Buch, Englisch, 248 Seiten, Format (B × H): 178 mm x 254 mm, Gewicht: 524 g
How We Persuade Students to Believe and Act on "Smart Is Something You Can Get"
Buch, Englisch, 248 Seiten, Format (B × H): 178 mm x 254 mm, Gewicht: 524 g
ISBN: 978-1-5063-5679-2
Verlag: SAGE Publications
The myth of fixed intelligence debunked
For all the productive conversation around “mindsets,” what’s missing are the details of how to convince our discouraged and underperforming students that “smart is something you can get.” Until now.
With the publication of High-Expectations Teaching, Jon Saphier reveals once and for all evidence that the bell curve of ability is plain wrong—that ability is something that can be grown significantly if we can first help students to believe in themselves.
In drill-down detail, Saphier provides an instructional playbook for increasing student confidence and agency in the daily flow of classroom life:
- Powerful strategies for attribution retraining, organized around 50 Ways to Get Students to Believe in Themselves
- Concrete examples, scripts, and classroom structures and routines for empowering student agency and choice
- Dozens of accompanying videos showing high-expectations strategies in action
All children in all schools, regardless of income or social class, will benefit from the strategies in this book. But for children of poverty and children of color, our proficiency with these skills is essential. in many ways life saving. Jon Saphier challenges us all—educators, students, and parents—to get started today.
About Jon Saphier
The author of nine books, including The Skillful Teacher, Jon Saphier is founder and president of Research for Better Teaching, Inc. (RBT), a professional development organization dedicated since 1979 to improving classroom teaching and school leadership throughout the United States and internationally.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
List of Resources
Foreword
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Introduction
1. The History of “Intelligence”
References and Resources
2. Malleable Intelligence: The Evidence—Attribution Retraining and the Growth Mindset
Data Challenging the Innate Ability Theory
Attribution Retraining
References and Resources
3. Verbal Behavior in Nine Arenas of Classroom Life
1. Calling on Students
2. Responses to Student Answers
3. Giving Help
4. Changing Attitudes Toward Errors
5. Giving Tasks and Assignments
6. Feedback According to Criteria for Success With Encouragement and Precise Diagnostic Guidance
7. Positive Framing of Re-Teaching
8. Tenacity When Students Don’t Meet Expectations
9. Pushback on Fixed Mindset Language and Student Helplessness
References and Resources
4. Regular Classroom Mechanisms for Generating Student Agency
10. Frequent Quizzes and a Flow of Data to Students
11. Student Self-Corrections/Self-Scoring
12. Student Error Analysis
13. Regular Re-Teaching
14. Required Retakes and Redos With Highest Grade
15. Cooperative Learning Protocols and Teaching of Group Skills
16. Student Feedback to Teacher on Pace or Need for Clarification
17. Reward System for Effective Effort and Gains
18. Extra Help
19. Student Goal Setting
References and Resources
5. No Secrets Instructional Strategies That Support Student Agency
20. Communicating Objectives
21. Criteria for Success
22. Exemplars
23. Checking for Understanding
24. Making Students’ Thinking Visible
25. Frequent Student Summarizing
6. Teaching Effective Effort
26. Effective Effort Behaviors
27. Student Self-Evaluation of Effective Effort
28. Learning Study and Other Strategies of Successful Students
29. Attribution Theory and Brain Research
References and Resources
7. Choices That Generate Agency: Voice, Ownership, and Influence
30. Stop My Teaching
31. Student-Generated Questions
32. Negotiating the Rules of the Classroom Game
33. Teaching Students the Principles of Learning
34. Learning Style
35. Non-Reports and Student Experts
36. Culturally Relevant Teaching
37. Student-Led Parent Conferences
References and Resources
8. Schoolwide Policies and Procedures
38. Hiring Teachers
39. Assignment of Teachers
40. Personalizing Knowledge of and Contact With Students
41. Scheduling
42. Grouping
43. Content-Focused Teams That Examine Student Work in Relation to Their Teaching
44. Reward System for Academic Effort and Gains
45. Push, Support, and Tight Safety Net (Hierarchy of Intervention)
46. Quality Afterschool Programs and Extracurricular Activities
47. Building Identity and Pride in Belonging to the School
48. Creating a Vision of a Better Life Attainable Through Learning the Things School Teaches
49. Forming an Image of Successful People Who Look Like Them and Value Education
50. Building Relations With Parents Through Home Visits and Focus on How to Help
References and Resources
9. Conclusion
What Leaders Do
Teacher Preparation
Obstacles
Coda
References and Resources
Appendix A. Case Studies in High Expectations Teaching and Attribution Retraining
Teacher Case Studies
Administrator Case Studies
Appendix B. Levels of Sophistication of Common Planning Time (CPT) Activities
Appendix C. Hierarchy of Interventions
Appendix D. Goal-Setting Experiments
Appendix E. Kristin Allison’s Log
Appendix F. Effort Books: A Bibliography
Index




