The Importance of Effective Classroom Talk

The productive hum of students engaged in talking and learning is like hearing a symphony, a favorite song. They are evidence of a teacher intentionally planning for and developing the expectations and strategies of effective talk with their students.

“Children’s speaking and listening lead the way for their reading and writing skills, and together these language skills are the primary tools of the mind for all future learning.” – Roskos, Tabors, & Lenhart, 2009

 

Increased effective discourse between students leads to deeper learning.

“According to John Hattie (2018), teachers can ask between 200 and 300 questions a day – whereas students typically ask clarification questions. Research also indicates that teachers should limit their speaking to 20-30% of the class time and the student talk time should be around 80%.” – Greenwood

 

According to Hattie’s meta-analysis, classroom discussion has an effect size of .82 which is more than twice the average growth in a year! When students talk together, their relationships strengthen, their oral language skills grow, they see each other’s strengths and feel an increasing sense of belonging, and engagement increases! Today I want to bring together some rich resources on classroom discourse, to support the ways that teachers scaffold increasingly complex student talk in their classrooms.

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Turning Toward Something Better

In my first post, I wrote about the goal of taking more time to review and synthesize what I have learned. Since March 13 when my focus turned towards supporting schooling from home, I have read articles and blogs, watched webinars, discussed with colleagues, and read books to find the best ideas. I’ve learned from listening to students and families. And I’ve been most intrigued with the idea of rethinking a better way of doing education in the fall. I know a huge system change is needed in order to a) move the education system into the 21st century and b) address systemic oppression and c) eliminate barriers in order to enable and empower all students, especially the students whose needs have not been served historically. What follows are some of the biggest themes I’m seeing. I’m using a list for my synthesis process and hope to dig in deeper to some of these topics in future posts. This is not meant to be a checklist.

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The Power of Metaphor for Self-Reflection and Coaching

This year I was a coach to others, and I was a coach to myself. I gave space, listened, and offered questions to lead to deeper understanding and a number of potential strategies towards goals. The most useful tools were the paraphrase and the use of metaphor. This post will focus on metaphor.

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Learning to Be a Better Learner

I’m a voracious learner. I love to read, collaborate, listen, and make connections. However, one the most important learning strategies has been missing in much of my past professional practice: review. I’m reflective. Maybe, sometimes, too reflective.

“We do not learn from experience…we learn from reflecting on experience.           -John Dewey

 

But, I often fail to take time to review material in an effective way. So I’m giving myself a challenge: to review more and to review more strategically. This will enable me to remember and synthesize, to be better prepared for coaching conversations and in my work with students. And, by modeling review I can teach others about thinking routines.

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