6 Signs You’re Creating Confident Students
Self-confident and efficacious students are able to persevere in the face of obstacles and challenges.
Self-confident and efficacious students are able to persevere in the face of obstacles and challenges.
From asking questions to empowering students to expressing affection, building better relationships starts with these suggestions.
Here are two questions to think about as you reflect on your daily instruction.
When students enter your room, are they happy to be here?
When they leave, are they smiling and feeling positive about their experience?
Some ways to promote intrinsic motivation in students your classroom include using inquiry and lessons that require their creativity.
Students who are challenging–i.e. victims of disruptive childhoods–do not change overnight. They require time to grow.
A good start toward engaging students is to meet the student on their own terms using ideas, evidence, and language credible to them.
Helping students pay attention in a traditional classroom setting may be a challenge of pure student engagement.
Here are 5 different tools and strategies to help students connect, collaborate, and create more in the classroom.
What is the one classroom management strategy that works every time? Build strong relationships with every student, every day.
The students’ strengths–and your trust–are two tools that can help you form a relationship when working with challenging students.
Equipping students with the right tools and providing them with the proper support can set struggling readers up for success.
How do you communicate with your students? Face to face, workshopping, supportin them as they communicate with one another?
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