Saturday, 14 April 2018

Beyond Academics


“Oh, you’re a teacher! Which subjects do you teach?”
A question that makes me introspect my role as a teacher.
Am I merely a subject teacher? I hope not. I am sure I inspire, but do I teach beyond academics?

The 21st century demands more than teaching of English, Maths, Humanities and Science.

A genius is an amalgamation of passion, talent and hard work. As Martin Seligman wrote, 24 character strengths help people flourish, the most important ones being grit, self-control, curiosity, social intelligence, gratitude and help.

If we want our students to accomplish, have good relationships, work with a meaning and a purpose, develop positive emotion and engage, we as educators need to work towards strengthening their character strengths, which will help them, flourish.

While some character strengths like humour and optimism can be taught, others like integrity, authenticity, zest can’t. They are self-acquired. As primary teachers we constantly strive to provide opportunities in various curriculum areas to build these skills explicitly through various creative thinking activities and discussions. In our daily conversations with students, I have noticed that reminders which involve humour bring better results than constant nagging.
One of my students was extremely hungry when he came into the class early in the morning after an exhausting swimming session and asked me if he could have his muffin. I allowed him and the next thing I noticed was a trail of chocolate icing on the floor.
Did I ask him to clean it? No
‘A skilled muffin eater leaves no trace of his crime’
The next thing I knew, the floor had been wiped clean.

While humour eases situations, optimism helps us become less depressed, more resilient, liked and ensures that we try harder to achieve more. This is an essential character trait we teach through our curriculum. It also leads to becoming a balanced personality. The emphasis on growth mindset as opposed to fixed mindset is all about promoting optimism. The idea is to make character a part of the curriculum as much as academics.

As mentioned in this article previously, there are some other character strengths which cannot be taught, however as a school we try and provide multiple opportunities for students to demonstrate the presence or absence of those strengths, receive feedback and work on building those strengths. Research shows that the ideal age for building self control is 0-6 years, 3,4 and 5 being particularly important. Grit and self- control predict success and grit is in completely unrelated to IQ. It is also important that we teach students to appreciate the role of failure while trying to succeed and the confusion that goes with it.

To ensure character development is embedded in our system we need to start using constructive responding and focus on growth mindset. We need to further work on developing systems or routines that are designed to teach character. For example - working independently with focus teaches grit. Character strengths need to be taught in with proactive planning and needs to be recurring. It needs to be active, i.e students need to experience these strengths and the activities should be planned in alignment with character strengths we intend to teach.

Ownership to the students: Since we believe that students should take ownership of their learning, we need to set up structured time to help children understand the development in their own character strengths (PSHE lessons - once every week or once in 10 days). We can use this time to link behaviours to character strengths where each child decides to work on certain character strengths. Students should reflect and score themselves on the character strengths they want to work on. This should be done every term to establish the importance of  character strengths. This time can also be used to facilitate conversations and to receive feedback on character strength. The idea is not to track growth over time but to provide a platform for conversations about growth over time.