- Define the learning goals and the success criteria that indicate the student has met the learning goals at the beginning of the project.
- Provide students with check-in dates along the way.
- Give students specific feedback after each check-in date.
- Require students to reflect on their progress at frequent intervals and think about next steps.
Wednesday, January 27, 2016
"Middle Schoolers Can't Self-Regulate!"
As an Instructional Coach at a middle school I hear comments like my post title all the time. However, middle schoolers can self-regulate, they need to be explicitly taught how to do so. So often I see teachers assign long-term projects and basically tell their students to finish the project by a given date. Sure, they provide guidelines and maybe even a rubric, but in the end, both the students and the teacher are frustrated and never want to engage in long-term projects again. Why? Students weren't explicitly taught how to self-regulate themselves during the work time of the project and have failed to finish. All of this could be avoided if teachers explicitly taught students how to self-regulate as they would teach students content. The fact of the matter is middle schoolers are middle schoolers, they are not adults, and self-regulation is a learned skill. It can be challenging to teach middle schoolers how to self-regulate but it can and needs to be done. Self- regulation is an important 21st Century Skill and students need to be able to self-regulate by the time they reach high school and beyond. There are some things a teacher could easily implement when assigning a long-term project that will incorporate teaching students self-regulation.
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