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June 26, 2013 - Engage Digital Natives: "Flow"
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There is a competition going on for everyone’s attention. Teachers often lose the battle for their students’ attention because they refuse to compete in the arena of new media. Modernize. Engage students where they already spend so much of their time.
You’d think by now that most teachers could see the value of creating social media accounts for the purpose of interacting with their students, but so few seem to take advantage of the opportunity.
Look at it this way: Any social media account (whether YouTube, Facebook, or Twitter) is like having your own TV channel. Students can “tune in” whenever they want. Americans spend a huge percentage of their internet time browsing social media websites. By creating your own social media outlets, you can capture students’ attention and get them thinking about learning when they least expect it. The more time they spend outside of class considering associated topics, the more likely they are to perform well in class.
Believe it or not, students often find it cool when teachers interact with them on social media websites. It can reduce any sense of authoritarianism in teacher-student relationships and cultivate feelings of familiarity and amiability. Even if you don’t want to directly “friend” students with your personal Facebook account, you can still create an account purely for professional reasons. You can even create a Facebook “page” or Twitter account just for the sake of blasting out education-related messages or short lessons.
If nothing else, you can share semi-relevant, humorous, and entertaining content that will keep students in good spirits, which in itself helps with engagement. By going as far as making a YouTube account and posting videologs, you can begin to interact with your students on a more “real,” personalized basis. Never underestimate the value of a smiling face looking directly into a camera.
With the new media of smartphones and tablets spilling over into the classroom, it’s time that teachers allow their content to overflow into the media of the home (not just through homework). By creating valuable, interesting content and posting it on venues students are already using, teachers shift to the new paradigm of communication. Engage students in settings where they naturally gravitate: engage them on social media outlets.
Still hungry for ideas on how to engage digital natives? Our professional development course: Technology Driven Classrooms (TDC) is designed specifically for you. TDC provides educators with essential teaching techniques, ideas, and suggestions for educating and inspiring today’s students.
Remember to come back next week for a new tip on engaging digital natives! And if you didn’t catch it, have a gander at last week’s post on the power of “Prezi!”
Let’s be honest: PowerPoint is passé. Prezi is the present. Tools like Prezi are making the old paradigm of PowerPoint increasingly obsolete. Prezi’s ability to integrate any form of media (YouTube videos, graphics, etc.) into a web-based and seamless presentation shows just how retro PowerPoint really is. Prezi’s sleek zooming interface is unrealizable in PowerPoint.
Prezi also isn’t just limited to presentations. Students can use Prezi’s features to create résumés, infosheets, stories, or generate nearly any other text and media-based content they can imagine. Oh yeah, did we mention Prezi is free?
How can you engage students with Prezi? Apart from converting your own lessons into a Prezi format, you can also have students generate their own Prezis on topics of interest. You might even instruct students create lessons for their peers by assigning (or having them choose) topics from your class. Prezi’s format enables greater degrees of freedom so that students can actually create a finished product they are proud of; not just mundane PowerPoint slides or another essay.
If you’re looking for even more novel ideas on how to engage your digital native students, check out our signature course: Technology Driven Classrooms (TDC). TDC provides educators with essential teaching techniques, ideas, and suggestions for educating and inspiring today’s students.
Make sure to check back next week for a new tip on engaging digital natives! And if you didn’t catch it, consider looking at last week’s post on “Flow!”
Have you ever been to a concert that was so loud, that once you left, all you could hear was a massive ringing? After events of such intensity, we struggle to hear. We may ask our companions to speak louder. We may turn up the volume on our devices. And, in general, we may try to make everything louder when we should be taking the time to let our auditory system rest. Otherwise, we risk getting caught in a spiral of continuously pumping up the volume.
In Western psychology, there’s the idea of a sensory threshold. A threshold is the level of intensity required for something to be detected. After a rock concert, you could say that your auditory threshold is much higher because you’ve become temporarily desensitized. You can’t quite hear all the nuances that you did before the concert. In the United States, our culture of high-stimulation and constant interactivity promotes a very high overall threshold for stimulation. We seek greater levels of intensity because our thresholds for stimulation are so high.
The way students approach education is no different. There’s a reason why so many students are disengaged. There’s a reason why the old system of education isn’t working as well as it did. The reason is that humans (especially those in younger generations) are developing higher sensory thresholds. As time passes, humans can process more and more information, largely due to shifts in how we communicate. “The medium is the message” has never been truer.
We are the in the digital era, where teachers and students alike are immersed in media. Despite swimming in a sea of information technology (IT), it seems that very few educators are managing to successfully integrate the most valuable IT tools into curricula.
What can be done? Let education evolve with students. It’s the only way.
For this first week, we show you how to enthuse your students by taking advantage of a very important, but infrequently-cited psychological state: “Flow.”
Have you ever been “in the zone,” “on point,” or “in the moment?” Of course you have! And when you were, you were probably in “Flow.” Flow is a state of being so totally immersed in an activity that everything else seems to recede from your consciousness. It’s like you become one with the activity. Flow coincides with peak performance. Any activity or skill that provides a challenge, requires great focus, and uses a lot of your sensory bandwidth can put you in flow. Whether it’s sports, videogames, drawing, dancing, or driving, if it requires a lot of focus, you can probably go into flow doing it.
Consider the potential for flow as you create lessons and activities for students. If they are accustomed to being in flow due to their highly interactive personal lives, how are they going to feel when a learning activity is simply stop-and-go and doesn’t require sustained focus? Distraction and boredom will abound.
In general, there seem to be three qualities that that will keep students in flow when engaging in an activity:
Need some help thinking of creative ways to promote “flow” in your students? Consider taking our signature course, Technology Driven Classrooms (TDC). It will redefine how you interact with your students.