Showing posts with label classroom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label classroom. Show all posts
Wednesday, January 30, 2008
An Ounce of Motivation
At this point of the year, some students start to lose focus.... so I have been devising a few strategies to keep them motivated and attentive. As I wrote earlier, the coupons still seem to help. It's hard to get to every student who deserves it, but I enjoy recognizing the hard work. I also found that simply writing statements on a small strip of paper (about the size of a fortune cookie message) can help to keep a student motivated throughout the lesson. Showing something gross or eye-catching seems to help as well. While discussing organic molecules I showed them a picture of a frog preserved in formaldehyde, and then a picture of the snottites from the Cueva de Villa Luz in Southern Mexico. It turned into a nice lesson on how hydrogen sulfide (consumed by the archaebacteria in the snottites) is great for the microbes, but deadly to us. I also pointed out how oxygen can be deadly to anaerobic archaea (such as the methanogens) while we require it to survive. High level stuff, but I feel like the visuals held their attention. I've also found that having them give their own powerpoints is a great motivator. Some of the students who struggle with writing shine as presenters. I was impressed with how much attention the kids gave their peers. In a way I think the audience is curious about what their peers can do, and it helps the presenters act as positive role models. It's challenging to keep students motivated all the time, but these strategies seem to help.
Labels:
classroom,
formaldehyde,
motivation,
snottites,
student,
teaching
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