Helping students take ownership of their learning Becky Navarre

I’m a teacher.

Although I come from a family where
education was not valued.

Neither one of my parents graduated
from high school.

In fact, my father didn’t make it through
the 7th grade.

Reflecting back on my schooling,

I was never taught how to learn.

Consequently in college, I struggled.

I struggled with organization, knowing
what to study, and how to take tests.

My parents were no help.

In fact, they had no expectation of
me to even use education in my future,

and told me I was wasting my time, and
my money.

My father went so far as to tell me
the only degree I needed to focus on

was the “Mrs” degree, find a husband.

But I wanted to change my circumstances.

And I knew that education could be my path
out of generational poverty.

As a teacher, I wanted this for my
students as well.

I wanted to teach them the skills that I
had to learn on my own.

I could only imagine how much more
effective I would have been

if I’d had that guidance.

It was important to me to be that
guidance for my students.

Success isn’t dependent on where you
start.

It’s dependent on good life choices
and some tools help along the way.

We have to teach these tools to our
students.

I started teaching with the optimism that
only a new teacher can have.

But I quickly realized my students were
facing the same challenges I had faced

as a student.

I needed my students to be successful
in the content, of course.

But even more than that,

I wanted to teach my students tools that
would help them be successful.

I wanted my students to approach
their learning as if it were their job.

I knew the tools I would teach them in my
classroom

were tools they could use all their lives.

Later in college, in their careers, or
whatever vocation they chose.

As I reflected on what worked and the
tools that helped me help them,

I found that there were three specific
things that solved the major challenges

my students faced in the classroom.

These three things made a positive impact
on my students' learning.

Organization.

Organization does not come
naturally to most students.

I know, you’re shocked.

So helping students with organization was
a natural place for me to start.

Everything we did in class was maintained,
recorded, and filed in “the journal.”

It kept them on task,
it kept them focused,

and taught students the value
of keeping track of their resources.

Students owned their work,

and they could see their knowledge
grow over the semester.

It was their first step in learning
the importance of organization.

Students also used “the journal” to
keep track of their grades.

There was no surprise at the end of the
grading cycle,

students knew where they stood.

They were taking control of their own
progress.

It showcased the idea of work in equals
work out, or, action equals reaction,

Newton’s 3rd law, in layman’s terms.

It put the responsibility for their
progress directly on them.

My students learned that
success breeds success.

Well, failure breeds failure.

I was choosing success for my students.

One former student said

having to update the journal consistently
reinforced the idea

that it’s up to them to progress
through school successfully.

Another, who is currently in law school,

told me she still uses the format of the
journal for her notes and case briefs,

despite having hated it
as an eight grader.

The next problem I needed to solve

was how to keep homework
from causing my students to fail.

As a teacher, we know that purposeful
homework

is a way for students to review and
practice concepts.

But I realized early on, that a majority
of my students didn’t do their homework,

causing serious damage to their grades.

I began to notice that some of the
students that weren’t doing their homework

knew the material.

Having students fail an assignment but
understand the material

didn’t seem reasonable.

But at the same time, teaching
accountability was important.

I had a dilemma.

I needed the students to practice, hence
the homework,

but I didn’t want students to fail because
they didn’t do their homework.

Our students may be tending to younger
siblings, working a part-time job,

have no parental support.

We don’t know what our students are
going home to.

I wanted my students to be successful.

Instead of collecting the homework for
a grade,

how about a pop quiz based on the homework
assignment, but with a caveat.

Those students that had done their
homework

could use the homework on the pop quiz.

For the students who were able to
comprehend the information

without having done the homework,

they proved it on the pop quiz.

Since the reason for assigning the
homework was to help them with the content

this was a win win, for the students,
and myself.

The students recognized that I was placing
importance on the outcome:

learning the material.

My goal was for the students to master the
content,

not just pass an individual assessment.

One former student said that being in my
class was the first time

she had to truly take ownership of her
own learning,

since no one was going to rescue her if
she failed.

The third problem solved by a specific
practice in my classroom,

was students not knowing what to focus
on when preparing for an exam.

To address this, I would give the students
a 3x5 index card

at the beginning of each grading cycle.

These were for their “gems of wisdom.”

And they were to write anything they
wanted on the front side of the card,

glue it to the front of the journal,

and then use the gems during their
assessments.

Since the card was so small, the students
had to think critically

about what pieces of information
or “gems” they wrote on the card.

A former student told me that the “gems”
helped consolidate information

and really focus on the important
concepts,

and this stood out to her as a tool
of success these many years later.

Another student told me,

“You were the first person to teach me how
to focus on the process,

or the “gems,” and that the
results would follow.

Teacher to teacher, I want you to
reflect on how you impact your students.

  1. How do you help your students with
    organization of their resources?

  2. How do you help your students reach
    academic standards in their content?

And then 3. How do you help students know
what’s important to focus on

when preparing for exams?

These were three major issues
I faced as a teacher.

Implementing the journal, adopting
student-centric grading practices,

and prompting my students to create
their own “gems of wisdom,”

impacted my students as lifelong learners.

From the moment they walked into
my classroom,

my students knew the content was rigorous

and that I expected a lot from them,

but they so knew, that they could expect a
lot from me.

I made sure they understood not to make
excuses, to work through their mistakes,

and to take responsibility for
their actions.

They knew that my classroom was a safe
space to learn in,

and that I would do everything in my power
to make them successful.

One former student told me,

“I was surprised at how much getting
organized in your class

helped me in other classes as well.”

We are pushing our students toward success
when we teach them organizational skills,

we hold them accountable, and guide them
to take ownership of their learning.

我是一名教师。

虽然我来自一个
不重视教育的家庭。

我的父母都没有
高中毕业。

事实上,我父亲没有
读完七年级。

回想我的学校教育,

我从来没有被教过如何学习。

结果在大学里,我很挣扎。

我在组织方面苦苦挣扎,不
知道该学什么,以及如何参加考试。

我的父母没有任何帮助。

事实上,他们甚至没有期望
我将来会使用教育

,并告诉我我在浪费时间和
金钱。

我父亲竟然告诉
我唯一需要关注的学位

是“夫人”学位,找个丈夫。

但我想改变我的处境。

我知道教育可以成为我
摆脱世代贫困的途径。

作为一名老师,我也希望我的
学生也能做到这一点。

我想教他们
我必须自学的技能。

我只能想象

如果我有这样的指导,我会变得多么有效。

为我的学生提供指导对我来说很重要。

成功不取决于你
从哪里开始。

这取决于良好的生活选择,
并且一些工具会在此过程中提供帮助。

我们必须将这些工具教给我们的
学生。

我以
只有新老师才能拥有的乐观开始教学。

但我很快意识到我的学生正
面临着我作为学生所面临的同样挑战

当然,我需要我的学生
在内容上取得成功。

但更重要的是,

我想教给我的学生
可以帮助他们成功的工具。

我希望我的学生把
他们的学习当作他们的工作来对待。

我知道我会在课堂上教给他们的

工具是他们可以终生使用的工具。

后来在大学里,在他们的职业生涯中,或者
他们选择的任何职业中。

当我思考什么有效以及
帮助我帮助他们的工具时,

我发现有三个具体的
事情可以解决

我的学生在课堂上面临的主要挑战。

这三件事
对我的学生的学习产生了积极的影响。

组织。 大多数学生

都不会自然而然地组织起来

我知道,你很震惊。

所以帮助学生组织
是我开始的一个自然的地方。

我们在课堂上所做的一切都被维护、
记录并归档在“日志”中。

它让他们专注于任务
,让他们保持专注,

并教会学生
跟踪他们的资源的价值。

学生拥有他们的工作

,他们可以看到他们的知识
在整个学期中增长。

这是他们
了解组织重要性的第一步。

学生们还使用“日记”来
跟踪他们的成绩。

评分周期结束时毫不奇怪

学生们知道他们的立场。

他们正在控制自己的
进步。

它展示了工作等于
工作的想法,或者

,用外行的话来说,行动等于反应,牛顿第三定律。

它把他们进步的责任
直接放在他们身上。

我的学生了解到
成功孕育成功。

好吧,失败会滋生失败。

我为我的学生选择了成功。

一位以前的学生说

,必须更新期刊始终
强化了这样一种观念

,即
能否成功完成学业取决于他们。

另一位目前在法学院上学的人

告诉我,她仍然使用日记的格式来
记录笔记和案例摘要,尽管她

在八年级时就讨厌这种格式。

我需要解决的下一个问题

是如何防止家庭
作业导致我的学生失败。

作为老师,我们知道有目的的
家庭作业

是学生复习和
实践概念的一种方式。

但我很早就意识到
,我的大多数学生没有做功课,

对他们的成绩造成了严重的损害。

我开始
注意到一些没有做作业的学生

知道这些材料。

让学生未能完成作业但
理解材料

似乎并不合理。

但与此同时,教学
问责制也很重要。

我进退两难了。

我需要学生练习,因此
有作业,

但我不希望学生
因为没有做作业而失败。

我们的学生可能正在照顾年幼的
兄弟姐妹,从事兼职工作,

没有父母的支持。

我们不知道我们的学生
要回家做什么。

我希望我的学生取得成功。

与其为成绩收集家庭作业,

不如根据家庭作业进行一次流行测验
,但有一个警告。

那些已经完成
作业的学生

可以在流行测验中使用作业。

对于无需完成作业即可理解信息的学生,

他们在流行测验中证明了这一点。

因为布置作业的原因
是帮助他们完成内容,所以

这对学生
和我自己来说都是双赢的。

学生们认识到我很
重视结果:

学习材料。

我的目标是让学生掌握
内容,

而不仅仅是通过个人评估。

一位以前的学生说,上我的
课是

她第一次真正掌握
自己的学习,

因为如果她失败了,没有人会救她
。 在我的课堂上

通过特定实践解决的第三个问题

是学生
在准备考试时不知道应该关注什么。

为了解决这个问题,我会

在每个评分周期开始时给学生一张 3x5 索引卡。

这些都是为了他们的“智慧宝石”。

他们
要在卡片的正面写下他们想要的任何东西,

将它粘在日记本的正面,

然后在评估时使用这些宝石

由于卡片很小,学生们
不得不批判性地思考

他们在卡片上写了哪些信息或“宝石”。

一位以前的学生告诉我,“宝石”
有助于巩固信息

并真正专注于重要
概念

,这对她来说是
多年后成功的工具。

另一位学生告诉我,

“你是第一个教我
如何专注于过程

或‘宝石’的人,
结果会随之而来。

老师对老师,我希望你反思你是
如何影响你的学生的。

  1. 你如何帮助你的学生
    组织他们的资源?

  2. 你如何帮助你的学生
    在他们的内容上达到学术标准

?然后 3. 你如何帮助学生知道在准备考试时
要关注什么是重要的

这些 是
我作为一名教师面临的三个主要问题。

实施期刊、采用以
学生为中心的评分实践

以及促使我的学生创造
自己的“智慧宝石”,这些都

影响了我的学生作为终身学习者。

从他们走进我的教室的那一刻起
,

我的学生知道内容很严谨

,我

对他们期望很高,但他们很清楚,他们可以对
我有很多期望。

我确保他们明白不要
找借口,要克服错误

,要接受 对
他们的责任 行动。

他们知道我的教室是一个安全
的学习空间

,我会尽我
所能让他们成功。

一位以前的学生告诉我,

“我很惊讶
在你的课堂上井井有条,

对我在其他课堂上也有很大帮助。”

当我们教给学生组织技能时,我们正在推动学生走向成功,

我们追究他们的责任,并引导
他们掌握自己的学习。