Categories: Education

Adam Voigt: Changing context is a start to changing student behaviour.

<h2>It’s not too often that I recommend teachers take pedagogical advice from real estate agents &&num;8230&semi; but this is the exception&period;<&sol;h2>&NewLine;<p>For they clearly have our measure when it comes to the understanding that location is everything&period; Real estate agents are acutely aware that you can’t build a palace in a swamp and expect your prospective buyers to be gushing in their praise and reaching for their chequebooks&period; You see – location &lpar;or context in teacher parlance&rpar; really is everything if you are looking for a specific desired behaviour&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<div>We see evidence of context impacting behaviour everywhere&period; I remember &lpar;don’t ask me why&excl;&rpar; a news story on a tour that Prince Charles and Camilla made to Australia&period; They were scheduled to attend an event on Bondi Beach in Sydney where some NRL players where giving a beach rugby demonstration&period; These players were in their<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>element&excl; With singlets on&comma; &OpenCurlyQuote;guns’ on show&comma; tattoos prized and pecs and quite a crowd of their favourite supporters &&num;8211&semi; bikini clad young ladies&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>And then the Royal Party arrived for the customary line-up of handshakes and pleasantries&period; What do you know&quest; These brawny and confident athletes were reduced to quivering&comma; perspiring messes as they scrambled to remember the correct protocols&period; Many were incapable of recalling the rehearsed &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;Your Royal Highness” and reverted back to<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>their default Australian &OpenCurlyDoubleQuote;G’day”&period; Here was a total change in behaviour&comma; just because two rather unremarkable English people wandered onto the beach&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>There are many who will determinedly tell you that there’s only one person whose behaviour you can change – yours&comma; of course&period; Well&comma; I’m here to tell you that&&num;8217&semi;s utter rubbish&period; Try walking into your next staff meeting naked and see if you happen to impact the behaviour of those around you&period; I bet you can picture it&excl; &lpar;Note – do NOT actually walk into<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>your staff meeting naked&period; It&&num;8217&semi;s the highest known limiting career move you can imagine&excl;&rpar;&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>The point of all this is that you can generate changes in behaviour by changing the environment or context in which certain behaviours are occurring&period; Try delivering explicit teaching from a different vantage point – like sitting on a stool – to see what the levels of engagement are&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>Try dressing in a more formal way if the classroom environment is getting too casual&period; Try placing classroom reminders on walls instead of providing them verbally&period; Try wearing a favourite cap in work time as a<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>signal to students that you are not available for their 15th request for the toilet this morning&period; Try &&num;8230&semi; try anything&excl;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>As Teachers&comma; we often forget that we have almost complete control over the classroom context&period; Our default mechanism is to strategise or to DO something different&period; However the problem is often not our strategy at<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>all&comma; but the context in which it is being delivered&period; Even the best pedagogy &lpar;the palace&rpar; will fail if employed in a bland&comma; lifeless and learning space &lpar;the swamp&rpar;&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>Great teachers already intuitively know the impact of context&period; Their classrooms have an air of excitement and feel like great places to learn or even just to be&period; But never believe that this has emerged by blind luck&period; These wonderful teachers have spent their whole careers in cycles of contextual trial and error&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>Some changes you make to the context will work spectacularly and some will fail miserably – that’s the art of pedagogy&period; Trial and error remains a highly valuable method of learning that we seem averse to in<&sol;div>&NewLine;<div>contemporary schools&period; It’s perhaps pertinent to begin embracing the concept of learning through failure by tinkering with the context of our craft&period;<&sol;div>&NewLine;

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Adam Voigt

Adam Voigt is the Founder & Director of Real Schools. Built upon years of experience as a successful Principal, Real Schools helps schools to build and sustain strong, relational School Cultures. A speaker of local and international renown, Adam has delivered a TED Talk and is the schools/education expert for The Project”.

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