- Share your enthusiasm. You don’t need to show them your online digital photo album of your summer vacation, but why not show them a picture or two and have them wonder with you?
- Share their enthusiasm: Let them share a photo (vacation or otherwise) that will make you wonder.
- Keep it real – I know field trip planning has gotten quite complex, keep the trip simple-just take your students outside and give them a two foot plot of grass to explore!
- Make kids wonder - As a science teacher, I had a number of “discrepant events” videos, demonstrations and activities that I used as grabbers in the beginning of a lesson. For example- you can tri-fold a piece of tissue paper (we used to use the tissue that came in between the ink and the paper in a ditto master:). Set it up like a chimney and light it on fire from the top-it will burn down and the ash will fly up. Like a magic trick, it makes them wonder and ask “how did you do that?’ – a first step in critical thinking and developing the motivation to learn more.
Technology now puts resources and learning at our fingertips. You can use all sorts of media to get kids motivated and increase the learning by having the research tools in their pockets.
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Getting Motivated
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Getting Motivated
We wanted to know more!
Curiosity and enthusiasm are great motives for learning. Can you replicate the motivation and inspiration that we felt in the classroom (can you say Harley field trip?)?
Here are a few things that you might try:
How do you get kids motivated to learn?
Category → Getting Motivated » activities , critical thinking , discrepant events. , engaging , motivation » how to think, not what to think.