Without contest, the biggest insight gained from both
interviewing students and just talking with students in general is how important
the aspect of choice is when completing things. I know that I also grappled
with the notion of reading as an adolescent because so often the only thing
that I was reading were things that were assigned to me in classes where I felt
less than autonomous.
Because of that (and honestly even before these interviews,
because I’ve been paying attention) one of the things that I plan to implement
into my teaching is choice. Even if it’s a choice from a list of things, it’s
still better than no choice at all. These choices don’t stop at what a student
reads in class, though. The students I interviewed all said that they didn’t
write much for fun, and the ones that had a strong opinion on the matter said
that if they could make a writing assignment that they wanted to do they would
enjoy it more. The suggestions for composition always trended toward other
forms of academic writing, so I’m sure that bringing multimodal production as an
option of a “writing” method into class would certainly get some student
buy-in.
Another factor is the school workload. Of course, there are
assignments that need to be assigned to evaluate where students are in their
learning, but I remember being in school and being assigned things that I had
to constantly wonder what purpose they served. I suppose that leads me to
something that I might consider trying. Instead of having a “read this by then”
approach, maybe I could get away with assigning just a certain amount of
reading from some variety of text. Of course, this sort of relates to choice,
but I’d also like to keep the workload as small as it needs to be so I can
instead encourage students to really engage in texts (both consuming and
creating) that bring them joy to foster that healthy long term relationship
with literature.
A third thing that I would love to incorporate into my
classroom is a vast classroom library because of the varied interests of teens.
Naturally there’s the issue of cost and making sure that all the texts are
things that aren’t going to get huge backlash from students, but I’m sure with
the help of sites like donor’s choose and with a little time an excellent
library for a classroom can be pieced together. This is, again, just an
extension of choice. It seems like allowing students to choose what they read,
when they read, what they write, and how they write might be the best approach
to getting students engaged with literature. It’s almost like we should let the
students run (or, maybe, lead) their own learning. I wonder if anyone’s written
anything on that yet that would support my hypothesis (:O).
2 comments:
Well selected meme! ... or perhaps you made it yourself!
I agree with "A third thing that I would love to incorporate into my classroom is a vast classroom library because of the varied interests of teens." Meeting the ever-growing social media infused world of teens is hard so why not give them as many options as they have on social media. This would be an easy way to meet their hyperactive brains whilst giving them the opportunity to learn with different texts. As a history teacher, I would love to have different text because I feel the same concepts can be taught with any text depending on how the lesson is designed. Cut and dry primary sources are important but a lesson can be learned from other texts as well.
Post a Comment