“Why
do we have to learn this?,” “When am I ever going to need this?,” “Is this
going to be on the test?” These are all questions heard in high school
classrooms across the country. Those
that are good at math, like the material, are engaged and are intrinsically
motivated to do well and be successful.
What about those that do not like mathematics? I work hard to keep my
classroom fun and energetic. I tell
stories to help them remember the process we are working on. I make up songs to engage them and create
rhymes to help them recall the concepts.
If students were engaged through another avenue, they may not need me to
be the cheerleader in front of the room.
They would be motivated on their own to complete their work, all while
being actively engaged.
According
to Kearsley and Shneiderman (1999), engagement theory’s fundamental idea is
students must be “meaningfully engaged in learning activities through
interaction with others and worthwhile tasks” (p. 1). It is the belief with this theory that
students can be engaged through opportunities using technology that may not be
possible otherwise. Engagement is
successful when students’ activities are creative, require problem solving,
reasoning, decision making, and evaluation.
The learning environment of the classroom allows students to be innately
motivated. The main idea of engagement
theory is broken into three components:
relate, create, and donate (Kearsley & Shneiderman, 1999).
Interpersonal
and collaborative skills are acquired during the relate stage. When students collaborate with each other
they are required to talk through the problems, and collectively come up with a
solution. According to Shneiderman,
Alavi, Norman and Borkowski (1995), “verbalization of problems has often been
demonstrated to be advantageous during learning and is an important job skill
to acquire for modern team-oriented organizations and relationships” (p.
21). The traditional format of many
schools is to complete independent work, even though the workplace requires the
opposite.
Collaboration
has a variety of benefits and advantages.
Not only can students work with others in their own classroom, but
through technology they now have the opportunity to connect with others from
around the world and gain a different cultural perspective. Instructors can use the engagement theory to incorporate
blogs and class websites to achieve this type of collaboration. Educators can use Google Sites and Weebly to
provide a place to post assignments, class documents, and announcements. Edmodo
can also be used to present assignments and associated materials, grade student
work, and communicate with students. It
also offers them a place to upload work and communicate with peers (Walser, 2011). According to
Kearsley and Shneiderman (1999), collaboration also increases motivation in
students and decreases drop-out rates.
Incorporating technology with collaboration can provide powerful
results.
According
to Poelzer (2014), an online book discussion was created using Moodle for a 7th
grade classroom. Throughout the Moodle
course, students shared their opinions, made personal connections with the stories,
and discussed, compared and contrasted texts.
A mother of one of the boys in the class commented that her son, “would
rather cut off his right arm than sit down with a book” (Poelzer, 2014, para.
12). Technology provided a learning environment where he felt motivated to read
the assignments and involve himself with the online discussions because he did
not want to miss out.
Besides
Moodle, blogs, and class websites, there are a variety of ways collaboration
can be incorporated with technology to engage students. Web conference boards, chat programs, and
gaming are also avenues instructors can employ.
Gaming, specifically, “can help make learning more engaging and relevant
in ways that static textbooks simply cannot” (Levine & Gershenfeld, 2011,
p. 25). However, regardless of the
technology, students will need guidance with their time management skills, with
their leadership ability, and consensus building. These are all 21st century skills
that are needed and required in the current workplace.
The
second component of engagement theory is the create stage. During this stage, students analyze a problem
creatively and with purpose. In other
words, in the traditional classroom, students are basically robotic in their
learning. They regurgitate what the
teacher has presented to them, or memorized what is expected. However, in the create stage of engagement
theory, students take control of their learning by creating their own projects,
applying their ideas, and focus their efforts in order to problem solve. Computers and the world-wide-web have opened
up a whole new world of resources and projects.
No longer are teachers bound by their possible out of date
textbooks. With access to digital
libraries and ebooks, students can create projects that were not possible
before. One example of how educators can
use the create stage of engagement theory in the classroom is for students to
create an encyclopedia or online textbook for their class. This has been done at the graduate level
where students have created an Encyclopedia of Virtual Environments. It was
also accomplished in a 5th grade class that produced a database on the animals of Africa
for third graders (Kearsley
& Shneiderman, 1999).
The
final component of engagement theory is the donate stage. The projects that are shaped during the
create stage are intended to help a community organization, school, church,
library, museum, government agency, local business, or needy individual. The intent is to have students work on a
project that has a practical focus (Kearsley & Shneiderman, 1999). Some examples of authentic projects that have
been completed are students have worked on campus related projects and
developed scheduling systems for the bus service and television station. They also kept records for the scuba club,
organized carpools, and created an accounting system for a physics department
(Shneiderman, 1998).
In
conclusion, the engagement theory through relate, create, and donate stages, is
intended to produce successful collaborative groups which work on tasks that
are significant to someone beyond the classroom. Technologies such as websites, blogs, gaming,
digital libraries, and ebooks are just a few mentioned that can engage students
and provide a place for such collaboration and projects to exist. Engaging students can be challenging, but
with the use of these technologies, students can be motivated, connected, and ultimately
allow success in our students!
Kearsley
& Shneiderman, B. (1999). Engagement Theory: A framework for technology-based teaching and
learning. Retrieved from
http://home.sprynet.com/~gkearsley/engage.htm
Levine,
M. H., & Gershenfeld, A. (2011). The
Video Game-Learning Link: Isn’t It Time
We Leveled Up? Education Week, 31(11),
24-26.
Poelzer,
T. (2014). Using ICT to Engage Reluctant Male Learners in Literacy Activities. Retrieved from
http://www.ascd.org/ascd-express/vol3/312-poelzer.aspx
Shneiderman,
B. (1998). Relate-Create-Donate: A teaching/learning philosophy for the
cyber-generation. Computers & Education, 31(1), 25-39.
Shneiderman,
B., Alavi, M., Norman, K., & Borkowski, E.Y. (1995). Windows of Opportunity
in Electronic Classrooms. Communications
of the AMC, 38(11), 19-24.
Walser,
N. (2011). Spotlight on Technology in Education. Harvard Education Press Cambridge, MA.
Kendra,
ReplyDeleteReading about how you interact with your students within your classroom makes me wish that I had a teacher like you teaching me math instead of the teachers I had to endure through middle school and high school. The way my math teachers handled the subject made me completely loath math, and to this day math is still my least favorite subject. Had they applied the engagement theory, I believe that my perspective of math would be wholly different. During the relate stage of the engagement theory, it is interesting how collaboration can increase motivation. Is it possible though for those students who do not enjoy collaboration to still do as well in the motivational aspect compared to those students who do utilize collaboration? My favorite component that you shared about the engagement theory is the donate stage. Having students apply what they learned and created in the classroom to the community motivations students by giving them a sense of purpose, which I have found to be one of the best motivators.
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