As
a classroom teacher, I highly valued and saw importance in student voice and
choice in the learning environment. Now, as a Curriculum-Technology Partner, I hope to work with teachers to design
projects with a level of voice and choice for students, while addressing
content goals and standards.
Each
classroom and teacher is different, making it safe to say that there is no
one-size-fits-all method to inviting voice and choice in the classroom. Many factors play into the culture and
climate of a school and classroom, and this affects the classroom community,
the teacher, and students’ experiences.
One way to allow students to express voice and choice; is giving choice
in product to show learning. In
this week’s blog post, we will consider the five “Ws” as opportunities to
create engagement and student-centered learning.
The
first “W” is "Who"
Who
are you going to work with?
Who
is the best person for you to work with on this assignment?
Who
do you need to help?
Who
can help you?
Who
is your audience?
Who
are you presenting to?
Who
are you trying to inform, persuade or entertain?
Students
should have some choice in who they work with. However, we hope they become more reflective and critical in
selecting who they work best with.
Prompts like those above can help students make intentional decisions in
the learning partners they choose. In addition, many times students create work
for a variety of audiences. It is
important to remember “who” you are presenting to and hope to reach.
Next,
we need to ask “What?”
Allow
choice in how students show us what they have learned about the
content is common. Have we
considered how to offer more choice in the content? We need to think creatively about our standards and
determine what topics fit under their broad umbrella. Consider that we might
have more flexibility than we think in the content that students learn.
How
can we allow students voice and choice in “What” they learn while still meeting
our content area standards? On
area that comes to mind as a teacher, is reading. Allowing students to choose “what” they read with out confining
them to reading levels or Lexile scores, can free students to read more and be
more engaged in what they read. We
all know that the more we practice reading, the more fluent we become and
better our skills become. As Penny
Kittle reminds us, choice and voice in “what” we read increases motivation as “Teenagers
want to read - if we let them.”
Considering
"When"
When
we personalizing student learning, we need to become flexible about when
students are creating work, when they are learning certain concepts, and even
when they might turn work in. Teachers can guide students as they select tasks
for learning, encourage them to practice skills in a way that students want,
and help them plan effective deadlines for work. By allowing to have students
control over when they learn, we can create an environment where time is no
longer the most important variable, and instead learning becomes the driving
force.
Allowing
voice and choice of "Where"
Do
students always have to learn in the same place? Are they always at desks? Can they sit on the floor? Do you use the hallway? Can they learn at home? Are they using learning space in the library? How about outside, in the commons, or
in another classroom? Consider
experimenting with your space. Try
creating and incorporating quiet corners, sitting and standing desks,
conference-style areas, Maker Space and more.
We
can offer more voice and choice to students by allowing them to decide “where”
they want to learn. In offering choice of “where” we support student
tsocial-emotional needs, foster engagement in learning, and create a space
where learning is physically dynamic.
"Why"
and Purpose
We
know that students need to have a learning goal and know “why” they are
learning. As teachers, we state
learning goals at the beginning of a lesson for our students. Consider asking students to identify
the "why." Ask them why they want to learn this material, or help
them brainstorm ideas and then let them decide why they want to learn
something.
Students
can also become the driving force in the purpose of their learning: "I
will learn this in order to _______" is a great sentence starter to give
them more of a voice in the "why" of learning. We can also incorporate Genius Hour or
Passion Project time in our week given students the power to choose “what” they
learn and “why” they want to learn it.
Not
only can voice and choice create more engagement in learning, it allows them to
be more self-directed learners. Voice and choice can allow students to explore
their passions and interests, building energy and passion to the classroom
community.
How
might you provide more voice and choice to your students?
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