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June Preszler TIE September of 2007
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Positive Reinforcement and Providing Recognition rank as number three in percentile gain (following identifying similarities and differences and summarizing and note taking).
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5 Share with a partner: How do you presently reward effort? What are some ways in which you presently provide recognition to students?
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Not all students know the connection between effort and achievement (Seligman, 1990,1994; Urdan, Migley, & Anderman, 1998)
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The concept: Counting Coup What do you think it means? Think-Ink-Pair-Share—Content Area Writing, 12-13
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Not a person But a thing “The biggest enemies our children have are those things sitting in front of you and they’re called books.”—Gerard Baker
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“What do you do with your enemies? You conquer them.” “We have to redefine our enemies and conquer them.”
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“We have to count coup on books.” Three-Minute Pause (Write) (Struggling Readers, 21) Vocabulary Notebook (Build Student Vocabularies, 24)
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Identifying the enemy Empowering the student Becoming a warrior Conquering the enemy
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LIST CONTENT FOR EACH CLASS PREPARATION AND SCHOOL – RELATED RESPONSIBILITY Ex. 9 th English, Speech, Yearbook, Volleyball coach WHAT % OF EFFORT (NOT NECESSARILY TIME) DO YOU EXPEND ON EACH AREA? The total in the column needs to add up to 100% Rate from 1-10 how much you ENJOY each content or activity Rate from 1-10 how much SUCCESS you have with each content or activity Rate from 1-10 how CONFIDENT you are with each content or activity Rate from 1-10 how PROUD you are of each content or activity
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Student achievement can increase when teachers show the relationship between an increase in effort to an increase in success (Craske, 1985; VanOverwalle & DeMetsenaere, 1990)
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When I Try HardWhen I Don’t Try Hard What I say to myselfWhat I say to myselfMy mental pictureMy physical sensations My emotions Figure 6.5 Blackline Master O from The Pathfinder Project: Exploring the Power of One Teacher Manual by Marzano, Paynter, and Doty
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Effort logs Effort/Achievement Rubrics Effort/Achievement Comparison Graphs Effort Honor Rolls Marzano Handbook, 99-102
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http://www.surveymonkey.com/ http://www.surveymonkey.com/
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Giving students rewards or praise for accomplishment related to goals Speaks to affective development rather than academic skills
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Rewards do not negatively impact intrinsic motivation Most effective when contingent on attainment of a standard Abstract (praise) more effective than tangible (chocolate) Ways to praise, Handbook 110
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Rewards for accomplishment can improve achievement when the rewards are directly linked to successful attainment of an understood performance standard. (Cameron & Pierce, 1994; Wiersma, 1992)
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Personalize recognition Use the Pause, Prompt, and Praise strategy (Handbook, 109) Use concrete symbols of recognition
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http://www.nths.nvusd.k12.ca.us/Website2007/i ndex.html
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http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/templates http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/templates http://www.educationoasis.com/teacher_tools/A wards/awards_certificates.htm http://www.educationoasis.com/teacher_tools/A wards/awards_certificates.htm http://www.printablecertificateawards.com http://www.printablecertificateawards.com http://www.yahoo.americangreetings.com/ http://www.yahoo.americangreetings.com/
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“The deepest craving in the human heart is the desire to be appreciated.” --William James “Catch people in the act of doing something right.” --Ken Blanchard “Brains, like hearts, go where they are appreciated.” -- Robert McNamara, Former U.S. Sec. of Defense “When we want someone to do better, why do we make them feel worse?” --Unknown
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