You may, in fact, have encountered what I am about to say in one of your educational labs. Have you ever observed in a classroom where the teacher says:
“Now
Class, get out your math book and open up to page 153 and work
on problems #1 through #10.”
All of a sudden, you hear
one student ask, “What book do we get out?” Another student will ask,
“What page is the assignment?” And yet another student will ask the teacher to
repeat
which problem should be worked. The class seems to have
been thrown into chaos as
students bang desks hunting for their books, notes are passed under
desks, whispers go
back-and-forth, the teacher has to
repeat the instructions several times and get
louder each time to
go over the noise -- and it takes minutes
before the class settles down to
the task.
What was the teacher’s
mistake? Can you guess? It is so simple
but so easy to forget. This teacher gave too many directions at
one time.
I will share with you a strategy
that will ensure
this will not happen to
you.
Here
is how to implement
this strategy. Let’s work through the scenario above.
Step 1: The teacher (you) instructs the students to get out their
math books. Take note, at this
point, the teacher should STOP.
Do not proceed any further until all students have their math books
on their desks.
Step
3: Lastly, the teacher instructs the students to work problems #1 through #10.
I know that you are
probably thinking, “Wow, this is going
to take all day to do a simple task.” But I can assure you
that it will not. In fact, once the students realize
they only need to
do one
thing at a time, then they are usually able
to accomplish it without
a lot of fuss. Just think for a moment – if you had to
stop and repeat yourself 25 different times, how much time would be wasted!
Yes, it’s true. An argument could
be made that most 21st
Century kids are
amazing at multi- tasking. They can watch TV, listen
to music, write messages
on smartphones, build a fort,
watch the other kids, and play
games on a computer or Xbox – all at the same time.
But what most children cannot do is perform tasks sequentially. They may also not
be very good – yet-- at prioritizing. These are skills that you as their
teacher can assist them to gain by breaking
tasks into achievable “chunks.”
Working step-by-step, one step at a time,
following just one direction from the teacher, they can be successful all along the way and will learn
the connections – how one step
leads to another.
Moreover, they will begin to understand
how if you break large tasks into small
chunks, you can accomplish almost anything!
Just go step by step…
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