How do you deal with negative attitudes among learners?
If you’re having a tough time with certain students in your class, try out the following strategies.
- Bring difficult students close to you.
- Talk to them in private.
- Be the role model of the behavior you want.
- Define right from wrong.
- Focus more on rewards than punishments.
- Adopt the peer tutor technique.
- Try to understand.
How do you deal with student attitude?
25 Sure-Fire Strategies for Handling Difficult Students
- Take a deep breath and try to remain calm.
- Try to set a positive tone and model an appropriate response, even if it means you must take a few moments to compose yourself.
- Make sure students understand that it’s their misbehavior you dislike, not them.
How do I stop being jealous of other teachers?
For the love of teaching and teamwork, please stop doing these things:
- Stop sharing your opinion all the time.
- Stop speaking for others.
- Stop speaking over me.
- Stop speaking at me.
- Stop talking about yourself all the time.
- Stop saying each year your class is the best or the worst class ever.
How can we stop lecturing in the classroom?
Getting Rid of the Lecture Bottleneck
- Opening: Get everyone’s attention.
- Direct instruction: Deliver a 10–20 minute lecture to the whole group.
- Guided practice: Work through a problem as a whole group.
- Independent practice: Give the students an assignment to work on individually.
How do you retain information in a lecture?
Here are a few proven study tips you can use to retain information.
- Teach someone else. We discussed this in a previous blog, but it’s worth repeating.
- Know when you’re most alert and attentive.
- Focus on one topic at a time.
- Pause.
- Write it down.
- Make it interesting.
What is the purpose of lecturing?
Lecturing usually is an attempt to instruct and/or persuade the listener about something. It also may intend to chastise or criticize. Think of the last time someone lectured you in a social (vs. classroom) setting.
What does it mean when someone lectures you?
Depending on how the lecture is delivered (e.g. voice dynamics, eye contact, and body language ), a lecture can imply “I’m right (good), and you’re wrong (bad).” Note the difference between someone advising you at your request, and lecturing you without your consent.
What is the difference between moralizing and lecturing?
Note the difference between someone advising you at your request, and lecturing you without your consent. The latter is usually more about the speaker’s needs than yours, and is implicitly disrespectful, no matte how well meant. Moralizing can be a type of lecturing where the speaker imposes their idea of right and wrong on you.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lcofoRnexs0