Innovatsion yondashuvlar asosida milliy ta’lim tizimini takomillashtirish
2021-yil
23-aprel
76
community.
Use skits, plays, readers theater productions, library displays, bulletin boards, a
class newspaper or newsletter, or other media to promote the efforts of the whole classroom.
A Value on Learning
The third element that contributes to the motivation of students is whether or not
students see a value in what they’re learning. The predominant question in the back of every
learner’s mind is,
What’s in it for me?
Learning something is one thing, but knowing
why
you need to learn something is quite another.
For motivation to occur, students must know the reasons, rationale, and whys of any
learning task. Your students will be more engaged and more motivated when you provide
them with specific reasons for learning something. To do that, relate the learning directly to
their lives. When students see a connection between what they learn in the classroom and
their lives outside the classroom, they’ll be motivated to actively participate in the learning
process.
Try the following suggestions:
“Let’s take a look at how this idea of friction might affect our performance on a
skateboard.”
“We know Andrew likes to collect baseball cards. If he wanted to add 25 new cards
to his collection and each one was priced at $1.79 each, how much money would he need?”
“Remember the fight on the playground last week? How was that confrontation
similar to or different from the conflict between the North and the South?”
“I know you’re all familiar with this rap song. I wonder if we can take the food
pyramid and turn it into our own rap song.”
It's also important that you provide your students with opportunities to make their own
choices. Making personal choices helps develop a sense of ownership and can be a powerful
motivational strategy. Students can select various ways to complete an assignment, the due
date of an assignment, or the complexity of a learning task. These kinds of decisions offer
students a measure of control over their academic lives. More control = more motivation.
Motivated students are active students. As we discussed in Lesson Methodologies,
active students are engaged students. Too often students see school as a passive
environment-one in which there is little involvement. By utilizing a variety of instructional
methodologies, we can provide conditions that will involve and motivate students to take an
active role in their own learning.
Provide opportunities for students to create tangible or finished products. Completing a
worksheet of addition facts is not a tangible product; answering all the odd-numbered
questions after Chapter 11 in the history textbook is not a tangible product. For learning to
be meaningful, students must create meaningful products. Here are just a few examples.
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