From Research to Practical Applications: Daniel Willingham’s Why Don’t Students Like School?

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OK. First, the title of the book is dorky. And it is a little misleading.

Second, if you are a teacher, run out and get a copy. Quick. Because this book takes 9 well-proven findings from neuroscience, explains them in plain English and then tells you what the implications are for your classroom.  There is not much that is new here, especially if you have had your ear to the tracks the last few years, or if you have read one of several other books about the brain and how it works,  such as the Brain Rules. But unlike many books, this one is especially written for teachers by someone who spends a lot of time working with teachers–he also writes the Ask the Cognitive Scientist column for American Educator magazine, where you can find this article that appeared last year and is basically the first chapter of the book.

The 9 principles that are covered in the book were selected because they are well-established, are always true either in the lab or the classroom, and can have important consequences if acknowledged or ignored. They are, therefore, cognitive “rules” for teaching and learning. Each unit deals with one principle and starts with a question, such as “Why is it so difficult to make school enjoyable for students?” The principle is then introduced and explained. Following that are several suggestions under the heading Implications for the Classroom. And each unit ends with two lists of references, less and more technical–something which is very much appreciated in a world where many authors assume readers do not want or need references (Yes, Rick Lavoie, I’m talking to you).

Here are the 9 principles:

  1. People are naturally curious, but they are not naturally good thinkers.
  2. Factual knowledge precedes skill.
  3. Memory is the residue of thought.
  4. We understand new things in the context of things we already know.
  5. Proficiency requires practice.
  6. Cognition is fundamentally different early and late in training.
  7. Children are more alike than different in terms of learning.
  8. Intelligence can be changed through sustained hard work.
  9. Teaching, like any complex cognitive skill, must be practiced to be improved.

Well-organized, to the point, and with a clear description of what the research has to say about what you should be doing or not doing in your classroom, this book is well worth a little of your time.

Motivation in Practice: Richard Lavoie’s The Motivation Breakthrough

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As an EFL teacher, my main early exposure to motivation research and theory was the work of Gardner and Lambert and others on integrative motivation. Years later, what came to surprise me most about motivation was how little attention had been paid to other theories of motivation that were and are so dominant in the other fields, specifically Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs and Deci and Ryan’s Self-determination Theory. And one thing that irritated me about those early language motivation theories was that they had very little to offer the classroom teacher who found himself in an”unmotivated” class. Of course, like any teacher I soon found out that any class can be motivated and what I did with and for my students had a big impact on how they reacted to the subject.

Richard Lavoie in his new book The Motivation Breakthrough takes Maslow’s theory as a frame of reference he uses to organize some of his ideas, but his focus is firmly on best practices for improving motivation for teachers, parents, schools, and caregivers. His background and area of specialty is children with learning disabilities (currently the Schwab Foundation for Learning, and before that Riverside School in Mass.) and he approaches the topic as an educator working under the assumption that all kids have some sort of learning problem and teachers and parents need to be much better informed and employ much more effective techniques to get learning to happen.

In the early part of the book, Lavoie challenges many of the “myths” about motivation, those common assumptions and practices that are found in practically every home and school. There is really not much that is new here, and nothing really that is radical. But read along and realize how much of what used to be “true” is no longer thought to be so. Get reminded here that kids are never ever unmotivated or impossible to motivate; that motivation is usually pretty constant, not a fickle state caused by circumstances beyond the control of teachers; that rewards and incentives are only motivating in the short term; that competition is best done against ourselves and can lead to “chronic success deprivation” for many kids–hi there Japanese junior high schools!–when employed as a program-wide tool; and that punishment is not motivating because kids tend to associate the punishment with the punisher and not the behavior. Well, if this paragraph makes you feel that your toolbox has just been upended, you really need to read the book. And if you agree with everything he says, then you will likely find the rest of the book a veritable shopping mall of practical ideas for going about the business of getting learners to go about the business of learning. Of special note here is his discussion on learned helplessness and why it is important to break the cycle and how it can be done. Anyone who has worked with less successful learners will find inspiration here.

For much the next part of the book, Lavoie summarizes his views on motivation. It would be nice if he cites research supporting his claims more–but he doesn’t, except quoting mentors–and he even says at one point that his own view goes against established research. But this is a book born out of experience and you will find his ideas and his justifications interesting, and more, transferable to classrooms. And that is where he starts, with the characteristics of a motivating classroom. He says that the motivating classroom has or allows for these things: creativity, community, clarity, coaching, conferencing, and control. This is a nice list, a good summary of the last few decades of research into teaching and learning too. But it is a preface to the central argument of his book: there are significant individual differences in motivation and  no single approach can touch all your learners. He identifies eight “forces”, of motivation, motivating needs that are modified from Maslow. They are gregariousness, autonomy, status, inquisitiveness, aggression, power, recognition, and affiliation. He then lists six motivational approaches that can be used effectively with learners of different need types: projects, people, praise, prizes, prestige, and power.  Of course, making use of these requires really knowing your learners, and as the book continues and he covers each of the six approaches it becomes clearer and clearer that they will mostly work with small groups of learners when  instructors are able to know and profile their learners. A profiling questionnaire is included in the book, but the results will only be practical if teachers are free to bring some individualization into their classrooms. For those who can the next section gives lots of wonderful ideas to try.

The last section of the book covers non-classroom issues that impact in-class performance. The role of parents, homework, chores, talking to kids about learning disorders are all dealt with. As someone who has read a few books covering Asperger’s syndrome and ADHD, I can tell you that I found this book to be refreshing and insightful. Lavoie’s mentor-like approach inspires confidence . He then deals with teachers encouraging parental involvement and finally with advertising techniques that teachers can bring to their lessons, a chapter that doesn’t really fit into this part of the book but is interesting none the less. Much of the material is better covered in books such as Made to Stick or Why Don’t Students Like School?.

For teachers and parents looking for a good book to help understand what motivation is and what can be done about it, this book is well worth reading. Rick Lavoie’s experience and wisdom are well worth the price of admission here. If you are looking for something more academic you won’t find it here, but for a reassuring voice and lots of practical ideas this book is very valuable. Though not about language teaching situations and not about Japan at all, this book still has enough to get the reader thinking and it offers some nice justification for adapting approaches generally to allow for more autonomy, more success, and more support.

A Visual Introduction to Connectivism

Here is a video introducing connectivism. It was made by one of the students in the massive online multi-student megacourse run at the University of Manitoba last year. The instructors were George Siemans and Stephen Downes. If you want to know more, visit George Siemens’s websites: Elearnspace (http://www.elearnspace.org/), where you can download his book Knowing Knowldge, or Connectivism (http://www.connectivism.ca/).

Mindsets and Competitive Plasticity

Recently I took delivery of two books I ordered: Mindset, The New Psychology of Success by Carol Dweck, and The Brain that Changes Itself by Norman Doidge.

The former seems the rather tortured product of a Stanford U. psychologist and an unnamed editor who seemed to want to take a good, scientifically-based idea and pitch it to a self-help audience that they believe are not too interested in the data. Wrong (and if you read the Amazon reviews, you get a strong sense of exactly how wrong. Dweck comes across as mostly sincere but often condescending, particularly if you really believe the story she tells that her students sat her down and ordered her to write this book. The basic idea is sound, however: that a growth midset–being open to challenge and learning and striving for excellence–leads to considerably better learning (and business, parenting, and relationship success) than the fixed mindset of people who choose “easy” tasks they can do well so they can feed themselves (or placate themselves) on the laurels they achieve by succeeding every time. According to Dweck, praise is good only if it is praise for effort that leads to more effort. Learners need to be challenged more and encouraged to embrace challenges more, persist in the face of setbacks and learn from criticism. Dweck says the difference between the achievement of these two groups, the growth mindset group and the fixed mindset group is astounding. Her research path developed early in her career when she began to see two types of abilities in children: “…a fixed ability that needs to be proven and a changeable ability that can be developed through learning” (pg. 15). Some kids feed on praise and success and thus never challenge themselves. The job of educators is to help learners understand how brains are like muscles that can be stretched and then continuously challenge learners and support their effort.

A complimentary notion comes up in Doidge’s book, which is about neuroplasticity. In an early chapter, the topic of competitive plasticity arises in a section on language learning. Competitive plasticity is the notion that brain resources are “turned over” to other uses when we do not practice or engage in a certain skill. In this view, first and second languages (for example) compete for brain real estate and when we stop making use of the second language, the first language will just take over the parts of the brain no longer being used. Competitive plasticity also explains why unlearning bad habits (those so-hard-to-fix repeated language and usage errors, for instance) is so challenging–the bad habits are already established and in place with competitive advantage (pg. 58-9).

Dweck’s book encourages us to “learn and help learn” but the combative metaphors flying around in the the section on competitive plasticity in Doidge’s book suggest that more than just encouragement is necessary when it comes to learning a second language. Indeed between the covers of both books, the harsh reality of language learning–the vast amount of time necessary, the need to start early, the need to continually challenge learners, acclimatize them to criticism, and get them able to handle setbacks by trying harder–becomes clear. For EFL settings, the wisdom of these two authors points to more time for language learning, particularly in intensive courses if possible, and the necessity of encouraging learners (realistically only those who are ready and able to make the effort) to max out their time with the language as independent learners. This means access (i.e., internet) and tools and techniques for immersive participation. It means we teachers and our paltry lessons and programs are not enough. We knew that already, of course, though we often don’t embrace it.