This website stores cookies on your computer. These cookies are used to improve your website experience and provide more personalized services to you, both on this website and through other media.
Accept
EdTechReviewEdTechReview
  • News
  • Trends
  • Insight
  • eLearning
  • Research
  • Dictionary
  • EdTech Voices
  • More
    • Data & Statistics
    • Reviews
    • AWS for Education
    • Events

    Resources

    • Infographics
    • Reports & Case Studies
    • Videos
    • Books
    • Webinar

    Needs

    • 1:1 Learning
    • 21st Century Education
    • 21st Century Leadership
    • 21st Century Learning
    • 21st Century Teaching
    • 3D Printing
    • More Tags

    For

    • Students
    • Teachers/Educators
    • Administrators
    • Entrepreneurs/Startups
    • Govt. Officials/Policymakers
    • Parents
Explore
Search
Contribute
  • Submit A Post
  • EdTech Trainers and Consultants
  • Your Campus EdTech
  • Your EdTech Product
  • Your Feedback
  • Your Love for Us
  • EdTech Product Reviews
ETR Resources
  • About
  • Mission/Vision
  • Team
  • Services
  • Testimonials
  • Authors
  • Sponsor
  • Partner
  • Advertise
  • Our Clients
  • Media Kit
  • Press Release
  • FAQ’S
Reading: Classroom Connectedness – Tips By An Educator
Aa
EdTechReviewEdTechReview
Aa
Search
  • News
  • Trends
  • Insight
  • eLearning
  • Reviews
  • Dictionary
  • EdTech Voices
  • Data & Statistics
  • Research
  • AWS for Education
  • Events
  • Voices
  • Tags
  • About
  • Contribute
  • FAQ’S
  • Our Clients
  • Partner
Follow US
Home > Trend & Insight > Insight > Classroom Connectedness – Tips By An Educator
Insight

Classroom Connectedness – Tips By An Educator

Swati Lahiri
Swati Lahiri Published Nov 27, 2020
Share
6 Min Read
5 Teaching Strategies to Engage Students Using Technology
5 Teaching Strategies to Engage Students Using Technology
SHARE

Teachers touch their students’ lives forever, therefore teaching is consequential.

AdvertisementWhy this Ad?

AdvertisementWhy this Ad?

Research has shown how the teachers have a tremendous impact on student achievement than any other factor and that the ‘proximity effect’ which essentially means that the closer teachers are to the learner, the greater is the positive effect on their achievement. This leads to the construct that development and improvement of the importance of ‘self -belief’ in teachers and the improvability in teaching can only happen when it is made absorbing, vital and worthwhile from the perspective of both. The art of teaching is a work in progress, in my opinion. It needs to be perfected all the time and again I am convinced from my teaching experience that ‘intelligence/innate talent’ is definitely not the ceiling of student performance.

As a teaching professional with an active mindset, I have always been convinced of the fact that achievement occurs in students’ heads and with well-judged practice, help, time and determination, academic improvement is inevitable. Driven by this belief, I have adopted the following steps in my classroom teaching plan:

  • Being responsible
  • Being responsive
  • Being reflective
  • Taking initiative
  • Monitoring progress

As a result, I have felt more empowered in my teaching because I have attributed success to factors within my control and made my efforts in the classroom seem more meaningful and motivational for me.

Since I believe that learning and teaching should improve at every step to reduce the gap between the two functional members, i.e. the student and the teacher to make that connection, I have focused on the questions listed below:

  • How do I guide and recruit students in their choice of their learning programs, courses and modules that are appropriate for them and meet their academic goals?
  • How can I ensure that my students learn at their best in our lessons, not just in the majority of them?
  • How can we best work with parents, classroom assistants, mentors and others?
  • How do I design a course /programme that ensures maximum success for my students?
  • How do I discover the support that my students will need to succeed in their academic programs and make sure that they get it?
  • How do I make sure that I am not inadvertently excluding some students due to some of own personal biases – ethnicity, social background, disability, for example.
  • Lastly, how do I improve the flavor of my teaching and adapt them in the best possible way to address the needs of my students?

Based on the above, my premise of teaching is based on the ‘Quality Learning Cycle’ which encompasses a two way flow of processes by overcoming communication blocks and barriers, thus bringing the students to their nearest approximation of understanding of the content delivered.

In my view, I have no direct control over the learning process because it is a hidden mental process whereby the students are constantly improving by correcting misconceptions and adding to their understanding. In a way it is quite a private problem-solving process therefore enabling the students to create a personal understanding of specific skills and knowledge that they need to learn the prescribed material and obtain the desired learning outcome.

By using the Quality learning cycle I help my students to use their own ‘meanings’ or ‘constructs’ of activities so that they can get feedback on its strengths and weaknesses thus enabling them to check and correct their learning. Students learn from group work, self-assessment and peer assessment to check their own and each other’s’ learning, how to test assumptions etc. This develops their ability to form constructs, test them and also to improve them. As a result, they learn to think in the subject.

As a reflective practitioner, I am always evaluating my teaching. Since teaching is an experiential cycle that has four important parts – Concrete Experience, Reflection on Action -Abstract Conceptualization and lastly, Planning Active Experimentation which all lead teachers such as myself to become critical thinkers. Critical thinking leads to skilled reasoning because it helps in developing intellectual standards such as precision, clarity, relevance, depth, accuracy and significance. Learning happens in a socially collaborative space and only when students are connected with their educators, they can actively construct the knowledge and apply that knowledge instead of passively receiving it.

Instead of developing ideas on one’s own reasoning abilities, as a critically reflective educator I introduce the ability to be more caring and receptive towards my students’ interests so that I am willing to listen to them, and consider their ideas as possibilities.

TAGGED: 21st Century Teaching, Digital Citizenship, Online Education, Teachers/Educators, Tips for Teachers/Educators
Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Whatsapp Whatsapp LinkedIn Reddit Telegram Email Copy Link
Previous Article Bookr Kids Raises €2m Hungarian Startup BOOKR Kids Raises €2M to Take its Literacy Program to Global Market
Next Article Lancify Raises $300k New-age Skills Provider Lancify Raises $300K in Angel Funding Round
AdvertisementWhy this Ad?

Latest EdTech News To Your Inbox

Stay Connected

AdvertisementWhy this Ad?
AdvertisementWhy this Ad?

Latest EdTech News To Your Inbox

Stay Connected

AdvertisementWhy this Ad?

You Might Also Like

Undp Unveils Groundbreaking E-learning Programme on Sustainable Finance
News

UNDP Unveils Groundbreaking E-Learning Programme on Sustainable Finance

Sep 29, 2023
from Classrooms to Screens Edtech Platforms Reshaping Financial Education
Insight

From Classrooms to Screens: EdTech Platforms Reshaping Financial Education

Sep 29, 2023
Credit Union Introduces Financial Literacy App Curriculum for Students
News

Premier Members Credit Union Introduces Financial Literacy App, Curriculum for Students

Sep 29, 2023
Idp Education & State Bank of India Join Forces to Aid International Student Loans
News

IDP Education & State Bank of India Join Forces to Aid International Student Loans

Sep 27, 2023
Springboard Launches New Course Offering for University Partners
News

Springboard Launches New Course Offering for University Partners

Sep 27, 2023
Pbs Learning Media Introduces Free Online Educational Tool for Students Mental Health
News

PBS Learning Media Introduces Free Online Educational Tool for Students’ Mental Health

Sep 27, 2023
University Living Unveils study Abroad Buddy to Enhance Overseas Education Via Ai-powered Platform
News

University Living Unveils ‘Study Abroad Buddy’ to Enhance Overseas Education via AI-Powered Platform

Sep 26, 2023
Sports Coaching Platform Teachmeto Raises $2m in Seed Funding
News

Sports Coaching Platform TeachMe.To Raises $2M in Seed Funding

Sep 26, 2023
Show More
EdTechReviewEdTechReview

H433, 2nd Floor, Vikaspuri, New Delhi, India, 110018
Phone: 011 41321030

Follow US

Copyright © EdTechReview. All Rights Reserved.

  • Home
  • Advertise
  • Event Associations
  • Press Release
  • About
  • Services
  • Contribute
  • News
  • Trend & Insight
  • Data & Statistics
  • eLearning
  • Reviews
  • Research
  • Voices
  • Dictionary
  • Tags
  • Resources
  • Events
  • Courses
  • EdTech Product for Review
  • Our Clients
  • FAQ’S
  • Contact Us
  • Important Links
  • Sitemap
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy
newsletter
Join 100K+ subscribers!

Subscribe to our weekly newsletter that brings the latest EdTech news, trends, insights, reports, interviews, etc. for educators, school leaders, entrepreneurs, investors, & others.

Zero spam, Unsubscribe at any time.
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?