Skip to main content

Loquacious Learning

I'm an Enneagram Type One. 

For some, that means nothing. For others, it's an indisputable life guide.

According to Compass Points, I'm also a North personality. If the 16 Personalities test is more your jam, I'm an ESTJ, otherwise known as The Executive. In summary, and as my children and husband would confirm, I'm action oriented and always right. Does any of this vital personality information impact my teaching? Of course it does.

The research around personality traits coalesced in the 1990s into some common findings about the big five personality traits. However, there is very little conclusive research currently to determine exactly how a teacher's personality impacts effectiveness. Given the difficulty in creating a clear cause and effect relationship between a teacher's charm and a student's success, why even bring it up? Because there is one trait that becomes common and undeniable among all types of personalities in the classroom.

Teachers talk too much.

John Hattie's research, explained in a 2019 Education Week article, establishes that teachers talk for seventy to eighty percent of class time on average. His synthesis is ten years old and the pandemic has changed some of those habits. However, many current classrooms would also support that teachers talk more than students. Those that are doing the talking in the classroom own the learning. For increased student learning and decreased teacher burnout, we must reverse that trend.

One powerful tool a teacher possesses to swing the talk pendulum toward students is questioning. The book Hacking Questions by Connie Hamilton provides a guide to the art of questioning in the classroom. Two concepts stand out as essential to using questioning as an effective tool. First, teachers can plan more purposefully for questioning throughout their lessons. Hamilton shares strategies for scaffolding students who do not know answers, partnering students for talking over answers, and ways to ask a variety of more complex questions that require increased student deliberation and decreased teacher talk. Julie Stern discusses similar ideas throughout her focus on learning transfer. Stern's list of questions based on conceptual learning ask students to do the heavy lifting with questions that call for comparison and transfer versus recall.

Just as essential as teacher planning for questioning, is planning for answering. The second key concept to master as educators is the art of continuing student thinking when they are the ones asking the questions. Too often, teachers immediately answer a student's question, increasing the time a teacher is talking and decreasing the time a student is talking and thinking. Research by Peter Liljedahl in Building Thinking Classrooms asserts that a typical teacher will answer between 200 to 400 questions in a day. In Liljedahl's chapter on questioning, he describes the three types of questions students ask. In order to increase student thinking and student talk in the classroom, he asks teachers to only answer the third type of question, the keep thinking questions. Teacher talk often shuts down student thinking and student voice in the classroom. With planning and patience, students can do the hard work of learning in the classroom.

In addition to my enneagram type causing a bit of drama at home, it could squash student discussion in my classroom. It's possible I am always right about how to load the dishwasher, but it is absolutely impossible for me to always be right about the myriad of topics in a given classroom. My power as a teacher is not that I know everything, but that I am an expert in how to help others know things. Whether we are introverted or extroverted, action oriented or vision based, disciplined or flexible, we can all master this one skill. 

Stop talking and start teaching.

Comments

  1. Love your blog. I'd say more, but I already recognize myself as a teacher who talks too much! Thanks for sharing.

    ReplyDelete
  2. "My power as a teacher is not that I know everything, but that I am an expert in how to help others know things" This is such a powerful insight. So many teachers feel the need to have the answers for students when they ask questions, I know I did. But having the answers for students and giving them the answers can sometimes prevent students to have to think more critically and find the answer themselves by constructing meaning - doing the learning. This is a great blog Robyn. "Teacher talk often shuts down student thinking and student voice in the classroom." The art of teaching is when to provide the answer to promote and support student thinking or crafting questions to facilitate student learning to reach the answer. Our job as teachers is promote student thinking and student voice as you suggest.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Be a Vibe

 At 2.2 billion dollars, the Era's Tour is the highest-grossing tour ever. Why?  Because Taylor Swift is an absolute VIBE.  When she released her first song in 2006, did our Wildest Dreams tell us what we would eventually know All Too Well ? Taylor's energy crosses generational boundaries and has become a worldwide phenomenon. So, let's put on our Cardigan , get Fearless , and think about how we can all bring a little Swiftie energy to our classrooms this year. Robert Marzano, an educational researcher whose work spans decades, identified four areas of student engagement in his 2020 book, Improving Teacher Development and Evaluation . The areas of attention, energy, interest and intrigue, and personal motivation are all vital to moving from compliance to authentic engagement in our classrooms. Often at the secondary level, however, energy takes a backseat. In order to maintain a highly engaged classroom,  it is vital to consider the less sexy aspects of student eng...

Educational Theory via Airport Restrooms

Most airport restrooms are nothing to write a blog about. However, I recently traveled through the Louis Armstrong New Orleans International Airport and had a magical moment. With the push of a button, a sanitized toilet cover rolls around and covers the seats in their restrooms. That one moment of reprieve from the horror of an airport restroom was relatively inspirational. In our classrooms, we sometimes need a sanitized cover to scoot out and save us. A quick refresh on a day when we're a bit in the dumps...so to speak. Perhaps we need a lesson for a substitute and don't have the energy to create it. Or maybe we did not get a lesson ready because our plan period was taken by a meeting or event. There are a million different reasons why our plans might be in the toilet, and we all have moments when we need something magical to save the day.  Here are three things we can do to sanitize and refresh a crappy lesson day: Premade Choice Boards If we want an easy button lesson, try...

Daylist Delights

 I was recently listening to my Summer Camp 2010s Monday playlist on Spotify and bopping along to Daya's "Sit Still, Look Pretty" when I thought about how happy the daylist concept makes me.  Do I want to listen to some of those songs? No.  But do I feel seen, respected, and valued by the AI that took the time to get to know my music and make a little list with a funky name just for me? Absolutely.  So, as the year draws to a close, I encourage all of us to daylist our classroom whenever possible to successfully survive this last stretch. At this point in the year, we know our students well. Some of them too well. Use that knowledge to create activities that introduce students to some new ideas, create interventions to meet students where they are, or just find some fun games to end the year with a smile. Some lists I've curated to meet whatever needs you have this May: Daylist 1: Rage Girl Dinner Monday Morning ***For the moments when you need structure to decrease...