3 Teaching Role and Body Language

17th January 2017

As a teacher, one of your main roles is to motivate your learners to develop their ability and aspiration to learn. You may read about delivering training and facilitating learning , but in reality you do much more than that. Your role is not just about teaching your subject or preparing learners for assessment. The focus of your role relates very much to inspiring your learners to change and develop their personal, social and professional skills to the best of their ability. In this respect, your ultimate aim is to enable your learners to understand how to take responsibility for their own development. You can do this by planning and preparing teaching and learning activities that take account of the needs and well-being of individual learners as well as groups of learners. Some key aspects of your role as a teacher may be:

carrying out initial and/or diagnostic assessments;

clear communication with your learners, other professionals and stakeholders;

promoting appropriate behaviour and respect for others;

identifying and meeting individual learners’ needs;

being aware of the support mechanisms available;

being organised;

being reflective, which means learning from successes as well as mistakes.

As a teacher, a primary responsibility is to ensure that learners are enrolled onto the correct course, in terms of meeting their needs, abilities and aspirations. Further to this, you need to ensure that your learner is on the appropriate course in terms of meeting their award and organisational requirements. In order to do this you will probably have responsibility for the following:

promoting a safe and supportive learning environment;

promoting equality and diversity;

adhering to key legislation, regulatory requirements and codes of practice;

modelling professional behaviour at all times to inspire your learners;

ensuring your own professional development;

contributing to a team of professionals in order to improve the experience and achievement of your learners;

designing or contributing to the design of the course curriculum

negotiating appropriate learning targets f  or the group and individuals as appropriate to their needs and aspirations as well as the course aims;

planning learning activities based on the needs of your group and specific individual needs within the group;

designing or amending learning resources that are varied, appropriate to the award aims, and intellectually challenging for your learners;

keeping accurate records to contribute to your organisation’s quality improvement strategy. This will include keeping accurate records of recruitment, retention, achievement and progression of your group, as well as evaluation of how these can be improved;

keeping accurate records of individual learners’ progress and future needs. This is often recorded in the form of an individual learning plan;

providing learners with appropriate points of referral as required.

In terms of this last point, during the course your primary aim is to enable each learner to achieve to the best of their ability through working in a safe and supportive environment. It is therefore your responsibility to know who your learners should contact if they need any additional support or specialist information, such as:

finance; health; study skills; counselling.

I really appreciate teachers who are truly passionate about teaching. The teacher who wants to be an inspiration to others. The teacher who is happy with his/her job at all times. The teacher who every child in the school would love to have. The teacher kids remember for the rest of their lives. Are you that teacher? Read on and learn 11 effective habits of an effective teacher.

1. ENJOYS TEACHING

Teaching is meant to be a very enjoyable and rewarding career field (although demanding and exhausting at times!). You should only become a teacher if you love children and intend on caring for them with your heart. You cannot expect the kids to have fun if you are not having fun with them! If you only read the instructions out of a textbook, it\’s ineffective. Instead, make your lessons come alive by making it as interactive and engaging as possible. Let your passion for teaching shine through each and everyday. Enjoy every teaching moment to the fullest.

2. MAKES A DIFFERENCE

There is a saying, \”With great power, comes great responsibility\”. As a teacher, you need to be aware and remember the great responsibility that comes with your profession. One of your goals ought to be: Make a difference in their lives. How? Make them feel special, safe and secure when they are in your classroom. Be the positive influence in their lives. Why? You never know what your students went through before entering your classroom on a particular day or what conditions they are going home to after your class. So, just in case they are not getting enough support from home, at least you will make a difference and provide that to them.

3. SPREADS POSITIVITY.

Bring positive energy into the classroom every single day. You have a beautiful smile so don\’t forget to flash it as much as possible throughout the day. I know that you face battles of your own in your personal life but once you enter that classroom, you should leave all of it behind before you step foot in the door. Your students deserve more than for you to take your frustration out on them. No matter how you are feeling, how much sleep you\’ve gotten or how frustrated you are, never let that show. Even if you are having a bad day, learn to put on a mask in front of the students and let them think of you as a superhero (it will make your day too)! Be someone who is always positive, happy and smiling. Always remember that positive energy is contagious and it is up to you to spread it. Don\’t let other people\’s negativity bring you down with them.

4. GETS PERSONAL

This is the fun part and absolutely important for being an effective teacher! Get to know your students and their interests so that you can find ways to connect with them. Don\’t forget to also tell them about yours! Also, it is important to get to know their learning styles so that you can cater to each of them as an individual. In addition, make an effort to get to know their parents as well. Speaking to the parents should not be looked at as an obligation but rather, an honour. In the beginning of the school year, make it known that they can come to you about anything at anytime of the year. In addition, try to get to know your colleagues on a personal level as well. You will be much happier if you can find a strong support network in and outside of school.

5. GIVES 100%

Whether you are delivering a lesson, writing report cards or offering support to a colleague – give 100%. Do your job for the love of teaching and not because you feel obligated to do it. Do it for self-growth. Do it to inspire others. Do it so that your students will get the most out of what you are teaching them. Give 100% for yourself, students, parents, school and everyone who believes in you. Never give up and try your best – that\’s all that you can do. (That\’s what I tell the kids anyway!)

6. STAYS ORGANIZED

Never fall behind on the marking or filing of students\’ work. Try your best to be on top of it and not let the pile grow past your head! It will save you a lot of time in the long run. It is also important to keep an organized planner and plan ahead! The likelihood of last minute lesson plans being effective are slim. Lastly, keep a journal handy and jot down your ideas as soon as an inspired idea forms in your mind. Then, make a plan to put those ideas in action.

7. IS OPEN-MINDED

As a teacher, there are going to be times where you will be observed formally or informally (that\’s also why you should give 100% at all times). You are constantly being evaluated and criticized by your boss, teachers, parents and even children. Instead of feeling bitter when somebody has something to say about your teaching, be open-minded when receiving constructive criticism and form a plan of action. Prove that you are the effective teacher that you want to be. Nobody is perfect and there is always room for improvement. Sometimes, others see what you fail to see.

8. HAS STANDARDS

Create standards for your students and for yourself. From the beginning, make sure that they know what is acceptable versus what isn\’t. For example, remind the students how you would like work to be completed. Are you the teacher who wants your students to try their best and hand in their best and neatest work? Or are you the teacher who couldn\’t care less? Now remember, you can only expect a lot if you give a lot. As the saying goes, \”Practice what you preach\”.

9. FINDS INSPIRATION

An effective teacher is one who is creative but that doesn\’t mean that you have to create everything from scratch! Find inspiration from as many sources as you can. Whether it comes from books, education, Pinterest, YouTube, Facebook, blogs, TpT or what have you, keep finding it!

10. EMBRACES CHANGE

In life, things don\’t always go according to plan. This is particularly true when it comes to teaching. Be flexible and go with the flow when change occurs. An effective teacher does not complain about changes when a new principal arrives. They do not feel the need to mention how good they had it at their last school or with their last group of students compared to their current circumstances. Instead of stressing about change, embrace it with both hands and show that you are capable of hitting every curve ball that comes your way!

11. CREATES REFLECTIONS

An effective teacher reflects on their teaching to evolve as a teacher. Think about what went well and what you would do differently next time. You need to remember that we all have \”failed\” lessons from time to time. Instead of looking at it as a failure, think about it as a lesson and learn from it. As teachers, your education and learning is ongoing. There is always more to learn and know about in order to strengthen your teaching skills. Keep reflecting on your work and educating yourself on what you find are your \”weaknesses\” as we all have them! The most important part is recognizing them and being able to work on them to improve your teaching skills.

There are, indeed, several other habits that make an effective teacher but these are the ones that I find most important. Many other character traits can be tied into these ones as well.

LAST WORD: There is always something positive to be found in every situation but it is up to you to find it. Keep your head up and teach happily for the love of education!

1    According to the Journal of Counselling Psychology (1967) Vol 31 :

             Meaning is conveyed through:Words,Voice,Body Language

(55% body language,38% voice,7%  words)

2

3  Why do we use body language in the language classroom?

maintain students\’ interest;keep the students focus on you;create a dynamic atmosphere;to emphasise a point;to clarify a point;make a point memorable;to help elicit;to help give instructions;in error correction;in pronunciation classes;to be an example;to show your own opinion;to encourage interaction;to encourage or discourage certain behaviour.

Scrivener, J. (2012) Classroom Management Techniques. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 56-65

涂鸦:

That’s why millions of teachers and students at thousands of learning institutions throughout the world now use Canvas—because it brings classroom technology together, simplifies it, then gets it out of the way. All so teachers, pupils, parents and school managers can focus on what really matters: teaching and learning.

As a modern, easy-to-use, accessible easy-to-use, accessible learning platform, Canvas connects all your teaching and learning materials, reports, content and apps into one centralised place.

One place and one platform where you can build courses, give feedback, assess learning, manage reports and simplify everything you do in your classroom every day. And with technology out of your way, you’ll:

Because teaching and learning get easier when technology gets simpler. With an intuitive interface and user-centred features designed to save time and effort, simple is what Canvas does better than any other learning platform.

The kinds that come from having too many tech tools in too many places. As an open platform, Canvas plays nicely with third-party content, tools and services, so that you can provide an integrated learning environment for students.

With tools to create and deliver targeted instruction, Canvas helps you personalise learning so everyone can succeed. And with built-in rubrics and outcomes that can be aligned to standards, you can easily collect and analyse assessment data.

Canvas is the fully-supported, future-proof, cloud native learning platform hosted on AWS, one of the most trusted cloud services in the world. It’s easy to access, always up to date, secure, reliable and capable of scaling to your needs during peak periods of use.

That’s what we mean when we say Canvas gets out of your way. By creating a centralised hub that integrates, streamlines and simplifies everything you do in your classroom every day, Canvas makes it easier to focus on teaching and forget about technology.

Good Body Language Improves Classroom Management

Successful Teachers Blend both Verbal and Nonverbal Communica

Effective teachers use body language to communicate with students, build rapport with them, and make them feel safe and supported.

“Face the student with arms uncrossed and relaxed,” says Mindy B. (on NEA Today Facebook) “and usually always smiling! Give them eye-to-eye contact, and pay attention to them! By doing this, I’m conveying the message that ‘I care!’”

“The ability of a teacher to establish positive rapport with students is a critical aspect of the teacher-learner relationship,” explains Ron Benner, a school psychologist in Bridgeport, Connecticut. “The successful teacher blends both verbal and nonverbal communication skills in establishing good rapport with students and this has a direct correlation to student achievement.\”

Test your understanding of your students and how your body language affects them by standing in the doorway of the room as your students shuffle in. This close contact sets up a naturally occurring single file line that calms them before they enter the classroom and enables a positive learning environment before they even sit down, according to body language expert Chris Caswell.

From the start, command the classroom. Greet the class with a loud, clear, upbeat voice. If you look frazzled, you seem vulnerable. Lack of confidence is a red flag to students.

Body Language Dos and Don’ts

Where and how you stand in the classroom speaks volumes, too.

Stand up straight. Poor posture—slumped shoulders, stomach sticking out—is not only physically unhealthy, but it can convey a whole range of attitudes and degrees of interest and respect.

Avoid folding your arms, standing behind a desk, and using barriers. These behaviors “simply sends the signal that you don’t want to make contact,” says Caswell. It blocks you off and makes you appear unapproachable. Don’t cross your arms or shuffle papers that aren’t related to the lesson, and refrain from looking at your watch when a child is speaking.

Use the whole classroom. Walk around the students’ desks to show interest, and indicate approval with a head nod. Caswell suggests leaning slightly forward and moving momentarily into their territory in a nonthreatening way.

Be aware of your facial expressions (or lack thereof!). They can easily convey any number of moods and attitudes, as well as understanding or confusion.

Smile. It conveys happiness and encouragement. Frowns show sadness or anger. Big, open eyes suggest fear. An animated face draws the listener in.

Make eye contact. It helps establish rapport and trust, and it shows that you’re engaged and listening to the students.

Adopt different poses when you want your students to respond in a particular way.

Your hand on your chin encourages students to think about the answer and shows you’re waiting for their answer.

Hands out and palms up shows that you’re open to questions and answering in a nonthreatening way.

Observe wait time—don’t stare and rush them. Appear relaxed and ready to listen.

Body language helps you get your message across. Let students know that you want to create a supportive, productive learning environment.

9 Micro-Habits That Will Completely Change Your Life in a Year

原文地址

To reach your goals, you need a system. You need to build habits and you have to stick around long enough to let them do their magic. You hear it over and over again because it\’s true.

In 2019, one of the most popular books was Atomic Habits, by James Clear. It\’s a pratical guide to break bad habits and build good ones. The author explains clearly why small, everyday habits lead to great success.

If you haven\’t read the book yet, make sure you do. But don\’t just read it. Put in practice everything you learn from it. Unitl you do so, here are 0 micro-habits that can improve your life.

I know, I know, it\’s a fast-moving world. But that does not mean we have to respond quickly to everything. Learn to say \”I\’ll let you know later\”,\”I\’ll get back to you on this\”, and other similar phrases.

Instead of saying yes to an offer only to realize later that it doesn\’t fit your schedule, better to take a few miniutes to think about it.

It will save you a great amount of time and disappiontment in the long run.

Every day, pick a small task you don\’t want to do then go ahead and complete it. From washing the dishes to making your bed and from going for a run to making dinner instead of ordering food. It can be anything.

After doing this for a few days, you\’ll realize the problem is not the task itself. It\’s your habit of postponing things. It\’s being comfortable, especially when you have a choice. But often, once you make the first step, you get yourself in the mood and get the job done.

Once you\’ve spent a few days completing small tasks, make the jump to bigger ones.

There were days when my phone was the extension of my hand. I would pick it up for no reason and then scroll on social media for 30 minutes without realizing it. And I\’m not even big on social media platforms. I never post anything on Facebook and have around 200 followers on Instagram, whom I spam with pictures of my travels from time to time.

But I can\’t give it up for good, nor do I want to. Facebook is a great way to find out about local events, and Instagram is a great source of inspiration for my writing. But all of these are useful if I use the platforms in moderation.

So instead of deleting the apps from my phone, I\’ve decided that I\’m not going to use them on Sundays. And so I did. After four weeks, I\’ve drasitcally reduced my screen time and even set a 1-hour limit for social apps.

So if you\’re struggling with this as well, start small. Spend a day away from social media or don\’t connect your phone to wifi at all. After you realize you\’re not missing out on anything, by being offline for one day, you\’ll consciouly choose to spend less time online,every day.

Choose your outfit and put everything in your bag (men might not understand this, but most women hava a looong list of things that they need to have in their everyday bag).

Write down a to-do list and check your calendar to see if you scheduled any meetings of calls. Do anything you can to make the next day easier.

If you have a plan, you get things done faster. There\’s no magic involved, it\’s pure logic.

When you\’re eating and working/reading/watching a movie at the same time, you often eat more than you need. Plus, you\’re not enjoying the food, nor are you being productive. Can you even taste those vegetables if you\’re busy trying to make sense of an excel document? Probably not.

Having lunch or dinner shouldn\’t take more than 10-15 minutes. So when did we become so busy that we don\’t even have 10 minutes to spare to fuel our bodies?

Next time you eat, do just that: eat. You\’ll see it\’s not easy at all to not reach for your phone. And the simple fact that we have to talk ourselves out of doing it should raise some questions.

The Pomodoro Technique might as well be called the Bible of Productivity. It got so famous because it works so it does deserve all the praise. Out of all the mircro-habits I mention here, this one has helped me the most.

Working and traveling full-time is not always easy (or fun, might I add) and you have to come up with a schedule and stick to it. So I\’ve adjusted the Pomodoro Technique in a way that works for me: I write for one hour, take a 10-minute break, and then write for another hour.

This is one of the main tricks that have helped meet my deadlines while exploring a few different cities every month.

If you keep your phone next to you when you sleep, you\’ll just keep hitting the snooze button until it\’s almost too late to get out of bed. But for most of us, the hard part is standing up, not waking up. And this is why this method works.

When your phone is on the opposite side of the room, you have to get up and take a few steps to stop it from ringing. Then you might realize you are also thirsty and have a lot to do in the next following hours. So your bed doesn\’t look so comfortable anymore.

For the past few years, I\’ve been applying two rules before buying anything. First, if I see something I like, I never buy it on the spot–unless it\’s something I need and have been looking for. Instead, I wait for a few days to see if it\’s still going to be on my mind.

If after three days I still dream about a dress or some shoes, I go ahead and buy them. If I completely forget about them, then I just dodged a bullet because it was probably just compulsive shopping.

The second rule applies to items on sale. Everybody loves the sales periods, right? Of course we do. But it\’s also when we tend to buy a lot of stuff we don\’t need. It\’s how our brains are wired. That\’s why marketing works. Getting a good deal makes us happy. Satisfied. Until we get home and realize it was just a temporary feeling.

To avoid buying unnecessary things, ask yourself a simple question:\” Would I pay the full price for it?\” If the answer is \”yes\”, then take out your wallet. If it\’s negative, walk away.

\”It\’s ok, I\’ll remember it\” should go down in history as the biggest lie we tell ourselves. Out of all the things you pick up during the day, you end up forgetting more then half of it.

So make a habit of writing everything down, even the silly stuff that seem unimportant.

The main reason why people don\’t reach their goals is that they make drastic changes instead of building small, everyday habits. To do so, you only need to follow these two simple rules:

Make a list of all the bad habits you have and want to get rid of. Instead of going on a war against yourself, trying to get rid of all of them at the same time, pick only one and focus on that. Take baby steps. Smoke one less cigarette. Buy one less unnecessary item every week. Stop eating one thing out of a few you want to give up.

Only after you\’ve managed to give up a bad habit, start working on another one.

The same goes for good changes you want to make. Don\’t try to drink 2 liters of water every day if you only drank 1 glass before. Instead, try to drink 2 glasses per day and slowly increase. Add one more vegetable to your plate. Run one more minute on the treadmill. Read one more page every night.

Choose something you\’re struggling with and slowly increase the time you spend building that good habit. When you feel like it became a habit, start working on the next one,

As James Clear said in Atomic Habits:

So make sure you have a well-established system for every goal.

翻译如下:

为了达到你的目标。你需要一个系统。你需要建立习惯并一直保持以便让它们发挥奇效。你不胜其烦地听到这种论调恰好证明了其正确性。

在2019年,James著的原子习惯是一本畅销书。这是一本手把手教你改掉坏习惯并培养好习惯的书。作者解释了为何日拱一卒能够带你走向成功。

如果你还没读过这本书,请读读看,但请别只是“读”,去实践你的所学。直到你做了这些后,我这列出了9条能改善你生活的微小习惯。

现在一切都是快节奏的,我懂,但这也不意味这我们必须对所有事情快速反应,学会去说“我等下告诉你”、“我回头跟你说”等话术。

相对于答应一个后面发现日程有冲突的请求,多想想是件好事。

这会长期替你省下大把时间且能更好地达成承诺。

每天找一件自己不想做的小任务并完成它,从洗盘子到叠被子,从跑步到自己做饭而非叫外卖,可以是任何事情。

这样做一段时间后,你会明白任务本身并没有问题,只是你习惯性地抗拒它们,因此当你还有选择的时候,主动解决它们吧。之后,当你踏出第一步,你就能找到状态并且完成它。

一旦你花了几天去拍了些“小苍蝇”,你就可以去试试处理“大老虎”了。

曾几何时我机不离手,我会无理由地拿起来,漫无目的地刷个30分钟且意识不到时间的流逝。

我并非社交平台的大咖,从未在脸书上发表文章且在Instagram仅有200来个粉丝,上面我也只是时不时放些旅游照片。

但我还是有些不能放下它的理由。脸书是个获取社区新闻的好渠道,Instagram是我的写作灵感源泉。但这一切好处仅在我有节制地去使用时才有。

所以,与其把它们从手机上删掉,我决定周日都不再使用它们。我做到了,几个星期后,我神奇地减少了看手机的时间甚至养成了每天最多使用1小时社交软件的习惯。

若你也苦恼于此,一点点改变吧,一天内不用社交软件或者不连wifi。当你意识到你这期间并没有错过什么事后,你理所当然地减少线上时间,每天都是。

把你要带的东西都放到包包里(直男可能不懂,但很多女性每天都有一大堆东西要带)。

在你的日历上写下一个清单去规划你的会议,总之做一些会让你第二天更容易上手的事情。

如果你有了个计划,你会做事更有效率,这不是魔法,这是纯逻辑。

当你在工作、阅读、看电影时吃东西,你经常会吃得更多。另外,你既没有享受食物,又没有效率。你能一边做Excel一边好好品尝你的蔬菜吗?显然不行。

吃顿午餐或晚餐不会超过10到15分钟,我们什么时候忙到连10分钟都没法留给身体补充营养呢?

下次你吃的时候,只做一件事:吃。你会发现放下手机吃饭不容易,但我们还是要告诉自己,不这么干会引发一些问题的。

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