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Lesson 4: Maintaining Learner Involvement

Quality learning activities not only increase the amount students learn but also reduce behavior problems and create happier students. This lesson provides information on ways that teachers and paraeducators make instructional time in the classroom more productive and rewarding.

Strategies for increasing and maintaining active learner involvement are important to establishing an effective classroom. Students who are actively involved in learning activities benefit more from learning time. Learner involvement includes time spent listening to the teacher or paraeducator, time spent attending to activities and most importantly time actively participating in learning by asking and answering questions. The following provide suggestions for strategies to increase the students' active involvement in learning activities.

Give Complete and Specific Instructions

Paraeducators are often asked to introduce instructional activities or to help clarify directions for students. Clear directions are essential. It is easy to misinterpret difficulty with directions as noncompliance or a behavior problem.

Try to avoid the following when giving directions:

Chaining
In a series of instructions, students remember the first and the last or are so confused they don't know what to do.
Vague
Don't give directions without a concrete activity/action.
Questions
Student may think they have a choice or that you don't really mean it.
Directions followed by a reason
Students remember the reason and forget the directions so give reasons first then directions.

Try using the following suggestions when giving directions to students:

Provide Instructional Activities at Appropriate Level

Learning activities which are too difficult or too easy make poor use of instructional time. A key to high involvement of students in learning activities is the appropriateness of the timing and design of the lesson. Key decisions about what learning activities take place are the responsibility of the teacher. In order to make good decisions about the instructional process, the teacher must have information about how effective learning activities are. The following ideas provide the paraeducator with background information regarding how the teacher attempts to provide learning activities which are at an appropriate level for each student. The paraeducator should be aware of these ideas when carrying out lessons and provide feedback to the teacher regarding the effectiveness of the lesson.

Fundamental Steps in the Instructional Sequence

Well designed learning activities involve the following steps:

  1. Review
    Students review previously learned material.
  2. Present New Content/Skills
    Teacher presents new content or skills. Often this includes explanation and modeling.
  3. Guided Practice
    Students are allowed to practice skills with considerable feedback from the teacher and/or paraeducator. Emphasis is on shaping the skills and avoiding practicing errors. Practice may be broken down into intermediate steps.
  4. Feedback and Corrections.
    Students are provided with feedback and retaught until they have learned the skill.
  5. Independent Student Practice
    Students are asked to practice the skill to develop mastery and efficiency. Focus may shift to speed and accuracy.
  6. Weekly and Monthly Review
    Skills are routinely reviewed and generalized to new settings.

Skipping steps or moving too quickly through the sequence can cause students to have learning problems and lose interest in the materials.

Practice at the Right Level

Independent practice must be designed correctly to maintain interest and involvement.

Avoiding Boredom

Maintaining student interest in learning activities is a key factor in learning involvement. Students may tire of activities before they have mastered the skill. To avoid students loosing interest in learning activities:

Adjust to meet individual students' needs

Often lessons must be adjusted to accommodate the learning or behavior needs of individual students. Rates of learning can be increased by effectively matching the lesson to individual students. The following are examples of areas which might be adjusted in a lesson to meet the needs of students.

Provide Alternative Activities

One of the biggest challenges of working with groups of students is keeping them all working productively. The organization and scheduling of the classroom, and adjusting for individual student differences, means that all students do not require the same amount of time to complete activities.

As one means of dealing with this issue many teachers provide students with independent work folders. These folders contain learning activities which are individually tailored to the students' needs for practice. The material in the folder is work which students can practice without additional assistance from the teacher or the paraeducator. The work in the folder must be directly related to the current learning objectives for the students. Students utilize the time between activities to work in the folder. This might include the time when the student finishes an assignment ahead of other students, or when a student has a question and is waiting for the teacher or paraeducator to respond. The folders allow the student to work productively while they are waiting for the teacher or other students.

Paraeducators can play an important role in correcting and maintaining the work in these folders.

Hints for Keeping Students Actively Involved in Group Activities

While a lesson is being presented the paraeducator can use a number of strategies to help keep all students actively engaged in the learning activity.

Timings and Time Limits

The use of timings and time limits is one way to increase the efficiency of learning activities. Competing against the clock is often naturally rewarding for students. It also shifts the focus away from just accuracy to include the rate of completion. Timings refer to timing how long it takes to complete a task or set of problems. Time limits means providing a predetermined amount of time to complete a task. Timings have the additional advantage of communicating high learning expectations.

Several cautions regarding timed activities are important:

Often a regularly scheduled time is set aside for timed activities. Students learn the procedures to be followed during the timed activity and these same procedures are used consistently. Students must be given the opportunity to learn and practice the procedures used in the timed activities.

Using Your Attention to Increase Student Performance

The attention provided by the teacher and the paraeducator influence student behavior. The teacher and the paraeducator should identify behaviors that they wish to see maintained and increased in the classroom. Emphasis should be on providing attention to the students who exhibit these behaviors. One of the most common mistakes made in classrooms is paying too much attention to misbehavior. The teacher and the paraeducator should develop methods for dealing with behavior problems which minimize attention and time. For additional information on managing behavior please see Lesson 5: Use of Classroom Rules & Procedures and Unit 5: Behavior Management.

Characteristics of Effective Praise

Praise can be made more effective by observing the following:

Sample Praising

The following two statements are examples of praise which includes the student's name, is descriptive, and is convincing:

"Steve, you went from one page right to the next; that's the way to keep working! "
"Janice, you capitalized the first word of every sentence, you've really learned the rule!"

Strategies for Praising Students

As a paraeducator you should work on developing the following skills:

Avoid Giving Attention to Misbehavior

When you do have to remind a student that they are not following the rules or procedures, the reminder should be quick and unobtrusive. You should give the student the minimum amount of attention necessary to let them know you are aware of the problem and to provide a cue as to the appropriate behavior. You should not spend time lecturing the student or discussing the behavior with the student. If the behavior continues follow the next step in the behavior management plan (See also Unit 5: Behavior Management).

Strategies at the Beginning of the Year

(Emmer, Evertson, and Anderson; 1979)

The following are a series of suggestions for dealing with students and organizing the classroom. You should: