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Motivating Students and Homework Issues.

Motivating Students

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This presentation is to help teachers understand how to motivate students in the classroom. It also discusses the value of homework as a targeted assignment and not just to keep students busy at home.

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Page 1: Motivating Students

Motivating Students and Homework Issues.

Page 2: Motivating Students

http://www.nwrel.org/request/oct00/engage.html

Motivating Students To Engage in Class Activities

Page 3: Motivating Students
Page 4: Motivating Students

Develop a positive

relationship with

students, most

students want to co-operate and

do well.

http://www.teachersatrisk.com/2008/10/20/nuturing-intrinsic-motivation-in-your-students/

Page 5: Motivating Students

When I focus on the positive and catch my students “doing good” and comment about it, then they do more of the same and other students follow suite.

http://www.teachersatrisk.com/2008/10/20/nuturing-intrinsic-motivation-in-your-students/

Page 6: Motivating Students

For those students who can’t sit still for very long and lose focus easily; do their work on the board, they are more likely to stay focused and learn.

http://www.teachersatrisk.com/2008/10/20/nuturing-intrinsic-motivation-in-your-students/

Page 7: Motivating Students

When a classroom is a safe place to make a mistake, then reluctant students are more willing to take risks.

http://www.teachersatrisk.com/2008/10/20/nuturing-intrinsic-motivation-in-your-students/

Page 8: Motivating Students

http://www.nwrel.org/request/oct00/engage.html

Ensure course materials relate to students' lives and highlight ways learning can be applied in real-life situations.

Page 9: Motivating Students

http://www.nwrel.org/request/oct00/engage.html

Allow students to have some degree of control over learning.

Page 10: Motivating Students

http://www.nwrel.org/request/oct00/engage.html

Assign challenging but achievable tasks for all students, including at-risk, remedial, and learning disabled students.

Tasks that seem impossible easily discourage learners, as do those tasks that are rote and repetitive.

Page 11: Motivating Students

http://www.nwrel.org/request/oct00/engage.html

Arouse students' curiosity about the topic being studied.

Page 12: Motivating Students

http://www.nwrel.org/request/oct00/engage.html

Design projects that allow students to share new knowledge with others.

Page 13: Motivating Students
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Homework and Practice

Page 15: Motivating Students

Grade level is important when teachers assign homework.

Page 16: Motivating Students

Teachers should assign appropriate homework at instructional levels that match students' skills and provide positive consequences.

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A survey of teachers found that 80 percent of teachers regularly assigned homework, but few matched the tasks to students' skills.

Page 18: Motivating Students

Match the right type to the goal.

Assign the appropriate homework type to meet the learning goal to make homework a more focused learning experience.

Page 19: Motivating Students

Homework should serve a clear purpose. Make the goal of a homework assignment explicit and clear to everyone, including students.

Page 20: Motivating Students

Assign the right amount of homework time.

A good rule of thumb is to multiply the grade x 10 to approximate the right amount of minutes per night for students.

Page 21: Motivating Students

DON’T LET HOMEWORK BE …..