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Mindsets in the classroom
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Published on Nov 23, 2015
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1.
Mindsets in the classroom
"Praise the Process"
Photo by
Paxson Woelber
2.
Fixed Mindset
Intelligence, skills, or talent is predetermined
Photo by
Mukumbura
3.
Fixed Mindset Students
Low performers - legacy of failure
Apathetic underachievers - less than 100%
High-achieving perfectionists - playing school
Photo by
Robert S. Donovan
4.
Growth Mindset
Intelligence can be developed with persistence and effort
Photo by
Jordi Payà Canals
5.
Character Education
Wisdom (Reason, Responsibility)
Vigilance (Self-control, Steadfastness)
Courage (Perspective, Perseverance)
Strength (Drive, Discipline)
Photo by
The Wandering Angel
6.
Character Ed and Mindsets
Perspective-Start the work.
Perseverance-Finish the work.
Drive-Overcome indecision.
Discipline-Overcome adversity.
Photo by
Vvillamon
7.
Understand Neuroplasticity
Neurons that fire together wire together
Photo by
ecstaticist
8.
Redefine Failure
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JA7G7AV-LT8
9.
Current SYstem
Time is the constant and learning the variable
Policies penalize learning that isn't timely
Work is accepted that isn't satisfactory
Teachers play with the grades to make them work
Photo by
nathanmac87
10.
Evidence of Mastery
Growth mindset states that ALL students can learn
Students need opportunities to learn from mistakes
There is no learning without risk
There will be no risk without safety
Photo by
Will Merydith
11.
Failure is the key to success
Teach students that we learn when we try new things
Give students a safe place to try, fail, and succeed
Remove behavioral compliance & time from grading
Allow students to redo work without penalty
Provide scafolded support for struggling students
Photo by
inallyourways
12.
EOM in Action
Grading policy redesigned to focus on mastery
25% grade from standardized test (upper grades)
25% grade from student self-reflection
25% grade from authentic performance task
25% grade from student selected work portfolio
Photo by
Michael 1952
13.
Standardized test
Mimics STAAR format for upper grades
Can be replaced by reading diagnostic for younger grades
Shows a snapshot of understanding on one day
Photo by
thebarrowboy
14.
Student self-reflection
Forces students to own their effort
Rubric based on 4 character traits
Perspective, Perseverance, Drive, Discipline
Photo by
Elle Is Oneirataxic
15.
Untitled Slide
16.
Authentic Performance Tasks
Tasks tie into the trivium
Grammar stage: demonstrate knowledge of topic
Logic stage: analyze concepts, create logical frameworks
Rhetoric stage: reasoned speeches and essays
Work to be done in class with guidance of teacher
Photo by
jrr_wired
17.
Student selected work portfolio
4 items turned in over grading period (possible 8-10)
Assistance given from teacher, peers, parents
Items scored against a rubric for thoroughness
Can be resubmitted after feedback
Photo by
Daniel Kulinski
18.
What about homework?
Still assigned and expected to be completed
Truly used as formative practice
Missing work dealt with through behavior (e.g., study hall)
Not graded unless submitted as part of portfolio
Photo by
Steven Leith
19.
Benefits to Growth Model
Focuses on evidence of mastery rather than compliance
Allows all students to show mastery with support
Assignments are given simply to take a grade
Grades aren't padded with dropped tests or extra credit
Self-discipline taught and expected from earliest grades
Photo by
ecastro
20.
Praise the process
Teach students a new vocabulary to use
Incorporate character lessons in homeroom
Teachers model a growth model attitude
Educate parents
Teach about the brain and how to train it
Photo by
nathanmac87
Aaron Daffern
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