Create conditions for learning and build resilience and motivation in students through a sense of purpose. Regularly posing student engagement questions in your classroom, beginning at the start of the year, will help teachers know essential things about students to influence teaching and provide positive classroom environments. This article proposes student engagement questions for students of all ages and suggests ways to use them in your classroom.
Robert Brooks has been a voice for humanism, caring, and the value of bouncing back for many years. He regularly gives away his wisdom. On his web page, he provides over 150 free articles, the majority of which are of great interest and value to teachers and parents.
Brooks believes that resilience and motivation come from having a sense of purpose, believing you have value to others, and engaging in acts of service that confirm that value. When these point in a positive direction, students gain momentum and positive accomplishments; when they are not positive, we see downward spirals and increasing distance from college, career, community, and life success.
Brooks also believes that there are some things we should know about all our students, because knowing these things will greatly influence our teaching. Some of these student engagement questions are essential to address at the start of school; others are best posed after students settle in a bit. Still others are ongoing student engagement questions to show concern for students and to monitor how they are feeling and managing.
Here are some examples.
There are several ways to utilize these student engagement questions throughout the school year. Adapt the questions for any age student and consider the following uses.
You can put the “Immediate Start-of-School” questions on index cards and ask students to write their answers on the other side, perhaps doing one per day during the first week of school. Another approach is to create a survey and ask students to respond; responses can be anonymous or not.
A more interactive approach is to use a “morning meeting” format and start the school day by having students discuss their responses to several of these questions in small groups and then share their group’s responses with the class.
The “Settling-In” questions can be addressed in similar ways during the second and third weeks of school. Students’ answers to these questions can help tailor instruction and make adjustments to classroom environments and routines that support all students.
The remaining questions are of ongoing importance—not that the first questions should be forgotten! It often takes a few weeks before students get a clear sense of their answers to these questions. By then, they should know who believes they can succeed, who is always happy to speak to them, who helps them bounce back, and so on.
It’s important to implement student engagement questions at the start of the year and throughout. Knowing the answers to these student engagement questions will greatly influence teaching and will allow teachers to create positive conditions for learning.