enhancing the school success of boys of color grades prek-3
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Enhancing the School Success of Boys of Color Grades PreK-3. Train-the-Trainer Summer Institute Lansing Public Schools July 20, 2011 Dorinda J. Carter Andrews, Ed.D. Agenda. Module 5 Activities Discuss Chapters 10 and 11 from Minds of Boys BREAK Module 5 Activities (continued) - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Enhancing the School Success of Boys of Color
Grades PreK-3Train-the-Trainer Summer Institute
Lansing Public SchoolsJuly 20, 2011
Dorinda J. Carter Andrews, Ed.D.
Agenda• Module 5 Activities– Discuss Chapters 10 and 11 from Minds of
Boys• BREAK• Module 5 Activities (continued)– Teach Like a Champion – Chapter 2
(Planning that Ensures Academic Achievement)
– Reflection and Practice– Teach Like a Champion – Chapter 4
(Engaging Students in Your Lessons) text
Module 5
Using Instructional Approaches that Motivate and Engage Boys of Color
Causes of Undermotivation for
BoysThe boy’s brain itselfThe school systemFamily dynamicsEnvironmental social stressors
(e.g., poverty, peer pressure, violence, etc.)
Lack of positive “male motivators”
Gifted Underachieving Boys
• Many students go unnoticed as high-ability non-achievers. The nonachievement and undermotivation usually stems from:– Low academic self-esteem– Negative attitudes towards teachers– Low motivation and self-regulation skills– Negative attitude toward school– Negative attitude toward course offerings– Low goal-setting/self-evaluation skills
What Teachers Can DoTen Effective Strategies for Motivating Boys (of Color):1.Formally check in with boys of color daily2.Target BOC for in-class activities by using specific strategies to engage them in topics of interest3.Sit them near the front of the class4.Modify teaching methods to include less verbal instruction and more hands-on activities while letting nonverbal-, non-writing-type students do more work on the computer than you might otherwise allow
What Teachers Can Do
5. Let boys move around physically while they are reading, writing, learning, and even using the computer
6. Give boys soft objects to squeeze in their hands constantly so that they can keep their brains stimulated physically and thus avoid the rest state.
7. Design school and/or class schedule to fit the student brain.
What Teachers Can Do
8. Make physical education a priority for student motivation – especially for underperforming males
9. Provide smaller schools and classroom sizes when possible; it helps motivate boys.
10.Provide all undermotivated boys with a mentor
Brainstorming/Strategies
In your building teams, use 15 minutes to identify strategies at the classroom level and building level for identifying and addressing the needs of undermotivated/underperforming boys of color
Planning that Ensures Academic Achievement
Teach Like a Champion Techniques#6 – Begin with the End#7 – 4 M’s#8 – Post It#9 – Shortest Path#10 – Double Plan#11 – Draw the Map
Planning that Ensures Academic Achievement
• Golden Nuggets/Insights– Consider as a learning objective: “As
adults my children will . . . (Begin with the End)
– Double Plan technique: knowing what you will say as well as what the child will learn and do is critical
– Begin with the end in mind– Connections to Stephen Covey’s ideas– Teachers need to really know what the
standards mean for today’s lesson– Post-It requires the visual reminders. This
is very important
Reflection and Practice
• Activity 5.1 – In building teams, choose one of the
questions (1-4) on pp. 69-70 in Teach Like a Champion, and work as a group to answer it.
– Task Time: 25 minutes– Report Out to follow
Engaging Students in Your Lessons
Teach Like a Champion techniques #22 – Cold Call#23 – Call and Response#24 – Pepper#25 – Wait Time#26 – Everybody Writes#27 - Vegas
Engaging Students in Your Lessons
• Golden Nuggets/Insights– With Cold Call, there must be a
classroom culture where kids feel safe; similar to Socratic method
– Stay positive! Scaffold!– Cold Call/Pepper: allows for involving
more students in the conversation/engaging more students
– Call & Response: movement and music can be used with this strategy
Reflection and Practice
• In small groups, answer questions 1 and 5 on p. 144 in Teach Like a Champion.
• Task Time: 15 minutes• Report Out to follow
What Stuck?
• An ‘Aha’ moment• A pleasant surprise• Something that you had to struggle with to
understand• Something that you don’t agree with• Something that you agree with strongly• Something you thought was particularly
interesting• Something you didn’t expect• An insight or solution• Something you want to know more about/A
question that you have