As a young student, my mornings often begun with me trying to convince my mother to let me stay home from school. I would often say that "I have no interest in school", "It's boring" and "I don't like what we're learning, it isn't important". This trend continued well into my schooling career as I could not find a passion for learning inside of the classroom. To me, listening to a teacher lecture about something I had no interest in and writing tests were I was only interested in the mark not the content was almost unbearable, I just wanted to learn about topics that were interesting and relevant to me.
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Students are spoon fed educational material on a daily basis, they are constantly asked to ignore their interests and their passions in order to meet and surpass provincial standards (Liston & Garrison, 2004). Although meeting these standards is considered success many students do not see it this way and are merely playing the game in order to succeed. They will forget the material and often never use it again. In order to make students truly successful and generate a deep learning in the classroom students need to be passionate about what they are learning, they need to experience passion-based learning.
Passion based learning is an approach that allows students to follow and learn about their individual passions. This approach provides individualization for each student and creates intrinsic motivation in the students to shift focus from the grade received to the pleasure of learning itself (Drake, Reid & Kolohon, 2014). By doing this, not only are we creating passion in the classroom but also effectively shifting the mindsets of our students from fixed to growth because the focus is now on learning and improving rather than simply a grade defining success and failure. For more on the difference between the fixed and growth mindset you can review the article on Mindset. A practical example of such passion-based learning in the classroom is Genius Hour.
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Genius Hour is a block of time that is provided to students in which they can follow their individual passions. This time block involves students thinking of an inquiry based question that interests them and then creating a project centering around that question that they will present to the class (Drake, Reid & Kolohon, 2014). This removes the teacher from their traditional role and instead, allows them to facilitate knowledge to their students while the students take a more active role in their learning. The students questions still must be approved by the teacher, their research must be adequate and they will be sharing their projects with their classmates but now that they are discovering and learning about things they are passionate about they can begin to change their mindset and in turn gain a deep understanding of the topic, More information on genius hour, you can watch this very informational video.
Giving your students even an hour of freedom to follow their passions is a refreshing break from the monotonous routines and information taught throughout the course of a day in a classroom setting and allows students to recharge and regain an interest in learning so that they can experience more success. According to Drake, Reid and Kolohon (2014), students were much more productive and creative when given time to follow their individual interests. By allowing students to follow their interests their work ethic and motivation will go up as a whole and they will be able to experience more success throughout all domains and subjects.
So for prospective teachers and current teachers alike, remember, keep the creativity and passion alive in the classroom and urge your students to dig deep into and explore these passions because passion is the driving force behind deep learning.
References
Drake, S. M., Reid, J, L., & Kolohon, W. (2014). Interweaving curriculum and classroom assessment: Engaging the 21st century learner. Don Mills: Oxford University Press.
Liston, D. P., & Garrison, J. W. (2004). Teaching, learning and loving: Reclaiming passion in educational practice. New York: Routledge Falmer, 2004.
Thank you for sharing this detailed information and your thoughts on the importance of creating Passion in the classroom! I felt your thoughts were really well organized within your post and I was able to read and understand what you were trying to convey easily. I really liked your topic of passion because it was really interesting and it related to the post I made last week, as a key takeaway from my blog was to recognize the importance of fostering this deep passion for learning in your students. I liked your personal connections to the topic like when you explained how you had no interest in school because you didn't find what you were learning to be important. This resonated with me because I too use to struggle with these thoughts and trying to find the connection between course content and relevancy of the real world. I liked your idea of talking about genius hour because I feel that this method could have worked really well for students like me, which had a lot of trouble paying attention in school. It was really informative and a good idea to include links for further information on Genius hour incase we wanted to learn more. I also liked how you connected this topic of passion in the classroom to your previous topics like growth and fixed mindset. It helped to bring the full picture into perspective as a fellow prospective teacher. Would you agree that fostering passion and deep learning, as a teacher is one of, if not the most, important goal of current and prospective teachers?
ReplyDeleteOverall I found your blog post both detailed and interesting, thank you!
Hi Tom,
ReplyDeleteTo begin, I loved your personal introduction. I think it was successful at painting an image of what you were going to addressing. Additionally, it was a scene that I have many memories of as a student myself. I enjoyed making that personal connection to your writing.
You mention that students are simply playing the game in order to succeed. Who do you think is at fault for students sacrificing their own interests in order to achieve “success”? Is it the teachers, the board of education, the post-secondary educations they aim to enrol in, the government? Regardless of the answer, I admire you for taking on such an important topic in today’s classrooms. As you mention, we definitely have the technology and resources to tackle the interests of students and I think we are failing them if we choose not to.
I love the concept of genius hour and I’m currently planning on trying to figure out a way to successfully implement into my own classroom. Do you have any strategies for balancing time between the required curriculum work and this passion-based learning?
Thank you for your input and I can’t wait to read your next blog!
Ryan
Hey Tom,
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing your insight on PBL. As usual, you provided an interesting an relevant personal connection. I liked that you opened with this, it showed me that you have a connection and vested interested in the topic and the rest of your blog proved that. Your personal experience showed a problem in traditional education and your second paragraph reiterated that thought, supporting it instead with research rather than personal experience. I appreciated this repetition from two different angles. And of course, you offered the solution. PBL is an interesting and relevant topic that could significantly change the educational experience. But PBL is a broad concept that is difficult to apply, which is why I really appreciated the example of Genius Hour. In your description of Genius Hour you do an excellent job relating it to the larger concept of PBL.
As someone interested in applying and using Genius Hour in my teaching I can see a few road blocks. First, that time is taken away from other instructional time, which is already limited. How would you get around this? Second, on task behavior could look very different for each student (building, researching, discussing, being active). Should I limit the kind of work being done during Genius Hour to prevent students from being a distraction? Finally, students might choose to learn about a topic that I'm unfamiliar with. How could I help facilitate their learning without knowledge of the subject area? Fortunately, Genius Hour is adaptable and I could limit it to one domain as an introduction and expand as I feel more comfortable using this method. As you reiterate, creativity and deep understanding are vitally important. It's worth the effort to facilitate passion based learning.