Teachers play an important role in student success and learning. What teachers and schools do daily impacts students for the rest of their lives, providing them with essential knowledge and skills to succeed. Seeing to understand how students learn best in the classroom and researching tips you can implement in your classroom is a great way to determine how to improve students’ performance.
Here are tips:
1. Make Learning Relatable
Help students find a connection between lessons and their personal interests, as well as real-life applications, to ignite their intrinsic motivation for enduring enthusiasm in learning. Understand their unique interests and incorporate them into lessons, demonstrating that their passions have a place in the classroom. Emphasize how the knowledge they gain applies to their daily lives and future careers. Encourage independent exploration aligned with their interests, granting them ownership of their learning journey. This approach helps students find a lasting passion for education that extends well beyond the classroom.
2. Motivational Guests
Sometimes a teacher can motivate students without having to do all the work themselves. Inviting guest speakers from various professions that can effectively engage and interact offers students an endless set of topic possibilities. This can happen in a variety of ways, including in-person appearances or online connections through Skype or other video conferencing tools. Guest speakers have the potential to relate to students and inspire them by describing problems, likes, dislikes, and challenges throughout their own lives that connect to the classroom content. For example, a science teacher could ask a scientist to speak about the biggest success and the biggest learning experience they’ve ever encountered in a laboratory setting. Students can then ask questions of the scientist and learn first-hand from someone who is in the field.
3. Get students to present work themselves
It’s said that one of the best ways to understand something is to teach it, and you can use this to help your students learn. Including student presentations will work better for classes that have material that can be dissected and spark discussion, as opposed to classes that teach irrefutable truths. For example, a course about economic history or behavioral economics – where economic theories are still being tested and debated – will probably have more opportunities for good presentations than an advanced econometrics course, where quantitative truths are more or less irrefutable.