Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Actively Engaging Student Handout
Actively Engaging Student Handout
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Relationships/Developmental
Appropriateness
• Set High Expectations
• Account for Age and Ability
• Get to know your Students
• Utilize the First Week
• Establish Mutual Respect
Teacher Demonstrating
Student Autonomy Active Love for Learning
• Target Intrinsic Motivation
• Offer Choice
Engagement • Exhibit a Passion for Teaching
••••••••••••• • Plan Fun & Educational Lessons
• Provide Accountability
in Learning • Promote Excitement
REINVENTING THE for Academic Content
• Connect Assignments to ACADEMIC WHEEL
Real-World Situations • Show Excitement for
Student Learning
• Model Lifelong Learning
Activity
• Integrate Physical Movement
• Create Opportunities for
Small Groups
• Initiate Compelling Discussions
• Assign Projects with Choices
and Exploration
• Connect Content to their Own Life
Presented by:
Hannah Bruesehoff • Sean King • Ann Wirtz
References:
Adkins-Coleman, Theresa A. “‘I’m Not Afraid to Come into Your World’: Case Studies of
Teachers Facilitating Engagement in Urban High School English Classrooms.”
The Journal of Negro Education, vol. 79, no. 1, 2010, pp. 41–53. JSTOR, JSTOR,
www.jstor.org/stable/25676108. Accessed 17 Sept. 2017.
Cantrell, Susan Chambers, Pennington, Jessica, Rintamaa, Margaret, Osborne, Monica, Parker,
Cindy & Rudd, Mary (2017) Supplemental Literacy Instruction in High School: What
Students Say Matters for Reading Engagement, Reading & Writing Quarterly, 33:1,
54-70, DOI: 10.1080/10573569.2015.1081838
Carroll, Maureen, et al. “Destination, imagination and the fires within: Design thinking in a
middle school classroom.” International Journal of Art & Design Education 29.1 (2010):
37-53.
Edwards, Susan. “Active Learning in the Middle Grades.” Middle School Journal, vol. 46, no. 5,
2015, pp. 26–32. JSTOR, JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/24342232.
Eliuk, Kendra, and David Chorney. “Calming the Monkey Mind.” International Journal of
Higher Education 6.2 (2017): 1.
Guvenc, Hulya. “The Relationship between Teachers’ Motivational Support and Engagement
versus Disaffection” Educational Sciences: Theory & Practice, vol. 15, no. 3, 2015,
pp. 647-657, Accessed 15 Sept. 2017.
Li, M. P., and Bick Har Lam. “Cooperative learning.” The Active Classroom, The Hong Kong
Institute of Education (2013).
Muir, Mike. “What Engages Underachieving Middle School Students in Learning?” Middle
School Journal, vol. 33, no. 2, 2001, pp. 37–43., www.jstor.org/stable/23043479.
Skinner, Ellen A., and Michael J. Belmont. “Motivation in the Classroom: Reciprocal Effects of
Teacher Behavior and Student Engagement Across the School Year.” Journal of
educational psychology 85.4 (1993): 571-81. ProQuest. 29 Sep. 2017.