Madly Learning

Want to Improve your Instruction? Ask These Questions

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If you want to improve your instruction in the classroom you need to reflect. Click through to learn which questions you ned to ask yourself! improve teaching | skills | student | teaching | differentiation

One thing that I notice the most when I watch others teach is this? What makes this teacher effective at instructing their students. Throughout my relatively short teaching career (8 years) I have been very lucky to be in the company of many great teachers.  For a few years I was an itinerant teacher and in this position went into other’s classrooms and helped them modify and accommodate for their ELL students.  If you ever have the opportunity to do this then you should jump at the opportunity especially early in your career.  I was able to see a different teacher, in different grades doing amazing things, all day long.  I think I learned something from each of these teachers about how to be a better teacher myself.  What I learned was how to improve my instruction so that students could learn. Hosting student teachers, team teaching, and writing unit plans for TPT etc. also puts me in the position of having to explain my instructional strategies to another person.  Which is not an easy task when sometimes I just do it my way.  With some reflection, and discussions with my fantastic EA @tamihorning who often helped me to analyze what it is I do.  I think that I have the three questions that help me to explain what effective instruction looks like.

1. Do you Really Differentiate?

Differentiation can occur in three places of the teaching cycle.  The Content, the Process and the Product  Most of the time we differentiate what the student does.  But what about differentiating you instruction, how you present the information to students.  I have classes full lots of boys, often very active boys.  What do I find.  These boys are not auditory learners, they are doers, kinesthetic learners.  While some are also visual learners.  So when I teach I make sure important instructions involve all three sets of instructions.  I write it down, I saw it out loud and I associate movement with them.  The movement piece was the hardest part to get used to because sometimes you feel like a dancing fool up in front of your class acting out the instructions.  But guess what, using this helps students immensely and during tests you will often see them relying on these movements to help them remember the steps.  Or sometimes it is just that my movement help them to focus and remember.

Question 2: Who is doing Most of the talking?

In a traditional classroom usually the teacher does most of the talking.  However I believe that students must spend more time engaged in their learning.  Additionally students in the elementary level just don’t have the attention span.  We are talking to students who are used to getting their information immediately.  They really don’t want to listen to us talk at them for 60 minutes.  However we also need to get our lesson across and guide students to learn new concepts.  Changing your structure of teaching is important for this as is trusting that your students can learn.
Mini Lessons: Keep your lessons short.  I find this easier if I have a learning goal and stick with it.  If you start your mini lesson with a narrow goal of what you are going to teach then you are better able to stick to a time frame and clearly express for your students what you want them to learn.  It is so easy to get trapped in the I have to take every opportunity to teach everything.  Let me assure you, you don’t.  If you try to do too much then the power of your message is lost. I try to stick to 10-20 minutes of me talking at a time.  However there are times where more direct instruction is necessary so how do you stick to the mini lesson format.  I use some of these strategies.

Question 3: Do you believe that your students are capable?

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