Some Ideas about Teaching
Strategies which Work with Year 11
(I wrote this years ago
for my own staff, but it is here for you if you want to.
Feel free to criticise - or reject it altogether.)
Year 11s are children
standing on the threshold of adulthood. They want the best of both worlds
and the duties of neither. Most of their reactions and attitudes are
different to ours, and some of them we find incomprehensible. They are
emotionally brittle and volatile. They over-react, go hyper, get hostile,
become over-confident and lose confidence – all at the drop of a hat. Their
values are different to ours. They are able purposely to close their minds
to the pressures they don’t want to face; often, the more important the
duty, the more they shirk addressing it.
Harry Enfield makes humour out of this – they are 'teenagers'.
All the research shows that identifying and ‘pushing’ disaffected and
underachieving pupils is actually counter-productive. It is so because
teachers try to do so without taking into account the teenage psyche.
Below are a series of strategies which can be successful, when applied at
the right time in the right way. To a degree, many of them involve acting
and dissembling.
Ways to fool teenagers into passing their exams
1. Teenagers
hate you ‘going on and on’. Realise this, and use it as a weapon – sparingly
and to maximum effect.
2. Teenagers
hate you ‘moaning’ at them, especially when there is nothing they can do
about it at this moment. Teenagers DO NOT mind being told off – they see it
as part of the territory. But make it short, appropriately fierce, to the
point . . . and then let the matter drop.
3. Tomorrow must
always be another day. Teenagers HATE you ‘dragging up the past’.
4. When telling
off a teenager, never postulate or argue in the conditional. Never tell them
what they are feeling or what will happen if . . ., etc. They will reject
you on the grounds that ‘how do you know?’, and they will therefore be able
to reject the message of the reprimand (we all know how pupils ‘glaze over’
as we are talking). Realise that even those who dare not backchat you to
your face are backchatting you in their head. Restrict yourself to the
unarguable FACTS, which gives them no grounds to let themselves off the
hook.
5. Be
longsuffering. The most powerful reprimands occur when you can pull out a
long list of their failures where you did nothing or even acted positively
while they did this, and this, and this . . . but now the time has come for
it all to stop.
6. Lighten up.
Share a joke. Smile. Be good fun. Hail fellow well met is a good strategy.
7. Butter them
up. Loads of (false if necessary) flattery. Seize on the good amidst the
dross in their work and comment on that – that is what you want more of.
Build up their self-esteem – if necessary by strategic lies and acting. Give
them the confidence to pass.
8. Encourage
them, much as you would a runner in a running race.
9. Constantly
reassure them that you like them.
10. Do little favours and
give little presents – both to the group and to individuals. Bring in a
newspaper cutting that you saw and thought that it might help X / do a
revision crib and give it to the group ‘because I thought it would help
you’, etc.
11. Don’t go on and on
constantly about how the exams are coming, and they’re not ready.... etc.
They will just ‘turn off’. Instead, frequently break off from the narrative
of your teaching to give them ‘asides’ and ‘tips’ for the exams – ‘By the
way, one question which often comes up in the exam is . . .’/ ‘One good
trick when you do the exam is . . .’ Firstly, it will make them feel that
you are doing them a favour. Secondly, every time you mention ‘the exam’, it
creates a flutter of panic in the pits of their stomachs. Who can resist
this!!
12. Be positive much more
than (and even to the exclusion of) negative. Tell them what they are
capable of if they do, not how they will fail if they don’t.
13. Make them feel that they
CAN do it.
14. Did you want to add the
words ‘if they try’ to point 13? Resist doing so.
15. Do not go on about how
much hard work it will take to come up to standard. Remember that Year 11s
are outgrowing their strength and their sense of duty and that they find
work much more difficult than us. They will usually do anything to avoid it,
and become stomach-twistingly bored as they go on. If you go on too much
about how much work is needed, they will think ‘I could never make myself/ I
don’t want to work that much’ and give up.
16. Teenagers can quite
enjoy feeling guilty. Don’t be afraid to lay it on how much they have
distressed you or how much they have let you down. But don’t over-egg the
pudding, and don’t expect them to show or admit you’re right.
17. Remember they are young
adults Treat them as adults/partners in the learning process in situations
where they gain. Too often we expect them to react like adults in situations
where they do not want the burden.
18. Remember they are still
children. Treat them as children in situations where they gain. Too often we
treat them like children in situations where they object.
19. Explain thoroughly. Many
children are culturally deprived, and often they do not have general
knowledge of even the most basic things. Many lack the ability to remember
work they did in previous years, or even last lesson. Many cannot
appropriate meaning easily from written text. So, assume nothing, and
explain orally from the thread to the needle. Ask if they have understood
before you ask them to start work on anything.
20. Give an outline overview
of the whole topic before beginning to work through the parts.
21. Give them a programme of
what they will be doing for the next half-term. Start each lesson by
reminding/ telling them where today’s lesson comes in the overall scheme of
things.
22. Expect and require
certain things, and don’t others – for instance, I require ALL pupils to
give 100% attention, application, co-operation and behaviour in lessons. I
require notes to be complete and in the right order by the end of the topic.
But I can’t be bothered to get uptight about irrelevancies such as trainers
not shoes, unobtrusive jewellery, eating sweets unnoticeably in class. Adopt
a set of standards that the teenagers can give mental assent to – if
necessary, discuss with them what you might acceptably get uptight about,
and what not.
23. If your SoW relies on
pupils doing every homework on time, you are going to become very stressed.
When giving homework, check their homework burden for that date, and
negotiate accordingly.
24. Some pupils can’t
organise themselves, lose their work and turn up without any materials.
Don’t let those pupils take anything home. Keep their work in your
classroom.
25. For work/ notes the
pupils do, have a typed copy, to give to pupils who have been absent or
haven’t done it and can’t or won’t catch up. Other pupils can’t easily read
their own writing, and it makes sense to give these pupils also a typed fair
copy set of notes to revise from.
26. Personal revision at
home is the key period for exam success. Pupils go up or down two grades
with ease. So make fully sure that, when they cease to attend your classes,
they are suitably equipped, not only practically (with good revision
schedules, materials etc), but also psychologically, to make the most of
that time.
27. Liaise with parents.
Write home when the pupils begin the assignment, asking the parents to
monitor and encourage their children. Write home if the work isn’t finished
on time, and ask the parents to make sure the pupil finishes it. But realise
that the resolve and power of parents, also, is limited.
28. At the end of every
topic, the History department sends home an (easy-to-write, mainly ticky-box)
interim report, to tell the parents how the pupil has done.
29. Remember that the pupils
want to do well too.
30. Do not ever become
sulky, or visibly sorry for yourself, or ‘take your bat home’ with the
pupils. They despise this, although (because???) they do so all the time!!
31. Be reasonable with them
and be overtly understanding of the limitations of their character and the
problems of their situation. Do not expect them to be at all reasonable
about you or your situation!
32. Don’t treat as a group.
They are not all the same. Don’t let a few wasters your view of the whole
class. Most of the class will be genuinely pleasant and diligent pupils.
33. Teenagers tend to be
immune to ‘atmospheres’ or a teacher ‘in a bad mood’. Sometimes they even
enjoy it. It is a tactic they use at home to get their own way. They are
going to do fairly much the same amount of work whether or not there is a
pleasant or unpleasant atmosphere. You, on the other hand, will enjoy the
lesson much more if there is a happy atmosphere. So let go of the fact that
lots of them haven’t done the homework (etc.), and create a happy classroom
– except perhaps every now and again, just to show them what it could be
like.
34. Pupils are like bacteria
– eventually they become immune to certain strategies, especially those
which are used too often. You need to keep finding new ways round them. ‘One
step ahead’ is the key to happiness; ‘one step behind’ will lead to stress.
Posted on: Nov 24 2004,
10:38 PM
Energizing More Able Year 10s and 11s
I have found that the
following principles help to enthuse older pupils:
Competitions!
If, for instance, you want them to discuss and come up with (eg) 'five
causes of...', 'an explanation of...', instead of just telling them to work
with a partner, put them into rival groups and tell them that they have to
devise the longest/best [whatever]. Then let them feedback in turn and mark
appropriately.
Choice
Instead of giving them all the same piece of work, give them a range of
alternatives, and let them choose their favourite. As part of this:
Design
A good way with more able pupils is to present them with a problem and them
let them try to find a solution themselves. The easiest thing is to ask them
to design the presentation [of whatever] is the way that THEY think will be
the most attractive/effective/clear/exciting etc. Thus, if you are studying
the six steps to WWII, invite the students to present their notes in the way
(eg) which makes it easiest to learn the 6 steps. Suggest that they might
wish to try (eg) ppt. webpages, posters, diagrams, mnemonics etc.
Give them a homework to finish their design, then take presentations of how
they did it at the start of next lesson and declare the best.
(This has the additional effect of ensuring that they do their homework.)
Challenge
With very able pupils, I like to set 'the obvious' essay, but to offer - for
those who want the challenge - a harder alternative for which I offer little
or no help. So - for instance - we have just been studying the reasons why
the League failed. The pupils have been given an essay for hwk. The main
title was 'Why did the League fail?', and I modelled and PEELed extensively
at the front of the class. But then, just before I set them to work, I
offered the more ambitious the alternative title 'Was the League's failure
inevitable?' A couple are doing this, and a number more are starting off
heading towards the basic essay, but will see if they feel confident enough
to try the harder title.
All very straightforward, but it works.
Posted on: Nov 18 2003,
08:25 PM
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