Login
Youth Truth Home
Contact Us
Twitter
LinkedIn
YouTube
  • Home
    • Our Impact
    • How We Work
  • Products & Services
    • Student Surveys
    • Family & Staff Surveys
    • Online Reports
    • Professional Development
  • Get Started
    • RSVP for a Webinar
    • Registration
  • Resources
    • Insights From the Student Experience: Emotional & Mental Health
    • Students Weigh In: Learning & Well-Being During COVID-19
    • Learning From Student and Stakeholder Voice
    • Guidebooks & Videos
    • Success Stories
    • Research
  • About
    • Team
    • Careers
    • Advisory Board
    • Funders
    • History
  • News
  • Contact

Lessons Learned: Practical Advice on What Helps High School Students Learn Best…From Students Themselves

November 13, 2011ytadminYT in the News

by Valerie Threlfall

With Labor Day fast approaching, it’s back to school season all across America. As teachers and school administrators ramp up for a new academic year, full of excitement, fears and hopes for what the year will bring, it is important to remember that students themselves have some important ideas about what makes schools work best.

Educators everywhere can benefit from incorporating student feedback into their ongoing experiments in the classroom. Using student input to help assess whether new programs or approaches are having their intended impact is not only wise — it’s essential.

Students are, after all, the primary “customer” in our education system, and as any successful business owner knows, customer opinion matters — a lot. We know from research that students can discern what’s working — for, example, they can predict who’s among the most effective teachers. We also know that improvements in students’ own perceptions can serve as leading indicators of higher achievement. So, ask them what they think!

At YouthTruth, a national survey project that solicits feedback from students about their high school experience, we’ve heard from more than 70,000 teens (including many students from low-income communities with under-funded schools), about key strengths and weaknesses of their classrooms. We’ve shared these findings and the comparative data we’ve gathered with schools, districts, education networks and students themselves.

Through this work we’ve started to notice some consistent themes that we encourage teachers and administrators to keep in mind as they head back to class. Here are five lessons worth noting:

1. Manage your classroom well. The frustration most commonly cited by students is that distracting and disruptive students are not better controlled in their classes, which makes it hard for them to focus and concentrate.

2. One-on-one time with students is critical. More than anything else, students say personalized attention from their teachers helps them do their best in class. So take the time to engage with students directly and personally as often as possible.

3. Make learning relevant. Students report that just over half of their teachers are good at making meaningful connections between what they’re teaching in class and what’s going on in students’ lives outside the classroom.

4. Culture matters. Students are more positive about the quality of their overall education when they believe their school culture is respectful, that their school is helping them develop the skills and knowledge needed for college, and that their teachers have high expectations for them.

5. Motivate your hardest-to-reach students. Among students who’ve considered dropping out, the two most commonly cited reasons are falling behind on school work to the point of feeling unable to catch up, and not seeing how school will ultimately help them in life. These students need help staying on track and understanding that schoolwork can be a path to future opportunity.

Read the full post by YouthTruth Director, Valerie Threlfall on The Huffington Post: http://ow.ly/6iUH0

Tags: huffington post, Valerie Threlfall

Related Articles

YouthTruth in The Huffington Post

September 28, 2010ytadmin
YouthTruth Team
  • Samar Allibhoy
  • Juan Cruz
  • Jen de Forest
  • Megan Hallisy
  • Jordi Hertz
  • Symone Marie Holloway
  • Devin Hua
  • Whitney Ivie
  • Doug Keller
  • Elissa Koh
  • Serena Meghani
  • Treva Patton
  • Brian Postow
  • Logan Rowland
  • Valerie Chavez Rule
  • Jimmy Simpson, Jr.
  • Heather Smith
  • Mauricio Teles
  • Jen Vorse Wilka