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 Who has made the longest journey?  Who has the most unusual hobby?  Who is married to the most pretty woman/ handsome man ?

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Presentation on theme: " Who has made the longest journey?  Who has the most unusual hobby?  Who is married to the most pretty woman/ handsome man ?"— Presentation transcript:

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3  Who has made the longest journey?  Who has the most unusual hobby?  Who is married to the most pretty woman/ handsome man ?

4  Do you interact with your students ?  How ?

5  Working with Peers  Working with Technology  Connecting to the real world  Love what you do  Get me out of my seat  Bring in visuals  Give us choice  Understand us  Lets have variety  We are human

6  Group Work  Time : 5 minutes

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9  an important mode of learning  learner the primary focus  Interaction & "doing"  can develop solutions to real-world problems

10  Peer to peer  Group work

11 › through readings › videos before class › through instructor lectures

12  educational experiences that are active, social, contextual, engaging, and student-owned lead to deeper learning.

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14  Development of higher-level thinking, oral communication, self-management, and leadership skills.  Promotion of student-faculty interaction.  Increase in student retention, self- esteem, and responsibility.  Exposure to and an increase in understanding of diverse perspectives.  Preparation for real life social and employment situations.

15  ------- -------- solving  ------- study  -------- - ---------- learning  Think-- - - - - - share (TPS)  Catch-up  - - - - - - - - debate

16  Group problem solving  Case study  Team-based learning  Think-pair-share (TPS)  Fishbowl debate

17  Empowers to take responsibility for their own learning  Enables to learn to assess and to develop life-long assessment skills  Enhances learning through knowledge diffusion and exchange of ideas  Motivates to engage with course material more deeply

18  “chunking” the class into sections of around 15 minutes.  Use a shift in energy, change the focus, change the stimulus, or change the means of delivery.

19  music, quotes, and stories to tap into students’ emotions  Move  Use electronic devices to ask students to reflect on what has been said in the last 15 minutes  Ask students to talk to the person next to them to tell them what they have learned in the last 15 minutes  Bring in a guest speaker, either physically or virtually

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21 must support four key components of learning:  active engagement  participation in groups  frequent interaction and feedback  connection to real-world experts – how?

22  Routine use  Transparent use of  Supports curricular goals

23  Through projects  students acquire and refine their analysis and problem-solving skills  as they work individually and in teams  to find, process, and synthesize information they've found online.

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25  Connected Learning  To meet young people where they are in terms of their peer culture, their interest in popular culture, social media, rather than say you have to meet us where we are as adults.”

26  extracurricular activities a part of your academics too?  Peer supported  Interest powered  Academically oriented

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29  Deep, personal commitments  A love for learning  Reflective thinking  Time for personal and professional self- renewal

30  forge relationships with students  create classroom environments that promote integrity and respect  provide students with opportunities to take ownership of their learning

31 passionate about  their field of knowledge  issues facing the world  children

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33  The mind-body link  How exercise affects cognition  The importance of play, recess, and physical education

34  not just hands-on classroom activities  daily stretching  walks, dance, drama  seat-changing  energizers

35  Cross-laterals › use arm and leg crossover activities that can force both brain hemispheres to “talk” to each other better. Books › Sensorcises by Laurie Glazner › Smart Moves and The Dominance Factor by Carla Hannaford.

36  Ensure movement  Shuffle / Regroup  Make them talk  Make them present

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38 Between 50%-80% of our brain’s processing power dedicated to seeing and processing visual sense

39  Visual stimulation helps brain development the most  Those who used visual presentation tools to convey information 43% more successful than those that did not!

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42 Doing things to students, not working with them?

43  Effects on general well-being  Effects on behavior and values.  Effects on academic achievement  Effects on teachers  Intrinsic value

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45  Background  Personality types  Learning styles

46 Adult learners  Experienced  Self conscious  Goal oriented  Different reaction times  Collaborative

47  Mix up the routines  Let the flow mix  Kill monotony

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49 One thing I want to do differently when I get back to teaching...

50 P. K. Babu., Ph. D. 9656 000 305 babu.peekay@gmail.com www.pkbabu.com


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