:
1. Want 69ý to ‘Build a Better World?’ Try Culturally Responsive Social-Emotional Learning
The practice includes expanding students’ networks and developing their awareness of what it feels, looks, and sounds like to manage emotions. Read more.
2. Culturally Responsive Social-Emotional Learning: How to Get There
Bringing culturally responsive SEL into class can’t be done as an add-on. It needs to be integrated into daily routines and academic work. Read more.
3. Nine Strategies for Promoting Student Engagement
Five educators discuss how to maximize engagement, including the importance of understanding student motivation in and out of the classroom. Read more.
4. Increasing Engagement With Student Choice
Four educators discuss ways to increase student engagement, including providing choice and building a sense of classroom community. Read more.
5. Student ‘Compliance Does Not Equal Engagement’
Four educators share suggestions on how schools can maintain student engagement, especially during the teenage years. Read more.
6. 17 Approaches for Encouraging 69ý to Revise Their Writing
Five educators offer instructional strategies to use when teaching writing revision, including the power of an authentic audience. Read more.
7. Ways to Help Ignite 69ý’ Intrinsic Desire for Writing Revision
Five educators make suggestions that might help students want to revise their writing, including by using “editing stations.” Read more.
8. ‘I No Longer Give Grades on Student Writing Assignments, and It’s the Best Thing Ever!’
Five educators share how they have helped students motivate themselves to revise their writing. Read more.
9. Making Revision of Writing a ‘Collaborative Process’
Six educators discuss strategies they’ve used to encourage students to revise their writing, such as demonstrating their own practice. Read more.
10. 12 Strategies for Encouraging 69ý to Want to Revise Their Writing
Four educators share suggestions for creating the classroom conditions in which students want to make revisions to their writing. Read more.
More videos on student motivation:
More Q&A posts about student motivation and social-emotional learning:
- Give 69ý Choice When It’s Time to Read
- Encourage 69ý ‘to See 69ý as a Relational Experience’
- 22 Strategies for Encouraging 69ý’ Intrinsic Motivation to Read
- ‘Allow Time for Children to Read Whatever They Want’
- Make Learning Relevant by ‘Getting to Know Your 69ý’
- Teachers Can Make Lessons Relevant by Listening
- Responses to ‘Why Do I Have to Learn This?’
- ‘The Problem With Kindness': SEL & the Death of George Floyd
- Adding Relevance to Instruction
- Ways to Make Lessons ‘Relevant’ to 69ý’ Lives
- Videos: Student-Motivation Tips for Remote Learning
- Encouraging Student Engagement in Remote Learning
- Ways to Handle Student Absences in Remote Teaching & When We’re Back in School
- Responding to Absenteeism During the Coronavirus Pandemic & Beyond
- Four Ways to Help 69ý Feel Intrinsically Motivated to Do Distance Learning
- Five Ways to Boost Student Participation in Remote Learning
- Overcoming Apathy in Remote Teaching
- We Need to Help ‘69ý Recognize the Brilliance They Already Have’
- Look at ‘What’s Strong, Not What’s Wrong’ With Our 69ý
- Focusing on What Our 69ý Are Doing Instead of What They’re Not ...
- The Importance of Focusing on 69ý’ Assets
- We Must ‘See Our 69ý as Asset-Filled Beings’
- Everything You Wanted to Know About Student Motivation But Were Afraid to Ask
- ‘Building Student Engagement Begins With Community & Relationships’
- ‘Student Engagement Means Connectedness’
- Ways to Promote Student Engagement
- Everything You Wanted to Know About Student Agency But Were Afraid to Ask ...
- ‘Agency’ Lets 69ý ‘Take an Active Role in Shaping Their Future’
- Ways to Support Student Agency
- ‘Student Agency Is Ownership’
- Teach 69ý That ‘Failure Is a Step Toward Success’
- Supporting 69ý’ Capacity to ‘Bounce Back’
- Ways to Promote Resilience in the Classroom
- A ‘Trauma-Informed Classroom Is a Safe and Secure Place’
- Strategies for ‘Trauma-Informed Teaching’
- Ways 69ý Can Respond to Bullying
- Going After ‘the Roots’ of Bullying
- Using Social-Emotional Learning to Challenge ‘Systems of Oppression’
- Equity & Social-Emotional Learning
- Creating Classrooms ‘to Unlock the Learning Potential Mistakes Provide Us’
- Mistakes Are ‘Learning in Action’
- ‘Freedom to Fail’ Creates a Positive Learning Environment
- Recognize 69ý When They Learn From Mistakes
- ‘A Mistake Is a Door to Discovery’
- Ways Educators Can Respond to Student Trauma
- 69ý Exposed to Trauma Are ‘Full of Promise’
- 69ý Can’t ‘Wish Away’ Challenges of Student Trauma
- Student Goal-Setting in the Classroom
- Provide ‘Voice’ and ‘Choice’ When 69ý Set Goals
- ‘A Goal Without a Plan Is Just a Wish’
- 69ý ‘Take Ownership of Their Learning’ Through Goal-Setting
- Metacognition Is a ‘Catalyst for Action’
- Metacognitive Skills Put 69ý on ‘Road to Lifelong Learning’
- Student Metacognition ‘Needs to Be Purposely Developed’
- Metacognition Helps 69ý ‘Understand Their Gaps & How to Close Them’
- We Need to ‘Nurture Creativity for All 69ý’
- We Must Help 69ý ‘Recognize Their Creative Strengths’
- We Need to ‘Initiate Wonder in the Classroom’
- ‘Learning Self-Regulation’ Is Needed on Path to Academic Success
- ‘Self-Control Doesn’t Just Happen, It Needs to Be Taught’
- ‘Student Autonomy Is a Prerequisite of Self-Control’
- ‘Self-Control Can Be Learned’
- ‘Helping Children Succeed': An Interview With Paul Tough
- Applying a Growth Mindset in the Classroom
- ‘Growth Mindset Starts With Us, Not With Them’
- Student ‘Reflection Needs to Be a Habit’
- 69ý Must ‘Reflect on What They Are Learning’
- ‘It’s Time to Change the Conversation About Grit’
- 69ý Develop Grit by ‘Taking Charge of Their Own Learning’
- To Teach Grit or Not to Teach Grit: That Is the Question
- Ways to Build ‘Authentic Engagement’ & Not ‘Strategic Compliance’
- Strategies for Encouraging Student Engagement
- ‘Care Is the Catalyst for Learning’
- ‘There’s Nothing More Innovative Than Care’
- Supporting Student Engagement by ‘Building Community’
- Student Engagement Is ‘the Act of Being Invested in Learning’
- Student Engagement ‘Involves Joyous Effort’
- The Best Ways to Engage 69ý in Learning
- Ways to Cultivate Whole-Class Engagement
- There Is No Such Thing as an Unmotivated Student’
- ‘Good News & Bad News’ About Student Motivation
- ‘Listen, Empathize, Connect’ for Student Motivation
- ‘Character Should Be an Integrated Element of Education’
- ‘Teaching Character Is Not a Program or Curriculum’
- ‘Character Is Not Compliance Out of Fear’
- ‘Teachers Need to Behave Like Johnny Appleseeds': An Interview With Daniel Coyle
- ‘Creating a Culture Where 69ý Want to Succeed’
- Ways to Develop a Culture of Success in 69ý
- ‘Flow’ in the Classroom
- Student Engagement ‘Requires a Conversation’
- Teachers as ‘Persuaders': An Interview With Daniel Pink
- Classroom Strategies to Foster a Growth Mindset
- Applying Research Findings to the Classroom
- An Interview With Paul Tough on Character & 69ý
- Teaching ‘Character’ in 69ý—Part Two
- Several Ways to Connect With Disengaged 69ý
- Several Ways to Engage 69ý Without Carrots & Sticks
- Several Ways to ‘Motivate’ the Unmotivated to Learn
- Part Two of Several Ways We Can Help 69ý Develop Good Habits
- Several Ways to Help 69ý Develop Self-Control
- Several Ways We Can Help 69ý Develop Good Habits
- Several Ways to Apply Social-Emotional-Learning Strategies in the Classroom
Explore other thematic posts:
- It Was Another Busy School Year. What Resonated for You?
- How to Best Address Race and Racism in the Classroom
- 69ý Just Let Out, But What Are the Best Ways to Begin the Coming Year?
- Classroom Management Starts With Student Engagement
- The School Year Has Ended. What Are Some Lessons to Close Out Next Year?
- Teacher Takeaways From the Pandemic: What Worked? What Didn’t?