Let’s face it: sometimes, the world of academia can be, well, boring. And while the classroom isn’t the first place most people think of when talking about fun, it’s an excellent place for stretching those creative muscles and for exploring critical thinking in energizing ways. Especially since we compete with different forms of technology for our students’ attention, it’s essential that teachers overcome classroom boredom by engaging students with hands-on and reflective processes so students are tapping into deeper, meaningful learning.

In Real Life

When we see what we’re learning connected in reality, it really reinforces the lesson, which is the idea behind forging that connection for students. It can be done by bringing in materials across disciplines, helping students notice the overlap, or it can simply be a way to keep your students interested in your subject. Nonfiction stories — for example, using a story in English class about how Abe Lincoln once jumped out of a window to halt the passing of a bill, or the inventiveness of Nikola Tesla in a history lesson, can be both amusing and an anecdotal way to present content.

Activities using material from the larger world are also engaging, such as a lesson on budgeting and price comparison strategies by having students set a budget and try to get the most for their money by comparing the prices at competing grocery stores. Or have students practice playing the stock market, where they choose a stock with a set figure of money and track its movement for the year. What historical sites can students visit if they were to buy a ticket on Amtrak? Bringing the real world into the classroom gets students exploring something that they could potentially experience later on.

The “Buy-In”

Student engagement starts with the important role teachers play in fostering students’ “buy-in” to learning. Teachers create the environment for deeper learning by setting up experiences for problem-solving, working in groups, and long-term assessments, like student portfolios. And sometimes, creating a project centered on student engagement provides chances for them to experience what really goes on in life.

One example of this is the student exhibition. If your class prepares for a presentation in an exhibit hall, they experience giving presentations, working under a deadline, and collaborating with a group. Are all very impactful learning moments and build skills that will benefit them later in life.

Looking for more ways to bust classroom boredom? Read “How to Ignite Creativity in Any Classroom.”

Get-Up-and-Do-It Kind of Thing

A great idea for practicing performance skills comes from a very non-boring approach to poetry. Yes, poetry; you read that right. In Lance Fisher’s class, students are encouraged to recite other people’s poems, practicing out loud, standing — sometimes shouting — at the walls around his buzzing classroom. Developed by the national program Poetry Out Loud, this active way of performing has students practicing skills such as acquiring a deep understanding of text structure, understanding the author’s purpose, building vocabulary, and connecting to written language. Foreign language teachers can also easily adapt this lesson, focusing on building vocabulary or pronunciation. Parlez vous Francais, s’il vous plaît?

Bust classroom boredom by going outside

Reflection Time

When students have opportunities to reflect, learning is more meaningful, enabling them to connect the material to their own lives and the larger world. In a review of their book Make it Stick, writers and psychologists Peter Brown, Henry L. Roediger III, and Mark A. McDaniel make the case for reflection by stating that “reflection can involve several activities…that lead to stronger learning. These include retrieval (recalling recently learned knowledge to mind), elaboration (for example, connecting new knowledge to what you already know), and generation (for example, rephrasing key ideas in your own words or visually and mentally rehearsing what you might do differently next time).”

So reflection drives this ability to really master content. So how do we make time for reflection? Some ideas for peppering in reflection include:

  • One-minute writing sessions
  • A class web page that reinforces the connection of content to the world with examples
  • Think-pair-share conversations in groups or pairs
  • Informal journal writing outside of class
  • Formal reflection papers assessed with a rubric
  • Homework assignments in which students collect examples in the real world of content

Another great way to explore reflection with your class is built right here in Gradelink. Creating Teacher Pages makes it easy to keep your whole class up to date with personalized web pages for teachers to use as announcement boards, newsletters, class/course pages, and more. You can add and edit content anytime, including text, pictures, and links for file downloads. Pages can be made viewable to parents when they log in to Gradelink and embedded directly onto your school’s website.

One of the best aspects of teaching is that moment when you can see that what you’ve prepared has sparked your students’ creativity and critical thinking skills through engaging classroom content. And it’s true that this isn’t happening one hundred percent of the time; that’s what makes these moments so special, and that’s what makes them so memorable. As we march on toward December and look forward to the new year, may you feel inspired to keep the energy flowing and make persistent classroom boredom a thing of the past.

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