Showing posts with label emotional intelligence. Show all posts
Showing posts with label emotional intelligence. Show all posts

Wednesday, 27 January 2016

Motivating teenagers

Why are teenagers so unmotivated all the time? What activities can we do to engange them in class? New discoveries in neuroscience can provide us with a biological explanation for this.
Brain function is different in adolescence than in adulthood (25 years). The Prefrontal cortex continues to mature into the 20s, making decision-making generally more effortful and difficult. Adolescents operate more from the reflexive, instinctive, amygdalar part of brain, leading to impulsivity.
They also have less activity in the nucleus accumbens (a region of the frontal cortex) which leads to motivational deficit. This means that adolescents are drawn to high-excitement and low-effort experiences, or both. Long-term planning suffers and risk-taking or "laziness" are very common.


Teenagers can be very demanding and critical but once they are motivated they can show a lot of creativity and imagination in class so the question is how we can motivate them and get the most of each of them....
Below you will find some activities that really worked in my class and I hope they will be useful and enganging for your students.

Warming up - First Impressions are really important to get students in the perfect mood to motivate them. The beginning of the class is a key moment to engage your group of teens in the lesson.

  • Cues! It's students' time to be detectives! Hide in the class five cues  that will help them find out what the lesson will be about. To make this activity more engaging and fun write the cues in QR code! What I always use is the QR Code Generator: www.goqr.me to create the cues, I paste the cues on the classroom walls and then they  have to use their cell phones to decipher the codes. They have to install a programme to read the codes, it's free and easy to download. 
  • Put a complex picture on the board related to the lesson, get them into groups to discuss what they think the lesson is going to be about and play some music in the background. When the music stops they share their ideas with the whole class.
  • Jigsaw Puzzle: if your students have computers you can give them a jigsaw puzzle to introduce a new unit. Here's the webpage I use to create my puzzles.: http://www.jigsawplanet.com
  • Pass the bomb: Get a ball and play some music, when the music stops, the student with the ball answers a question from the previous class. This is a great idea for revision that can be used at the beginning of the class or at the end as a round up.

Lesson Ideas
  • Google Earth Tour: For this activity you will need computers and the google earth programme installed in the computers.  If you are dealing with places, countries, cities, etc. you can get learners in pairs to carry out an expedition somewhere they would like to go. Then, they report back what they have investigated about the place they visited. 
  • Speed dating: If you want to practise speaking  you can sit your students in two rows of chairs facing each other. Call out the first theme and give students two minutes to talk about the topic. When the time is over one side of the class remains seated while the other side moves to the next chair. 
  • Connecting chain: This activity is used to revise / practise linking words. The teacher makes a statement and adds a linking word, then throws the ball to a student who has to finish and end the statement with a connective word and so on....
  • Survivors: Tell your students that they are flying as passengers on a jumbo jet over the Pacific. By chance a war takes place during their flight forcing the captain to land close to a small island. Passangers learn that they are about to become the last remaining survivors on the planet. The job of each group is to decide what sort of society they can create on the island. *Questions that may guide them through the task: what needs to be arranged / done immediately? How will tasks be arranged? How will decisions be made? Who will be the leader? What will they eat? How? How will children be looked after? How will family life be sorted? What happens to rule breakers? Stand back and let your students debate.
Rounding up

  • Box and Cox: This activity is an unthreatening way of assessing to what extent learners have understood what you have taught. Ask students to write down a question that relate to something they do not understand. Make sure these are anonymous and ask them to put these into a box. You can quickly go through any questions and clarify issues to the class that they may not have understood.
  • Don't mention it! Students draw from a bag/box a word they have learnt in class. They have to attempt to describe that word without using the word itself. 
  • Spot the mistake: Get students in pairs. The teacher writes a sentence, question, with a grammar mistake on the board and students must find it and correct it. You can also write grammaticaly correct statements and students decide if the sentence is right or wrong.
  • Mind maps: I am a fan of mind maps as they are an excellent tool to revise concepts and consolidate topics. The use of mindmaps can be used at the end term or the end of a unit, Ask learners for key ideas from the last lesson/current unit/s and tell them they have to create a mind map. Then, they share them with the rest of the class.
  • Who wants to be a millionaire? Prepare 10 questions for revision . Pick one learner to be the contestant and one to be the host, Like the television show,give learners three ‘lifelines’, phone a friend (ask someone in class) or askt he audience (everyone in the class writes an answer on a blank sheet of pape and holds it up). Swap the contestant and host.
It is a fact that motivating teens can be a really difficult task to achieve but it can also be one of the most rewarding experiences you may ever had. These were just some ideas that you can implement in class , try them out and see what happenes. I will be posting more activities soon. Stay tuned!

Tuesday, 26 January 2016

The Anti Bullying Class

This is a topic so relevant in today's world. Last year, one of my students was bullied outside the classroom and it was quite difficult to detect it until she came to me and talked about her problem. Detecting bullies is not that easy because most of them don't act uopn their victims in front of adults.
Children and teenagers tend to become cruel sometimes and it is part of their growing. However, when teasing becomes repetitive and it is made on purpose to hurt a child that is called bullying. 
It is essential to take this issue seriously and do something about it. Not only teachers and the school community should be involved but also parents and the government too. Developing kindness and empathy in our children is essential if we want to make a substantial change to stop bullying in class.

Some Ideas to prevent bullying
  • With teenagers you can explain what bullying is and prepare some questions for discussion to raise awareness of such an important issue.

How can bullying harm the school community, even for students who are not directly mistreated? What beliefs or assumptions will students have if they see that neither adults nor peers do anything to prevent or stop bullying?What are some reasons why students might not want to report bullying? Do students in this school generally support fellow students who are bullied? If not, what could we be doing better as a community to increase our support? What are some things we can do to safely support a peer who is being bullied? What do you think a mistreated student would want his/her classmates to do? 

Source: http://www.educationworld.com/a_lesson/student_engagers/bullying_student_engager.shtml
  • Help children to solve problems through dialogue instead of fighting. Role playing can be a good starting point. Below you will find some scenarios to role play ....

Source: http://www.eycb.coe.int/compasito/chapter_4/pdf/4_8.pdf
  • Encourage students to tell an adult when they see someone who is being bullied. It is vital to get support. Explain the difference between "telling" and "tattling".                       Telling is necessary so as to protect someone from being hurt and tattling is wanting to get someone in trouble but nobody is hurt or in danger.
Telling or Tattling?
  1. In the back row of class, Billy makes a face at the teacher when her back is turned to the board.
  2. On the playground, Roger is pulling other kids' hats off and throwing them over the fence.
  3. In the cafeteria, Sarah does not drink all of her milk and throws it away.
  4. After school, Sam tells a younger student that he is going to beat him up if he does not give him a candy bar.
  5. On the bus, Torre is kicking the back of the bus seat that Susie is sitting in and it is annoying.
  6. At home, Mark lets the dog outside without a leash on.
  7. After school Mary decides to make macaroni and cheese on the stove even though Mom has told her not to use the stove when she is gone.
  8. In the neighborhood, Cal decides he can ride his bike in the street when his parents are not home.
  9. At the restaurant, Billy blows air through the straw into his cup and it foams over.
  10. On Facebook, Kayla is getting hurtful postings calling her names.                                                                                                                                                                                                           Source:  http://www.togetheragainstbullying.org/the-difference-between-telling-and-tattling    
  • Prepare with your class a contract in which it is clearly stated that bullies are not allowed in the classroom.

  • Engage your students in activities to develop empathy, compassion  and kindness. Children need to know that their feelings are important but so are the needs and feelings of others. 
  • Tell them stories that have positive values behind and talk about them.

Recommended reading to teach kids about empathy

  • It's OK to be different by Todd Parr
  • My brother Charlie by Holly Robinson Peete and Ryan Elizabeth Peete
  • Don't call me special by Pat Thomas
  • The thankful Book by Todd Parr
  • Star of the week by Barney Saltzberg
  • Exclamation Mark by Amy Krouse Rosenthal
  • Making friends is an art by Julia Cook
  • Wonder by R. J. Palacio (Ages 8-12)
More classroom ideas
http://www.thebullyprojectmural.com/index.html#p/how-to-add-to-mural

If you have any other idea please comment below so we get nurtured and enrich each other. Have a beautiful day!
Paula.