This document summarizes an article about making teaching ideas stick. It discusses six traits that make ideas stick: simple, unexpected, concrete, credible, emotional, and story-based. It provides examples of teachers who have incorporated these traits into their lessons to help students better understand and remember complex concepts. The overall message is that applying these principles of "idea design" can help make any teaching idea stickier.
This show helps teachers to call their students' attention in the classroom. Before starting your lessons, think well how you call your students' attention to you and your ideas. Think, Rethink to think more and more creative ideas of teaching.
This document discusses planning lessons and materials for teaching novels and short stories. It provides examples of tasks for students, such as having them imagine a story based on brief paragraphs and then revealing it is from James Joyce's "Eveline." The document examines characteristics of short stories like plot sequence and narration. It also considers problems students may have, such as understanding language, plot and narrator perspective. Finally, it discusses planning lessons with activities to address difficulties and help students comprehend short stories.
The Teaching Learning Process: Intro, Phases, Definitions, Theories and Model...Monica P
(MST) The Teaching-Learning Process in Educational Practices
First set of report/discussion
DISCLAIMER: I do not claim ownership of the photos, videos, templates, and etc used in this slideshow.
How Teachers Can Use Stories In Teaching Classroom LessonsAileen Santos
Most teachers already know that stories are more interesting to students than plain facts. This article serves as a primer for teachers from grade school to high school on how they can use stories to teach actual lessons.
The article includes a 4-step process for turning lessons into stories, as well as story suggestions you can find online to start your storytelling adventures with.
Courtesy of STAR TEACHER magazine (published by Summit Media, Inc.) and A.S.Santos of http://StudentParanormalResearchGroup.com .
This document provides guidance on writing essays. It defines an essay as a collection of words organized to create an image, prove a point, argue a perspective, or express an opinion. The key parts of an essay are identified as the introduction, thesis statement, body paragraphs, and conclusion. Tips are provided for each section, such as making the thesis statement exciting and the conclusion leave the reader thinking. Overall advice emphasizes writing passionately about interesting topics and being conversational without talking down to readers.
This document contains two logic puzzles. The first puzzle involves four kids - Kelly, Marissa, Dagwood, and Jon - having lunch and each having a piece of fruit. The clues are that Marissa and Kelly have to peel their fruit, Dagwood doesn't like grapes, and Kelly has a napkin. The second puzzle involves organizing a biography with an introduction, thesis statement, chronological body paragraphs supporting the thesis, and a conclusion restating the thesis.
The document discusses comprehension monitoring and strategies for teaching students to monitor their understanding of texts. It defines comprehension monitoring as expecting reading to make sense and being prepared to clarify or "fix up" understanding when it breaks down. The document provides examples of monitoring strategies like tracking thinking, paying attention, and taking actions like rereading, questioning, connecting to prior knowledge, and using fix-up strategies when comprehension breaks down. It emphasizes the importance of teaching students these strategies explicitly and providing guided practice to support independent reading comprehension.
This show helps teachers to call their students' attention in the classroom. Before starting your lessons, think well how you call your students' attention to you and your ideas. Think, Rethink to think more and more creative ideas of teaching.
This document discusses planning lessons and materials for teaching novels and short stories. It provides examples of tasks for students, such as having them imagine a story based on brief paragraphs and then revealing it is from James Joyce's "Eveline." The document examines characteristics of short stories like plot sequence and narration. It also considers problems students may have, such as understanding language, plot and narrator perspective. Finally, it discusses planning lessons with activities to address difficulties and help students comprehend short stories.
The Teaching Learning Process: Intro, Phases, Definitions, Theories and Model...Monica P
(MST) The Teaching-Learning Process in Educational Practices
First set of report/discussion
DISCLAIMER: I do not claim ownership of the photos, videos, templates, and etc used in this slideshow.
How Teachers Can Use Stories In Teaching Classroom LessonsAileen Santos
Most teachers already know that stories are more interesting to students than plain facts. This article serves as a primer for teachers from grade school to high school on how they can use stories to teach actual lessons.
The article includes a 4-step process for turning lessons into stories, as well as story suggestions you can find online to start your storytelling adventures with.
Courtesy of STAR TEACHER magazine (published by Summit Media, Inc.) and A.S.Santos of http://StudentParanormalResearchGroup.com .
This document provides guidance on writing essays. It defines an essay as a collection of words organized to create an image, prove a point, argue a perspective, or express an opinion. The key parts of an essay are identified as the introduction, thesis statement, body paragraphs, and conclusion. Tips are provided for each section, such as making the thesis statement exciting and the conclusion leave the reader thinking. Overall advice emphasizes writing passionately about interesting topics and being conversational without talking down to readers.
This document contains two logic puzzles. The first puzzle involves four kids - Kelly, Marissa, Dagwood, and Jon - having lunch and each having a piece of fruit. The clues are that Marissa and Kelly have to peel their fruit, Dagwood doesn't like grapes, and Kelly has a napkin. The second puzzle involves organizing a biography with an introduction, thesis statement, chronological body paragraphs supporting the thesis, and a conclusion restating the thesis.
The document discusses comprehension monitoring and strategies for teaching students to monitor their understanding of texts. It defines comprehension monitoring as expecting reading to make sense and being prepared to clarify or "fix up" understanding when it breaks down. The document provides examples of monitoring strategies like tracking thinking, paying attention, and taking actions like rereading, questioning, connecting to prior knowledge, and using fix-up strategies when comprehension breaks down. It emphasizes the importance of teaching students these strategies explicitly and providing guided practice to support independent reading comprehension.
The document discusses observing systems and how we perceive things. It notes that unconscious thought shapes most of our conscious thought and that categorization is important for survival. The research project aimed to create a school culture where students see a need for algebra to express their ideas through collaboration between teachers and researchers. Over a year, lessons were observed and teachers and students were interviewed to understand how an "algebraic activity community of inquirers" could develop. The findings looked at patterns over time and contingencies between teacher and student behaviors as creativity and complex structures were supported.
This document provides guidance on identifying main ideas, making inferences, drawing conclusions, and summarizing texts. It explains that the main idea is the most general statement about a topic, and may be stated at the beginning, end, or middle of a passage, or implied. Readers can use context clues and consider the author's purpose to infer an unstated main idea. Good summaries are shorter than the original text, include the main ideas but not all details, and maintain the overall structure of the original.
This document discusses learner engagement and provides strategies for measuring and maximizing it. It defines engagement as involving interaction, with the interaction focused on the material being taught and requiring active mental processing from students. Engagement is measured using protocols that assess the amount and type of interactions. Strategies for engaging students include hands-on activities, group work, and ensuring interactions require higher-order thinking like analysis and evaluation rather than just remembering facts. Technology can impact engagement, but the focus should be on teaching methods rather than the tools themselves.
This document provides an overview of an upcoming class focused on systems thinking and frameworks for change. The class will involve analyzing films and readings about various sustainability topics like energy, food, and water. Students will complete assignments examining impact and creating impact projects. The document outlines expectations for professional conduct and participation during class discussions and activities aimed at making connections between topics.
How to Build an Economic Model in Your Spare TimeRazin Mustafiz
This document provides advice on how to build an economic model in one's spare time. It outlines an 8-step process: 1) Get ideas from outside academic journals by observing real-world phenomena. 2) Evaluate if an idea is worth pursuing by seeing if it can be simply explained and has implications. 3) Develop examples before reviewing literature to incubate ideas. 4) Build the simplest possible model and work examples. 5) Generalize the model using existing economic theory. 6) Expect to make mistakes and iterate. 7) Review the literature once the model is developed. 8) Get feedback by presenting the work in a seminar to improve the final paper. The goal is to distill models down to their essential elements and
This presentation provides an interactive presentation modeling activities that can be used in the classroom to engage learners. The goal is to provide an overview of how games, game elements and game design can drive the learners toward greater understanding, retention and
learning through interactive classroom activities.
Come prepared to participate in interactive games and learn how to apply games and gamification to the instructional process!
Sabbatical (Open Polytechnic) - Faculty as Scholars: Tips for Becoming Effect...Michael Barbour
Barbour, M. K. (2011, April). Faculty as scholars: Tips for becoming effective researchers and writers. An invited presentation to the Open Polytechnic, Lower Hutt, New Zealand.
This document provides guidance on writing effective introductions and conclusions for essays. It offers various strategies for introductions, such as telling a story, asking questions, using a theme statement or quotation. Introductions should catch the reader's attention and introduce the thesis. For conclusions, the document suggests echoing the introduction, tying together essay details, challenging the reader, or posing questions. Conclusions should stress the importance of the main point and leave a final impression, without explicitly stating it is the conclusion.
This document provides guidance for students on writing a community profile essay assignment. It discusses choosing a subject and angle for the profile, includes examples of both. It also outlines the key components that must be included in the essay such as background information, descriptions using sensory details, dialogue, anecdotes, and examples of community impact. The document provides tips on conducting research, pre-writing through outlining and brainstorming, writing drafts, conducting a peer review, and revising and editing the essay.
This document provides advice on how to build an economic model in one's spare time. It outlines an 8-step process: 1) Get an idea from outside academic journals by observing real-world phenomena. 2) Evaluate if the idea is worth pursuing by seeing if it is understandable and interesting. 3) Avoid reviewing the literature initially to incubate ideas. 4) Build the model through examples and simplification. 5) Generalize the simplified model using economic theory. 6) Expect to make mistakes through iterative modeling. 7) Review the literature once the model is developed to avoid duplication. 8) Get feedback by presenting the model in a seminar to improve communication. The overall goal is to distill models down to their essential elements
This document provides guidance on effective ways to begin and end paragraphs. It lists 7 types of effective paragraph beginnings, including rhetorical questions, quotations, dramatic statements, and illustrations. It also discusses 4 things to avoid in paragraph beginnings such as apologizing, complaining, or being dull. For paragraph endings, it recommends echoing the introduction, challenging the reader, looking to the future, or posing questions. Additional tips are provided such as restating the thesis in different words and making predictions based on the content.
This document provides instruction for students on writing a community profile essay assignment for an English 111 class. It outlines the requirements for the essay, including using background information, sensory details, examples, dialogue, and anecdotes. It also discusses choosing a subject and angle for the profile. Students are advised to brainstorm, outline, write a draft, conduct a peer review, revise, edit, and finally publish their essay. The deadline for the final draft is November 2nd.
The document provides an overview of a workshop on reading strategies for students learning English as a foreign language. It discusses seven key reading strategies (making connections, asking questions, determining importance, inferring, visualizing, synthesizing, and using fix-up strategies). It also includes an activity where students read excerpts from The Scarlet Letter and answer comprehension questions.
The document discusses the Kipling-Zachman lens, which is based on six questions from a poem by Rudyard Kipling ("What and Why and When And How and Where and Who"). These six questions form the columns of the Zachman framework for enterprise architecture. The document explores extending the traditional interpretations of these questions to provide additional perspectives. It suggests using multiple lenses or triangulating different viewpoints to gain a more comprehensive understanding. The goal is to use frameworks like this as tools to explore real problems, while also understanding each lens' potential for value or distortion depending on how it is applied.
This document provides guidance for students completing a community profile essay assignment for an English 111 class. It discusses the assignment requirements, including having an introduction paragraph, body paragraphs covering background information, firsthand observations, community impact examples, and anecdotes with dialogue. It recommends an essay structure and offers tips for choosing a subject and angle. The document also reviews preparation steps like outlining, peer review, revising, and publishing the final draft. Students are directed to resources for writing help and reminded of the assignment deadline.
The document provides strategies for writing effective introductions and conclusions to essays. It begins by explaining that introductions should catch the reader's attention and introduce the thesis. Several introduction strategies are then presented with examples, including telling a story, asking questions, using a theme statement, or providing background information. The document concludes by stating that conclusions should stress the main point and leave a final impression, and provides strategies like echoing the introduction or tying together essay details.
Brainstorming is a cooperative approach in which a number of people collectively agree upon a solution after all of their ideas are brought forth and discussed. Ideally, more people in a group can lead to more ideas being generated. Groups should consist of students who vary in experiences, backgrounds, knowledge and academic disciplines. It is important to provide some form of follow-up to the brainstorming session as a sort of follow-through to support student effort. Brainstorming sessions allow individual students’ voices to become one with the group’s voice. Explain that as part of this course all students are expected to bend a little which may have them participating in activities which might make them uncomfortable.
Microaggressions Table adapted by Patricia A. Burak, Ph.D., Tae-Sun Kim, Ph.D., Amit Taneja, Doctoral Candidate - all at Syracuse University, 2009. Based on Derald Wing Sue's “Racial Microagressions in Everyday Life: Implications for Clinical Practice.” American Psychologist (2007): 271- 286.
The document is a description of the adaptation of Rizzi-Salvatori's "difficulty paper" for use in small groups after students viewed each others videotaped interactions with standardized patients in a required ethics course in a Doctor of Pharmacy program.
The document discusses observing systems and how we perceive things. It notes that unconscious thought shapes most of our conscious thought and that categorization is important for survival. The research project aimed to create a school culture where students see a need for algebra to express their ideas through collaboration between teachers and researchers. Over a year, lessons were observed and teachers and students were interviewed to understand how an "algebraic activity community of inquirers" could develop. The findings looked at patterns over time and contingencies between teacher and student behaviors as creativity and complex structures were supported.
This document provides guidance on identifying main ideas, making inferences, drawing conclusions, and summarizing texts. It explains that the main idea is the most general statement about a topic, and may be stated at the beginning, end, or middle of a passage, or implied. Readers can use context clues and consider the author's purpose to infer an unstated main idea. Good summaries are shorter than the original text, include the main ideas but not all details, and maintain the overall structure of the original.
This document discusses learner engagement and provides strategies for measuring and maximizing it. It defines engagement as involving interaction, with the interaction focused on the material being taught and requiring active mental processing from students. Engagement is measured using protocols that assess the amount and type of interactions. Strategies for engaging students include hands-on activities, group work, and ensuring interactions require higher-order thinking like analysis and evaluation rather than just remembering facts. Technology can impact engagement, but the focus should be on teaching methods rather than the tools themselves.
This document provides an overview of an upcoming class focused on systems thinking and frameworks for change. The class will involve analyzing films and readings about various sustainability topics like energy, food, and water. Students will complete assignments examining impact and creating impact projects. The document outlines expectations for professional conduct and participation during class discussions and activities aimed at making connections between topics.
How to Build an Economic Model in Your Spare TimeRazin Mustafiz
This document provides advice on how to build an economic model in one's spare time. It outlines an 8-step process: 1) Get ideas from outside academic journals by observing real-world phenomena. 2) Evaluate if an idea is worth pursuing by seeing if it can be simply explained and has implications. 3) Develop examples before reviewing literature to incubate ideas. 4) Build the simplest possible model and work examples. 5) Generalize the model using existing economic theory. 6) Expect to make mistakes and iterate. 7) Review the literature once the model is developed. 8) Get feedback by presenting the work in a seminar to improve the final paper. The goal is to distill models down to their essential elements and
This presentation provides an interactive presentation modeling activities that can be used in the classroom to engage learners. The goal is to provide an overview of how games, game elements and game design can drive the learners toward greater understanding, retention and
learning through interactive classroom activities.
Come prepared to participate in interactive games and learn how to apply games and gamification to the instructional process!
Sabbatical (Open Polytechnic) - Faculty as Scholars: Tips for Becoming Effect...Michael Barbour
Barbour, M. K. (2011, April). Faculty as scholars: Tips for becoming effective researchers and writers. An invited presentation to the Open Polytechnic, Lower Hutt, New Zealand.
This document provides guidance on writing effective introductions and conclusions for essays. It offers various strategies for introductions, such as telling a story, asking questions, using a theme statement or quotation. Introductions should catch the reader's attention and introduce the thesis. For conclusions, the document suggests echoing the introduction, tying together essay details, challenging the reader, or posing questions. Conclusions should stress the importance of the main point and leave a final impression, without explicitly stating it is the conclusion.
This document provides guidance for students on writing a community profile essay assignment. It discusses choosing a subject and angle for the profile, includes examples of both. It also outlines the key components that must be included in the essay such as background information, descriptions using sensory details, dialogue, anecdotes, and examples of community impact. The document provides tips on conducting research, pre-writing through outlining and brainstorming, writing drafts, conducting a peer review, and revising and editing the essay.
This document provides advice on how to build an economic model in one's spare time. It outlines an 8-step process: 1) Get an idea from outside academic journals by observing real-world phenomena. 2) Evaluate if the idea is worth pursuing by seeing if it is understandable and interesting. 3) Avoid reviewing the literature initially to incubate ideas. 4) Build the model through examples and simplification. 5) Generalize the simplified model using economic theory. 6) Expect to make mistakes through iterative modeling. 7) Review the literature once the model is developed to avoid duplication. 8) Get feedback by presenting the model in a seminar to improve communication. The overall goal is to distill models down to their essential elements
This document provides guidance on effective ways to begin and end paragraphs. It lists 7 types of effective paragraph beginnings, including rhetorical questions, quotations, dramatic statements, and illustrations. It also discusses 4 things to avoid in paragraph beginnings such as apologizing, complaining, or being dull. For paragraph endings, it recommends echoing the introduction, challenging the reader, looking to the future, or posing questions. Additional tips are provided such as restating the thesis in different words and making predictions based on the content.
This document provides instruction for students on writing a community profile essay assignment for an English 111 class. It outlines the requirements for the essay, including using background information, sensory details, examples, dialogue, and anecdotes. It also discusses choosing a subject and angle for the profile. Students are advised to brainstorm, outline, write a draft, conduct a peer review, revise, edit, and finally publish their essay. The deadline for the final draft is November 2nd.
The document provides an overview of a workshop on reading strategies for students learning English as a foreign language. It discusses seven key reading strategies (making connections, asking questions, determining importance, inferring, visualizing, synthesizing, and using fix-up strategies). It also includes an activity where students read excerpts from The Scarlet Letter and answer comprehension questions.
The document discusses the Kipling-Zachman lens, which is based on six questions from a poem by Rudyard Kipling ("What and Why and When And How and Where and Who"). These six questions form the columns of the Zachman framework for enterprise architecture. The document explores extending the traditional interpretations of these questions to provide additional perspectives. It suggests using multiple lenses or triangulating different viewpoints to gain a more comprehensive understanding. The goal is to use frameworks like this as tools to explore real problems, while also understanding each lens' potential for value or distortion depending on how it is applied.
This document provides guidance for students completing a community profile essay assignment for an English 111 class. It discusses the assignment requirements, including having an introduction paragraph, body paragraphs covering background information, firsthand observations, community impact examples, and anecdotes with dialogue. It recommends an essay structure and offers tips for choosing a subject and angle. The document also reviews preparation steps like outlining, peer review, revising, and publishing the final draft. Students are directed to resources for writing help and reminded of the assignment deadline.
The document provides strategies for writing effective introductions and conclusions to essays. It begins by explaining that introductions should catch the reader's attention and introduce the thesis. Several introduction strategies are then presented with examples, including telling a story, asking questions, using a theme statement, or providing background information. The document concludes by stating that conclusions should stress the main point and leave a final impression, and provides strategies like echoing the introduction or tying together essay details.
Brainstorming is a cooperative approach in which a number of people collectively agree upon a solution after all of their ideas are brought forth and discussed. Ideally, more people in a group can lead to more ideas being generated. Groups should consist of students who vary in experiences, backgrounds, knowledge and academic disciplines. It is important to provide some form of follow-up to the brainstorming session as a sort of follow-through to support student effort. Brainstorming sessions allow individual students’ voices to become one with the group’s voice. Explain that as part of this course all students are expected to bend a little which may have them participating in activities which might make them uncomfortable.
Microaggressions Table adapted by Patricia A. Burak, Ph.D., Tae-Sun Kim, Ph.D., Amit Taneja, Doctoral Candidate - all at Syracuse University, 2009. Based on Derald Wing Sue's “Racial Microagressions in Everyday Life: Implications for Clinical Practice.” American Psychologist (2007): 271- 286.
The document is a description of the adaptation of Rizzi-Salvatori's "difficulty paper" for use in small groups after students viewed each others videotaped interactions with standardized patients in a required ethics course in a Doctor of Pharmacy program.
The document outlines Bloom's Taxonomy of Educational Objectives for the Cognitive Domain. It describes 6 levels - Memory/Knowledge, Comprehension, Application, Analysis, Synthesis, and Evaluation. Each level provides examples of tasks, key verbs, and sample test questions that demonstrate that level of learning. The levels progress from remembering facts to more complex thinking like evaluating ideas against standards. The taxonomy provides a framework for designing learning outcomes and assessments at different levels of cognitive complexity.
Critical thinking is defined differently in different contexts and is learned through various experiences. Teaching critical thinking involves activities that develop traits like open-mindedness, analysis, and evaluation. Assignments that test critical thinking allow students to apply these traits to demonstrate their understanding.
This document outlines an upcoming teaching enrichment series session on critical thinking. The session will be led by Anita Gonzalez and cover definitions of critical thinking, two perspectives on teaching it, and mapping critical thinking skills. Critical thinking is defined as reasoning dispassionately and using evidence to solve problems and draw conclusions. It involves both general skills like logic as well as discipline-specific skills. Effective teaching of critical thinking engages students with specific critical thinking skills within a knowledge base.
The document outlines best practices for teaching large lecture courses with diverse student learners. It recommends putting together a complete syllabus, fostering active learning, and giving captivating lectures. It also suggests making the large class feel small by interacting with students, forming small groups, and learning students' names. The document advises encouraging questioning, bringing in student backgrounds, connecting concepts to other disciplines, cultivating multicultural learning, being available to students, reaching out to struggling students, personalizing the course, and getting student feedback.
The document provides teaching suggestions from students' perspectives, including dos and don'ts. It suggests that professors should respect student confidentiality, check prerequisites, adhere to the syllabus, avoid running over class time, post important announcements and grades online, clearly explain grading systems upfront, avoid publicly humiliating students, state exam times clearly, and proofread exams.
1. Set a positive tone by being fully prepared, treating students with respect, and showing enthusiasm for the subject matter. Your attitude will significantly impact students' experience.
2. Assume all students are capable and motivated, though not necessarily to learn the specific subject. Do your best to engage students and facilitate different levels of learning without forcing any student to achieve a high grade.
3. Be considerate of students' busy schedules by planning reasonable workload and following university guidelines. Changes to expectations can disadvantage some students.
Strategies for Beginning to Establish a Digital Presence
Tuesday, November 12, 3:00 - 5:00pm | 3-180 Keller Hall
Participants in this session will discuss strategies for making use of social media to build a scholarly digital presence and establish professional networks as scholars, researchers and teachers. Participants are encouraged to bring laptops or mobile devices.
The document discusses using text messaging as a feedback tool in a large lecture mathematics course. The professor trialled allowing students to text him questions during class. Over 40 conversations occurred with 18 unique students, mostly about math concepts. Student surveys found texting created a welcoming environment and some students were more comfortable asking questions this way. For future use, the professor plans to better advertise the system and provide examples for sending math notation by text.
On create learning outcomes that will can be the foundation for the rest of your course development. Slides in support of workshop described at http://wp.me/p1Mdiu-rQ.
The document provides teaching tips from Donald J. Liu. It discusses 5 key elements of effective teaching:
1) Overcoming limitations by transforming weaknesses into strengths, such as compensating for being a non-native English speaker.
2) Engaging students through active learning techniques like using clickers and group work rather than solely lecturing.
3) Building rapport with students by learning their names and treating them with respect.
4) Seeking out new teaching methods and frontier areas, such as using classroom experiments with clicker technology.
5) Maximizing the "theater" aspect of teaching through strong preparation and presentation skills.
Here are some additional credible resources for designing authentic learning tasks:
- Project-based Learning Lab at Buck Institute for Education (bie.org) - Provides examples of authentic, project-based learning units and lessons across various subject areas.
- Edutopia (edutopia.org) - Offers best practice guides and videos showing examples of authentic assessments being implemented in K-12 classrooms.
- Grant Wiggins' Authentic Education website (authenticeducation.org) - Includes articles and resources from Wiggins on understanding and designing authentic tasks.
- Quality Matters Higher Education Rubric Standards (qualitymatters.org) - Benchmark standards for course design that emphasize using authentic activities to assess learning.
This document discusses six core principles for creating memorable presentations: 1) have students dig deep into the material by linking it to things they care about, 2) introduce emotion to make people care about the topic, 3) show enthusiasm for the subject, 4) link the material to things students already value, 5) ask students what they value to understand how to engage them, and 6) make emotion the intended outcome of the presentation. It emphasizes using stories and storytelling techniques to help explain concepts and inspire students in a way that fosters emotional involvement.
This document outlines principles and practices for creating memorable presentations and courses. It discusses beginning a presentation with stories to engage learners and provides an overview of key concepts like aligned course design, active learning, creativity, and intended learning outcomes. The document notes that learning refers to significant and measurable changes in capability, understanding, knowledge, practices, attitudes or values. It also explores how to apply principles of aligned course design to draw on sticky teaching practices and provoke meaningful learning through well-designed course objectives, assessments and activities.
This single sentence document provides a URL link to an Adobe Presenter narrated presentation hosted on umconnect.umn.edu. The URL is https://umconnect.umn.edu/p68566488/.
This document discusses interactive and active teaching methods. It defines key terms like learning, active learning, and classroom assessment techniques. It discusses the advantages of active learning for both students and teachers. Examples of active learning techniques are presented, including large and small group discussions, active lecturing, and classroom assessment techniques like sample exam questions. Tips are provided for implementing active learning in the classroom.
More from Center for Teaching & Learning - University of Minnesota (20)
This presentation includes basic of PCOS their pathology and treatment and also Ayurveda correlation of PCOS and Ayurvedic line of treatment mentioned in classics.
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty, In...Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
Exploiting Artificial Intelligence for Empowering Researchers and Faculty,
International FDP on Fundamentals of Research in Social Sciences
at Integral University, Lucknow, 06.06.2024
By Dr. Vinod Kumar Kanvaria
A workshop hosted by the South African Journal of Science aimed at postgraduate students and early career researchers with little or no experience in writing and publishing journal articles.
MATATAG CURRICULUM: ASSESSING THE READINESS OF ELEM. PUBLIC SCHOOL TEACHERS I...NelTorrente
In this research, it concludes that while the readiness of teachers in Caloocan City to implement the MATATAG Curriculum is generally positive, targeted efforts in professional development, resource distribution, support networks, and comprehensive preparation can address the existing gaps and ensure successful curriculum implementation.
Biological screening of herbal drugs: Introduction and Need for
Phyto-Pharmacological Screening, New Strategies for evaluating
Natural Products, In vitro evaluation techniques for Antioxidants, Antimicrobial and Anticancer drugs. In vivo evaluation techniques
for Anti-inflammatory, Antiulcer, Anticancer, Wound healing, Antidiabetic, Hepatoprotective, Cardio protective, Diuretics and
Antifertility, Toxicity studies as per OECD guidelines
This slide is special for master students (MIBS & MIFB) in UUM. Also useful for readers who are interested in the topic of contemporary Islamic banking.
How to Fix the Import Error in the Odoo 17Celine George
An import error occurs when a program fails to import a module or library, disrupting its execution. In languages like Python, this issue arises when the specified module cannot be found or accessed, hindering the program's functionality. Resolving import errors is crucial for maintaining smooth software operation and uninterrupted development processes.
How to Build a Module in Odoo 17 Using the Scaffold MethodCeline George
Odoo provides an option for creating a module by using a single line command. By using this command the user can make a whole structure of a module. It is very easy for a beginner to make a module. There is no need to make each file manually. This slide will show how to create a module using the scaffold method.
June 3, 2024 Anti-Semitism Letter Sent to MIT President Kornbluth and MIT Cor...Levi Shapiro
Letter from the Congress of the United States regarding Anti-Semitism sent June 3rd to MIT President Sally Kornbluth, MIT Corp Chair, Mark Gorenberg
Dear Dr. Kornbluth and Mr. Gorenberg,
The US House of Representatives is deeply concerned by ongoing and pervasive acts of antisemitic
harassment and intimidation at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Failing to act decisively to ensure a safe learning environment for all students would be a grave dereliction of your responsibilities as President of MIT and Chair of the MIT Corporation.
This Congress will not stand idly by and allow an environment hostile to Jewish students to persist. The House believes that your institution is in violation of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, and the inability or
unwillingness to rectify this violation through action requires accountability.
Postsecondary education is a unique opportunity for students to learn and have their ideas and beliefs challenged. However, universities receiving hundreds of millions of federal funds annually have denied
students that opportunity and have been hijacked to become venues for the promotion of terrorism, antisemitic harassment and intimidation, unlawful encampments, and in some cases, assaults and riots.
The House of Representatives will not countenance the use of federal funds to indoctrinate students into hateful, antisemitic, anti-American supporters of terrorism. Investigations into campus antisemitism by the Committee on Education and the Workforce and the Committee on Ways and Means have been expanded into a Congress-wide probe across all relevant jurisdictions to address this national crisis. The undersigned Committees will conduct oversight into the use of federal funds at MIT and its learning environment under authorities granted to each Committee.
• The Committee on Education and the Workforce has been investigating your institution since December 7, 2023. The Committee has broad jurisdiction over postsecondary education, including its compliance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act, campus safety concerns over disruptions to the learning environment, and the awarding of federal student aid under the Higher Education Act.
• The Committee on Oversight and Accountability is investigating the sources of funding and other support flowing to groups espousing pro-Hamas propaganda and engaged in antisemitic harassment and intimidation of students. The Committee on Oversight and Accountability is the principal oversight committee of the US House of Representatives and has broad authority to investigate “any matter” at “any time” under House Rule X.
• The Committee on Ways and Means has been investigating several universities since November 15, 2023, when the Committee held a hearing entitled From Ivory Towers to Dark Corners: Investigating the Nexus Between Antisemitism, Tax-Exempt Universities, and Terror Financing. The Committee followed the hearing with letters to those institutions on January 10, 202
3. TEACHING THAT STICKS
S o a friend of a friend of ours, who’s a frequent business traveler, was returning recently from a
meeting with clients, and he stopped into the airport bar. What happened next surprised him: An
attractive woman approached him and offered to buy him a drink. He said sure. She returned with
two drinks, he took a sip of his, and … that’s the last thing he remembered.
Until he woke up in a bathtub full of ice. With his kidneys missing.
Rough day.
You’ve probably heard this urban legend about “kidney thieves.” It’s an absurd idea. You’ll prob-
ably meet someone, at some point in your life, who swears it happened to their friend’s cousin, but
it didn’t. It’s 100% urban legend. Yet everyone seems to know it—even in other languages and other
cultures. It’s an idea that has stuck.
A sticky idea is an idea that’s understood, that’s We’ve discovered 6 traits that make ideas stickier. A sticky
remembered, and that changes something (opinions, idea is:
behaviors, values). As a teacher, you’re on the front lines
of stickiness. Every single day, you’ve got to wake up in the
1. Simple
morning and go make ideas stick. And let’s face it, this is
no easy mission. Few students burst into the classroom, 2. Unexpected
giddy with anticipation, ready for the latest lesson on 3. Concrete
punctuation, polynomials, or pilgrims. 4. Credible
So, given the difficulty of your mission, and the 5. Emotional
importance of it, it’s annoying that dumb ideas (like the
6. Story
kidney thieves legend) seem to stick so effortlessly. What’s
even more irritating is that urban legends don’t have any
resources behind them. There’s no textbook budget, les- We wrote a book about these 6 traits called Made to
son plan, or training program for an urban legend. Nor Stick: Why Some Ideas Survive and Others Die. In this article,
are there any people behind them! They stick on their own we’ll give you an overview of the 6 traits and how they apply
merits. There’s just something about the way these ideas to teaching. (If you like this guide, it’s pretty clear you’ll
are constructed that makes them “naturally sticky.” like the book, which goes into much more depth on these
And it’s not just sleazy ideas that stick naturally, it’s a topics.)
whole world of other ideas: proverbs (“A bird in hand…”) Here’s the good news about stickiness: This isn’t just
and fables (“The Tortoise and the Hare”) and conspiracy interesting trivia about how the world of ideas works.
theories (black helicopters) and religious stories (the Rather, it’s a playbook. There are very practical ways that
Good Samaritan) and fad diets (Atkins) and scientific you can make your teaching stickier. For instance, every
ideas (relativity). Some of these ideas are profound, some Earth Science class has a lesson on the Earth’s magnetic
are ridiculous, but they all stick. Why? What links them? field. But one teacher decided to add a bit of mystery. She
The two of us—Chip and Dan Heath, we’re brothers asked the students: “Did you know that if you’d been hold-
and now co-authors—have been studying successful ideas ing a compass 25,000 years ago, and you were walking
like these for years, trying to reverse engineer them. What ‘North’ according to the compass, you’d be headed straight
we’ve found in our research is that these ideas share com- for the South Pole?” That’s an example of a “curiosity gap,”
mon traits. You can actually spot the same trait in a suc- a technique we’ll discuss in the Unexpected section.
cessful conspiracy theory that you can spot in a successful
We hope to inspire you in this article by telling stories
history lesson. The content is vastly different, but the “idea
of teachers who made their lessons stick, and we’ll show
design” is similar. you how to apply the same principles to your own lessons.
Regardless of your level of “natural creativity,” we’ll show
you how a little focused effort can make almost
There are very practical ways that you can make any idea stickier. And a sticky idea is one that’s
your teaching stickier. more likely to make a difference.
Teaching that Sticks 1
4. SIMPLE class at the beginning of the term and referring back
to this example, I found I could keep the class on track
Journalists use a model of writing called the “inverted
to the core messages I wanted them to learn. I also
pyramid,” which demands that the most important news
focused on this core message when deciding what ma-
be put in the first paragraph, and then, with each succes-
terial to keep in the course and what should be left out.
sive paragraph, the news value declines. One result of this
is that it’s easy to cut down a news article, if you need the So identifying your core message involves tough choices:
space: You just lop off paragraphs from the bottom, since What’s in and what’s out? Once you’ve decided what’s “in,”
by definition they’re the least important. how do you communicate it as simply as possible?
The hard part about writing using inverted-pyramid Try the following exercise for some inspiration. Here are
style is that it forces you to prioritize. As a journalist, you’ve the rules: Spend 10-15 seconds, no more, studying the
got scads of information at your disposal, but you’ve got letters below. Then, look away from this article, pull out a
to winnow it down to the few pieces of information that sheet of paper, and write down as many letters as you can
deserve to be featured in the first paragraph. remember. Spoiler alert: Don’t move on to the next page
until you’ve finished the exercise.
This process of prioritization is the heart of simplic-
ity. It’s what we call “finding the core.” Simplicity doesn’t
mean dumbing down, it means choosing. Some concepts J FKFB INAT OUP SNA SAI RS
are more critical than others. And as the teacher, you’re the
only one who can make that determination.
Andrew Carl Singer teaches a class on digital signal
processing at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Cham-
paign. It’s a complex subject, and it’s easy to get lost in the
mathematics. So he works hard to find the core of his class.
He said:
When a student from the University of Illinois
interviews at a company and says “I took digital signal
processing from Prof. Singer,” what are the 3 things
that they need to know to both get the job and make the
University of Illinois proud to have this graduate
working in this field? By focusing on the core ideas of
the course, I whittled away the extraneous details that
basically served to separate the A+++ students from the
A++ students, but largely fell on deaf ears on the rest
of the class.
Students need to understand what a mathematical
model for a signal is, what happens when it is sampled,
understand the concept of analog and digital frequency
and how they are related, understand what happened
when the digital signal is processed (in time and
frequency) and what happens when this signal is then
reintroduced to the analog world, through a digital-
to-analog converter.
This set of core ideas can be visualized in a picture,
where the signals that touch the world, say a musical
recording, are sampled and become a digital file, this
digital file is manipulated, and then the file is played
out through a D/A converter. By showing this to the
2 Teaching that Sticks
5. If you’re like most people, you probably remembered They are containers that hold some information.” Each
about 7-10 letters. That’s not much information. student was given a different type of cup. Glass mugs were
Now try the exercise again. There’s a twist this time. only able to store numbers. Beer mugs were only allowed
We haven’t changed the letters or the sequence. All we have to store text. Coffee mugs were only allowed to store “true”
done is change the way the letters are grouped. Once again, and “false”. Contents were never allowed to be mixed—for
study the letters for 10-15 seconds, then click away and test instance, you couldn’t put a number in a coffee mug (which
your recall. modeled what’s called “type-safe programming”). Holdt
reported that, by using this analogy, students understood
JFK FBI NATO UPS NASA IRS
the concept of a “variable” more quickly and retained it
Chances are, you did much better the second time. In longer—he said he was frequently able to untangle misun-
Round 1, you were trying to remember raw data: 20 ran- derstandings by explaining things in terms of the coffee
dom letters. Round 2 was easier because you were simply cup or glass mug.
highlighting 6 concepts you already knew: John F. Ken-
Simplicity makes ideas stick by keeping them lean and
nedy, the FBI, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, UPS,
focused. The model of a simple idea is not a sound bite, it’s
NASA, the IRS.
the Golden Rule—a one-sentence idea that’s sufficiently
This exercise shows us how we can communicate a profound that you could spend a lifetime living up to it.
lot of information in compact fashion: By anchoring the
information in what students already know. Teachers use
this principle of anchoring constantly. For instance, take More on Simplicity from the book Made to Stick
the classic Bohr model of an atom. Teachers explain it by • How to use “generative analogies”—analogies that
are so useful that they can actually become a plat-
saying, “Electrons orbit the nucleus the way that planets form for new thinking (pages 60-62)
orbit the sun.” Because the concept is anchored in some-
• How economics, physics, and other subjects slowly
thing students already know—the solar system—they can build up complexity by using “schemas”
gain some quick intuition about a difficult concept. It’s like (pages 53-57)
the solar system but on a microscopic level.
Eric Beasley, a 3rd grade teacher in Sherwood, Oregon,
was struggling with how to communicate the concept of
an “onomatopoeia.” The dictionary definition is: “The UNEXPECTED
formation of a word by imitation of a sound made by or
Robert Cialdini, a social psychologist at Arizona State
associated with its referent.” Well, that’s ridiculous. No 3rd
University, wanted to find a more compelling way to talk
grader will understand that. What knowledge do they have
about science in his writing and in his classes. So, in
that you can anchor in?
search of inspiration, he went to the library and read a slew
You can anchor in examples, obviously: Boom. Cuckoo. of articles in which scientists were writing for nonscien-
Sizzle. And Beasley took it a step further, showing clips tists. He picked out the most interesting articles and then
of old Batman shows where the Dynamic Duo are fighting tried to figure out what made them succeed.
goofy-looking villains. With each punch thrown by the
He found one striking consistency: The good articles
masked crusaders comes a fresh onomatopoeia: “KAZAM!”
used mysteries. One article began this way: “How can we
“POW!” Beasley said it was a home run in class.
account for what is perhaps the most spectacular planetary
Analogies work well because of their built-in anchors. feature in our solar system, the rings of Saturn? There’s
A math teacher in Washington DC told her class: “Polyno- nothing else like them. What are the rings of Saturn made
mials are mathematical Legos,” emphasizing the way that of anyway?”
polynomials can be snapped together in various configura-
The answer unfolded like the plot of a mystery. The
tions.
teams of scientists pursued promising leads, they hit dead
A high school teacher in South Africa named Bjorn ends, they chased clues. Eventually, after many months of
Holdt, who teaches a Java programming class, was having effort, there was a breakthrough. Cialdini says, “Do you
a hard time communicating the concept of “variables.” So know what the answer was at the end of 20 pages? Dust.
he came up with an analogy: “Variables are just like cups. Dust. Actually, ice-covered dust, which accounts for some
Teaching that Sticks 3
6. of the confusion. Now, I don’t care about dust, and the make- More on Unexpectedness from the book Made to Stick
up of the rings of Saturn is entirely irrelevant to my life. But • How the producer of ABC’s Wide World of Sports
that writer had me turning pages like a speed-reader.” figured out a way to spark the curiosity of football
fans in games where their teams weren’t playing and
Piquing curiosity is the holy grail of teaching. Cialdini they had nothing at stake (pages 90-93)
said, “You’ve heard of the famous Ah ha! experience, right? • How Nora Ephron’s journalism teacher managed to
Well, the Ah ha! experience is much more satisfying when shatter and rebuild his students’ image of journalism
it’s preceded by the Huh? experience.” in a simple 30-minute exercise (pages 75-76)
So how do you create the “Huh?” experience with your
students? George Loewenstein, a behavioral economist,
says that curiosity arises when we feel a gap in our knowl-
edge. Loewenstein argues that gaps cause pain. When we
want to know something but don’t, it’s like having an itch CONCRETE
we need to scratch. To take away the pain, we need to fill
In math, students often struggle with the notion of a
the knowledge gap. We sit patiently through bad movies,
“function.” What exactly is a function, and what is meant by
even though they may be painful to watch, because it’s too
its strange “f(x)” notation, which looks like nothing else
painful not to know how they end.
that students have seen before?
Movies cause us to ask, What will happen? Mystery nov-
It seems so abstract, so mysterious. So a math teacher
els cause us to ask, Who did it? Sports contests cause us to
at the Loudoun Academy of Science, Diana Virgo, gives
ask, Who will win? Crossword puzzles cause us to ask, What
students a more real-world experience with functions. She
is a 6-letter word for psychiatrist? Pokemon cards cause kids
brings a bunch of chirping crickets into the classroom and
to wonder, Which characters am I missing?
poses a question: What do you think will happen to the
One important implication of the “gap theory” is that crickets’ chirping as the temperature changes? Will it get
we need to open gaps before we close them. Our tendency is faster or slower as the air heats up? And might the crick-
to tell students the facts. First, though, they must realize ets’ reaction be so predictable that we can actually create a
they need them. function that predicts how fast they’ll chirp? Our function
The trick for convincing students they need our would be a like a little machine: You feed in a temperature
message, according to Loewenstein, is to first highlight (say, 85 degrees), and out pops the rate of chirping (say, 60
some specific knowledge they are missing. You can pose a chirps per minute).
question or puzzle that confronts them with a gap in their So the class runs the experiment: The crickets chirp.
knowledge: One recent book had a curiosity gap as its title: The students count the chirps. Virgo changes the tempera-
“Why do men have nipples?” A science teacher in Colorado ture. The crickets, undoubtedly puzzled by the weather,
asked his students: “Have you ever noticed that, in the chirp differently. The students count again. And soon the
winter, your car tires look a little flat? So where did the airclass has gathered a bunch of data that can be plugged into
go?” The book Freakonomics makes brilliant use of curios- a software package, which generates the predictive func-
ity gaps: “Why do so many drug dealers live with their tion. It turns out that the hotter it is, the faster the crickets
moms?” [There is a more extended discussion of curiosity chirp—and it’s predictable! Suddenly, the importance
gaps in Made to Stick on pages 84-90.] of a function makes sense—it’s been grounded in reality.
Another technique is to force students to make a predic- Students have personally experienced the entire con-
tion. Eric Mazur, a physics professor at Harvard, came up text—where functions come from, how they’re constructed,
with a pedagogical innovation known as “concept testing.” and how they can be used. (As a side note, Virgo also warns
Every so often in his classes, Mazur will pose a concep- her students that human judgment is always indispensable.
tual question and then ask students to vote publicly on the For instance, if you plug into the function the temperature
answer. The simple act of committing to an answer makes “1000 degrees,” it’ll predict a really really fast rate of chirp-
students more engaged and more curious about the outcome. ing! Sadly, though, at 1000 degrees, crickets don’t chirp at
Unexpected ideas, by opening a knowledge gap, tease all…)
and flirt. They mark a big red X on something that needs to The cricket function is an example of making a concept
be discovered but don’t necessarily tell you how to get there. concrete—avoiding abstraction and conceptual language
4 Teaching that Sticks
7. and grounding an idea in sensory reality. It’s the differ- to make prejudice tangible to her students. At the start of
ence between reading about a wine (“bold but balanced”) class, she divided the students into two groups: brown-
and tasting it. In our book, we discuss what we call the eyed kids and blue-eyed kids. She made a shocking an-
“Velcro Theory of Memory” (extended discussion on pages nouncement: Brown-eyed kids were superior to blue-eyed
109-111). In brief, this concept says that the more sensory kids—”They’re the better people in this room.”
“hooks” we can put into an idea, the better it will stick. The groups were separated: Blue-eyed kids were
An 8th-grade teacher named Sabrina Richardson forced to sit at the back of the classroom. Brown-eyed kids
helped students “see” punctuation by using macaroni. were told they were smarter. They were given extra time at
Richardson described her exercise: recess. The blue-eyed kids had to wear special collars, so
The students were given cards with sentences that everyone would know their eye color from a distance.
printed on them that were missing punctuation like The two groups were not allowed to mix at recess.
quotation marks, periods, exclamation points, com- Elliott was shocked to see how quickly the class trans-
mas, apostrophes. The students were divided into formed. “I watched those kids turn into nasty, vicious, dis-
groups of two and three and were given baggies that criminating third-graders … it was ghastly.” Friendships
contained elbow macaroni, small macaroni shells, and seem to dissolve instantly, as brown-eyed kids taunted
ritoni. The students were asked to place the pieces their blue-eyed former friends. One brown-eyed student
of macaroni in the correct place in the sentence. For asked Elliott how she could be teacher “if you’ve got dem
example, they were given the sentence: blue eyes.”
Jackie shouted Gwen come back here At the start of the next class day, Elliott walked in and
The students had to use the elbow macaroni as announced that she had been wrong. It was actually the
commas and quotation marks, the ritoni and small brown-eyed children who were inferior. This reversal of
macaroni shell together as an exclamation point, and fortune was embraced instantly. A shout of glee went up
a small macaroni shell as a period. I knew that a lot of from the blue-eyed kids as they ran to place their collars
my students were confused about whether the comma on their lesser brown-eyed counterparts.
went inside or outside the quotation marks, so this On the day when they were in the inferior group, stu-
gave my visual learners and really all of my students dents described themselves as sad, bad, stupid, and mean.
a chance to “see” the correct way to punctuate quota- “When we were down,” said one boy, his voice cracking, “it
tions. Once they were finished, they knew the sentence felt like everything bad was happening to us.” When they
would read: Jackie shouted, “Gwen, come back here!” were on top, the students felt happy, good, and smart.
Concreteness etches ideas into our brain—think of how Even their performance on academic tasks changed.
much easier it is to remember a song than a credit card One of the reading exercises was a phonics card pack that
number—even though a song contains much more data! the kids were supposed to go through as quickly as possible.
One of the most striking examples of concreteness in The first day, when the blue-eyed kids were on the bottom,
the history of education comes from an elementary school it took them 5.5 minutes. On the second day, when they
teacher named Jane Elliott, who entered her third-grade were on top, it took 2.5 minutes. “Why couldn’t you go this
classroom on April 5, 1968, the day after Martin Luther fast yesterday?” asked Elliott. One blue-eyed girl said, “We
King, Jr. was murdered. She found herself trying to explain had those collars on…” Another student chimed in, “We
his assassination. In the all-white town of Riceville, Iowa, couldn’t stop thinking about those collars.”
students were familiar with King but could not understand Elliott’s simulation made prejudice concrete—brutally
who would want him dead, or why. concrete. It also had an enduring impact on students’ lives.
Elliott said, “I knew it was time to deal with this in a Experiments ten and twenty years afterward showed that
concrete way, because we’d talked about discrimination Elliott’s students were significantly less prejudiced than
since the first day of school. But the shooting of Martin peers who had not been through the exercise.
Luther King, one of our ‘Heroes of the Month’ two months Elliott’s simulation was life-altering. But the use of
earlier, couldn’t be explained to little third-graders in concreteness need not be so dramatic. Any lesson can be
Riceville, Iowa.” made more concrete, and the sensory nature of concrete
She came to class the next day with a plan. She aimed ideas helps to bind them to memory.
Teaching that Sticks 5
8. More on Concreteness from the book Made to Stick the bottle. But you’d believe it if you saw it. (In the mean-
• The surprising truth about math instruction in Asian time, just Google it for a laugh.) Lots of science lab experi-
countries—could it actually be more creative than ments operate on this principle—see for yourself. (Notice too
the average American classroom? (pages 104-106)
that labs are pedagogically useful for other reasons: They
• Why it feels different to use different kinds of are often Unexpected—“Look, the chemicals turn bright
memory—for instance, to think of the Mona Lisa
versus the taste of watermelon versus the capital blue when mixed!” And they are always Concrete—instead
of Kansas. (pages 109-111) of talking about a phenomenon, you’re seeing it or produc-
ing it.)
Another technique for making ideas credible is to use
statistics—but perhaps not in the way you’d expect. It’s dif-
CREDIBLE ficult to make a statistic stick. Numbers tend to slide easily
Amy Hyett, an American Literature teacher at Brook- in one ear and out the other. The relationships that statis-
line High School in Boston, teaches a unit on Transcen- tics illustrate, on the other hand, can be immensely sticky.
dentalism. She says when students read Thoreau, and they For instance, here are two statistics: Bottled water costs
learn how much time he spent alone in the wilderness, about 8.4 cents per ounce. Municipal water in San Fran-
they have a common reaction: Er, why would he do that? cisco costs about 0.0022 cents per ounce. When you read
So, in the spirit of building empathy, she gives them an those two statistics, what you take away is this: Wow, there’s
unorthodox assignment: Spend 30 minutes alone in nature. a big difference there. Bottled water costs a lot more than
No cell phone. No iPod. No pet companions. No Gameboy. municipal water! But our brains aren’t very good at intuit-
Just you and the great outdoors. ing much more than that. For instance, your brain would
Hyett says, “It’s quite amazing, because almost every have had an identical response if the numbers had been
student has a moving and illuminating experience. They 6.8 and 0.0877—wow, there’s a big difference there! That’s
are surprised by how much the experience moves them. a problem, though, because there’s a difference of 50 times
Even the most skeptical students come away with a deeper between those two pairs!
understanding of transcendentalism and nature.” The writer Charles Fishman, in a magazine article
For an idea to stick, it needs to be credible. YouTube- about the bottled water industry, figured out a brilliant way
era students don’t find it credible that hanging out outside, to make this statistic come alive. Here’s what he wrote: “In
for a long period of time, alone, could be conducive to great San Francisco, the municipal water comes from inside Yo-
thinking. So how do you combat their skepticism? You let semite National Park. It’s so good the EPA doesn’t require
them see for themselves. It’s like a taste test for ideas. San Francisco to filter it. If you bought and drank a bottle
of Evian, you could refill that bottle once a day for 10 years,
This is what we call a testable credential. A classic ex-
5 months, and 21 days with San Francisco tap water before
ample of a testable credential is the question: Are you bet-
that water would cost $1.35.” Now your brain can begin to
ter off now than you were four years ago? Ronald Reagan
apprehend the full scale of the difference between these
famously posed this question to the audience during his
numbers—it’s not a big difference, it’s a gargantuan dif-
1980 presidential debate with Jimmy Carter. Reagan could
ference! It’s a 10-and-a-half-year’s-worth-of-refilling-a-
have focused on statistics—the high inflation rate, the loss
water-bottle difference.
of jobs, the rising interest rates. But instead of selling his
case, he deferred to his audience. A testable credential, The trick with using statistics, then, is to focus on the
then, essentially outsources the credibility of an idea to relationship, not the number. Here’s another example of
the audience. [Testable credentials can also, unfortunately, this technique as used by Tony Pratt, a 4th-grade teacher
help to propagate sleazy ideas, such as the longstanding in the New Orleans Recovery School District. He said he
(false) rumor that Snapple supports the KKK, which gained was teaching the basics of probability, and as an example,
strength because of certain “secret marks” on the Snapple he told his students they had a really, really small probabil-
labels. See pages 157-158.] ity of winning the lottery. The odds are 1 in millions. But
again, this statistic is so big that it fuzzes our brains. Our
Sometimes you have to see something, or experience it,
brains can’t easily distinguish between “1 in millions” and
to believe it. For instance, you might not believe that add-
“1 in tens of thousands,” even though there’s an enormous
ing Mentos candy to a 2-liter bottle of soda would cause a
gap there! So the teacher grounded the probability in a re-
volcanic eruption that sends soda spewing 10-15 feet from
6 Teaching that Sticks
9. lationship. He said: You’re more likely to be struck by light- there is a good “listener” candidate nearby.)
ning than to win the lottery. That amazed the students—it The listener’s job in this game is quite difficult. Over
gave them an intuition for just how rare it is to win. In fact, the course of Newton’s experiment, 120 songs were tapped
several of them rushed home to tell their family members. out. Listeners guessed only 2.5% of the songs—3 songs out
One student, Jarred, relayed his story, “I saw my uncle of 120.
buying lottery tickets last night. I told him that he was But here’s what made the result worthy of a disserta-
more likely to be struck by lightning than he was to win tion in psychology. Before the listeners guessed the name
the lottery and that buying lottery tickets was a bad idea of the song, Newton asked the tappers to predict the odds
because of probability.” that the listeners would guess correctly. They predicted
“What did he say?” that the odds were 50%.
“He told me to get the F out of his face.” The tappers got their message across 1 time in 40, but
I guess we should admit it: Sticky ideas won’t win over they thought they were getting their message across 1 time
everyone… in 2. Why?
When a tapper taps, she is hearing the song in her head.
Go ahead and try it for yourself—tap out “The Star Spangled
More on Credibility from the book Made to Stick
Banner.” It is impossible to avoid hearing the tune playing
• How the NBA used a shocking testable credential to
get its rookie players to take the risk of AIDS seri-
along in your head. Meanwhile, the listeners can’t hear that
ously (pages 162-163) tune—all they can hear are a bunch of disconnected taps
• Why a medical internist had to chug a glass of harm- like a kind of bizarre Morse Code.
ful bacteria to get his colleagues to believe his idea, In the experiment, tappers are flabbergasted at how
which later won a Nobel Prize— (pages 130-132)
hard the listeners seem to be working to pick up the tune.
• How to use the “human scale principle” to make
numbers more intuitive (pages 143-146)
Isn’t the song obvious? The tappers’ expressions, when a
listener guesses “Happy Birthday to You” for “The Star-
Spangled Banner,” are priceless. How could you be so stupid?
It’s hard to be a tapper. The problem is that tappers
have been given knowledge (the song title) that makes it
THE CURSE OF KNOWLEDGE impossible for them to imagine what it is like to lack that
So wait a minute. We claim using the principles of knowledge. When they are tapping, they can’t imagine
stickiness is easy. And most of the principles seem rela- what it is like for the listeners to hear isolated taps rather
tively common-sensical. So why aren’t we deluged with than a song. This is the Curse of Knowledge. Once we know
brilliantly-designed sticky ideas? Why don’t most 35 year- something, we find it hard to imagine what it was like not
olds remember anything about their literature or chemis- to know it. Our knowledge has “cursed” us. And it becomes
try classes? difficult for us to share our knowledge with others, because
Sadly, there is a villain in our story. The villain is a we can’t readily re-create the state of mind of our listeners.
natural psychological tendency that consistently confounds The tapper/listener experiment is reenacted every day
our ability to create ideas using these principles. It’s called across the world. The tappers and listeners are CEOs and
the Curse of Knowledge. (We will capitalize the phrase to frontline employees, politicians and voters, marketers
give it the drama we think it deserves.) and customers, writers and readers. And, last but not least:
In 1990, Elizabeth Newton earned a Ph.D. in psy- Teachers and students. All of these groups rely on ongoing
chology at Stanford by studying a simple game where she communication, but they suffer from enormous informa-
assigned people to one of two roles: “tappers” or “listen- tion imbalances, just like the tappers and listeners. When
ers.” Tappers received a list of 25 well-known songs, such a math teacher unveils “functions” or an English teacher
as “Happy Birthday to You” and “The Star-Spangled Ban- talks about “graceful prose,” there is a tune playing in their
ner.” Each tapper was asked to pick a song and tap out the heads that the students can’t hear.
rhythm to a listener (by knocking on a table). The listen- It’s a hard problem to avoid—every year, you walk into
er’s job was to guess the song, based on the rhythm being class with another year’s worth of mental refinement under
tapped. (By the way, this experiment is fun to try at home if your belt. You’ve taught the same concepts every year, and
Teaching that Sticks 7
10. every year your understanding gets sharper, your sophis- found a way to make students care, to give them a peek into
tication gets deeper. If you’re a biology teacher, you sim- the brutal realities of war.
ply can’t imagine anymore what it’s like to hear the word That’s what Emotion does for an idea—it makes people
“mitosis” for the first time, or to lack the knowledge that care. It makes people feel something. In some science de-
the body is composed of cells. You can’t unlearn what you partments, during the lesson on “lab safety,” the instructor
already know. There are, in fact, only two ways to beat the will do something shocking: They’ll take some of the acid
Curse of Knowledge reliably. The first is not to learn any- that the students will be handling and use it to dissolve a
thing. The second is to take your ideas and transform them. cow eyeball. A lot of students shudder when they see the
Stickiness is a second language. When you open your demonstration. They feel something. (It should also be
mouth and communicate, without thinking about what’s noted that some students, mostly male, think it is “cool.”)
coming out of your mouth, you’re speaking your native Lab safety “dos and don’ts” don’t grab you in the gut, but a
language: Expertese. But students don’t speak Expertese. dissolving eyeball sure does.
They do speak Sticky, though. Everyone speaks Sticky. In The Civil War simulation tapped into students’ empa-
some sense, it’s the universal language. The grammar of thy and horror, and the lab safety demo tapped into disgust
stickiness—simplicity, storytelling, learning through the and fear. But more positive emotions can build student’s
senses—enables anyone to understand the ideas being engagement, too. For instance, many an algebra teacher
communicated. has heard the question, “Why do we need to learn this?”
Let’s compare and contrast two responses to this ques-
tion. The first comes from a 1993 conference on “Algebra
for All.” The participants laid out a series of responses to
EMOTION the question, “Why study algebra?” Here are two of them:
Bart Millar, an American History teacher at Lincoln
High School in Portland, Oregon, was having a hard time • Algebra provides procedures for manipulating
getting his students to care about the Civil War. “We talked symbols to allow for understanding of the world
about the weaponry, the tactics, the strategy, and so on. around us.
The students were respectful, but not much beyond that,”
he said. • Algebra provides a vehicle for understanding
our world through mathematical models.
Determined to do better, he went to the National Ar-
chives website and downloaded photos of battlefield sur-
geons and their surgical tents. He presented them to the So are you fired up to learn algebra? This is the Curse
class and asked them to imagine the sounds of war (the ex- of Knowledge in action. The phrase “procedures for ma-
plosions, the rustle of uniforms, the occasional eerie quiet) nipulating symbols” makes perfect sense to experts and
and the smells of war (dust, gunpowder, blood, excrement). no sense at all to students. It certainly doesn’t provide a
[This is a brilliant use of Concreteness, by the way.] But he motivational answer to the question, “Why study this?”
had one more surprise in store for the students. A different approach was taken by a 9th-grade algebra
On the side of the room was a table covered by a tarp. teacher named Dean Sherman. He said his students would
Millar whisked away the tarp to reveal: 2 stopwatches, 2 constantly ask him, “When are we ever going to need this?”
thick-looking bones, and 2 handsaws. The bones were cow He said that, at first, he’d search for a real-world rationale
legs procured from a local butcher that approximated the for everything he taught. Then, it dawned on him that he
weight and thickness of a human femur. Two student vol- had missed the point.
unteers were asked each to play the role of a battlefield sur- Now he tells his students: “Never. You will never use
geon, forced to amputate a soldier’s leg in hope of saving this.” Then he points out that people don’t lift weights so
his life. Their mission: Saw thru the bone forcefully and they’ll be prepared should, one day, somebody knock them
quickly—after all, at the time there was very little anesthesia. over on the street and trap them under a barbell. “You lift
Millar says, “The entire lesson only took about 15 weights so that you can knock over a defensive lineman, or
minutes, but 10 years later, students who stop in to say hi carry your groceries or lift your grandchildren without be-
still talk about that lesson.” And it’s not hard to see why: He ing sore the next day. You do math exercises so that you can
8 Teaching that Sticks
11. improve your ability to think logically, so that you can be a The first surprise concerns what kinds of stories are
better lawyer, doctor, architect, prison warden or parent. effective in making ideas stick. The answer is this: Virtu-
MATH IS MENTAL WEIGHT TRAINING. It is a means to an ally any kind. The stories don’t have to be dramatic, they
end, (for most people), not an end in itself.” don’t have to be captivating, and they don’t have to be
Let’s unpack this ingenious response. Note that it’s entertaining. The story form does most of the heavy lift-
Simple because of its analogy comparing algebra to weight- ing—even a boring story will be stickier than a set of facts.
lifting. It’s unexpected by virtue of the surprising first And that’s comforting to a lot of us who don’t consider our-
line, “Never. You will never use this.” It’s Concrete because selves great storytellers or dramatists. Woody Allen said,
Sherman provides specific occasions that can be visualized: “Ninety percent of life is just showing up,” and that seems
knocking over a defensive lineman, being a better prison to be true of storytelling. Ninety percent of the value is just
warden. And it’s Emotional because it appeals to students’ trying.
aspirations: This subject can make you a better doctor, If ever there was a subject ill-suited for storytelling,
lawyer, or parent. it’s accounting. Yet two college professors at Georgia State
And that’s the role of Emotion in making ideas sticky: University rewrote their intro accounting course and put
To transform the idea from something that’s analytical or a story at the center. The story concerned a new business
abstract or theoretical and make it hit us in the gut (or the launched by two imaginary college sophomores, Kris and
heart). Sandy at LeGrande State University.
Kris and Sandy had an idea for a new product called
Safe Night Out (SNO), a device targeted at parents with
More on Emotion from the book Made to Stick
teenagers who were old enough to drive. Installed in the
• Why the term “sportsmanship” has become so weak
and watered-down—and how one group of coaches
teenager’s car, the device would record the route and speed
is turning it around (pages 174-177) of the car. For the first time, parents could confirm that
• How the state of Texas managed to decrease litter- their car was being driven responsibly.
ing by 72% in 5 years by tapping into something that At this point, you—a student in introductory account-
was important to young, truck-driving guys (pages
195-199)
ing—become part of the story. Kris and Sandy are your
• Why voters consistently vote against their personal
friends and they hear you’re taking an accounting class.
self-interest, and why this finding should transform They need your help. They ask: Is our business idea fea-
the way we communicate (pages 187-191) sible? How many units would we have to sell to pay for
our tuition? You are given guidance on how to track down
the costs of the relevant materials (GPS receivers, storage
hardware) and partnerships (how much it would cost to
STORY sell it on eBay?).
Difficult accounting concepts—such as when to rec-
Have you ever noticed, when you teach, that the mo-
ognize revenue or how to compute current assets—could
ment you start sharing a personal story with the class, they
be hung on the structure of the story, the way that orna-
instantly snap to attention? Students seem to have Story
ments are hung on a tree. A Christmas tree ornament has
Radar. For that matter, so do the rest of us. Some of the
a specific location—it’s on a certain branch, near other
stickiest ideas in the world are stories. Aesop’s fables have
ornaments. And concepts that are taught within a story
endured for about 2,500 years, and they will easily survive
structure naturally receive a “location” that makes them
another 2,500. The world’s religions are built on power-
easier to retain—for instance, you might remember cash
ful stories. Our culture is defined by the stories we tell—in
flow management originated on the branch of the story in
movies, in books, in the media. Human beings just have a
which Kris and Sandy were growing so fast that they actu-
natural affinity for stories. Stories are the currency of our
ally ran out of operating cash.
thoughts.
Did the story-based course work? In the next ac-
None of this is a surprise to you. Teachers understand
counting course—taken an average of two years later—the
the value of stories. But there are two things that might
first section of the course built heavily on the concepts
surprise you: what kind of stories work so well, and why
that students were supposed to have learned in introduc-
they work so well.
Teaching that Sticks 9
12. tory accounting. Students who had worked through the More on Stories from the book Made to Stick
case study scored noticeably higher on this first exam. In • An extended discussion of the value of mental
fact, the difference in scores was particularly dramatic for simulation and why it works (pages 207-217)
students with a C-average overall. They scored, on average, • An explanation of the three kinds of stories—all
12 points higher—more than a letter grade. And, remember, easy to spot and tell—that are effective at inspiring
people (pages 224-231)
this is two years after the case study ended. And remember
also that this wasn’t a very exciting story! No child will ever
beg to be told the story of Kris and Sandy’s startup busi-
ness. The story form did the heavy lifting.
The second surprise about stories is why stories, even WHAT STICKS
boring stories, are so sticky. The answer starts with some Making ideas stickier is not hard to do. It just takes a
fascinating research done on “mental simulation.” Brain bit of time and focus. The six principles of stickiness that
scans show that when people imagine a flashing light they we’ve discussed can be used as a checklist—imagine the
activate the visual area of the brain; when they imagine checklist written on a Post-It note, to the side of your desk
someone tapping on their skin they activate tactile areas of as you plan out a lesson. “Okay, for tomorrow’s lesson I’ve
the brain. The activity of mental simulation is not limited got to compare sedimentary and igneous rock. How can I
to the insides of our heads. People who imagine words that make this Simple? Do students have some knowledge I can
start with “b” or “p” can’t resist subtle lip movements, and anchor in? How can I make it Concrete? Can I get a sample
people who imagine looking at the Eiffel Tower can’t resist of the kinds of rock to show them? Can I show them pho-
moving their eyes upward. Mental simulation can even tos? How can I tell a Story? Can I find a story of an archae-
alter visceral physical responses: When people drink wa- ologist who used knowledge of the rock layers to solve an
ter but imagine it is lemon juice, they salivate more. Even interesting problem?” You get the idea.
more surprisingly, when people drink lemon juice but A group of teachers at the Loudon Academy of Science—
imagine it is water, they salivate less. Linda Gulden, Jennifer Lynn, and Dan Crowe—did exactly
Mental simulation can also build skills. A review of this in planning their oceanography unit. They put a lot
35 studies featuring over 3,214 participants showed that of energy into revamping the unit, because they weren’t
mental practice alone—sitting quietly, without moving, happy with how it had gone in the years past. Here’s a para-
and picturing yourself performing a task successfully from phrase of the new and improved lesson plan for the unit:
start to finish—improves performance significantly. The In the first class in the unit, we start with a mys-
results were borne out over a large number of tasks: Mental tery: Let’s say you put a message in a bottle, drive out to
simulation helped people weld better and throw darts bet- the coast, and throw it as far as you can into the ocean.
ter. Trombonists improved their playing and competitive Where will the bottle end up? We let students make
figure-skaters improved their skating. Not surprisingly, their guesses. (“The waves will bring it right back to
mental practice is more effective when a task involves shore.” “It’ll end up in Antarctica.” “It’ll sink.” Etc.)
more mental activity (e.g., trombone playing) as opposed But we don’t give an answer (since there isn’t a clear
to physical activity (e.g., balancing), but the magnitude answer).
of gains from mental practice is large on average: Over-
Then we began to explore this same mystery in a
all, mental practice alone produced about two-thirds of the
more dramatic form. We’ll have students read a won-
benefits of actual physical practice.
derful article from Harper’s magazine. What happened
The takeaway is simple: Mental simulation is not as is this: In January 1992, somewhere in the Pacific
good as actually doing something—but it’s the next best Ocean, a cargo ship hit a severe storm and lost a con-
thing. And, to circle back to the world of sticky ideas, what tainer overboard which held 7,200 packages of plastic
we’re suggesting is that the right kind of story is, effectively, toys, including thousands of rubber duckies. Years
a simulation. Stories are like flight simulators for the brain. later, we know where many of these rubber duckies
When you tell a story about Queen Nefertiti, students ended up. In fact, many of them ended up on the same
are flight-simulating. They’re imagining that it would be beach! By tracing the paths that these duckies swam,
like to be her, to have lived in the era when she lived. And we learn a lot about the way ocean currents work.
that flight simulation makes the idea sticky. Next, we let the kids do some hands-on experimen-
10 Teaching that Sticks
13. tation. We’ll set up tanks of water with different salini- Our hats are off to these teachers. And we hope you’ll be
ties and different temperatures, and let them see how motivated by their work, and the work of the other teachers
those variables change the water current. In essence, we’ve cited. We hope we’ve inspired you to try something
we are letting them create their own ocean currents. new, and if you do, we’d love to hear about it. May your
Finally, we’ll pivot to the critical role that oceans ideas stick!
play with global climate. We’ll start by asking them: - Chip & Dan
What determines the weather of a city, like New York chip@madetostick.com
City? Inevitably, students say it depends on the latitude dan@madetostick.com
of the city – the closer to the equator the city is, the
warmer it is, and the closer to the poles it is, the colder
it is. There is much truth to that, but there are huge To get more free resources, check out our web site:
discrepancies: For instance, New York City and Madrid www.heathbrothers.com.
are at roughly the same latitude. Yet it snows every
If you liked this article, you’ll like our book, Made
winter in NYC and it doesn’t snow in Madrid. What’s
to Stick. At roughly 10x the length of this article,
the difference? That paves our way to talk about the we were able to cover many more concepts, in
way that ocean currents influence climate. more depth, than we could here. Made to Stick is
available via your local bookseller (Barnes & Noble,
In closing, notice that all of the elements of sticky ideas are Borders, Waldenbooks) and more immediately via
involved here. Amazon.com.
www.amazon.com/Made-Stick-Ideas-Survive-Others/dp/1400064287/
• Simple: Anchoring in students’ knowl-
edge of weather (New York vs. Madrid).
• Unexpected: Where will the bottle end
up? Where did the duckies end up?
• Concrete: The message in a bottle, the
rubber duckies, the hands-on tanks of
water, the mention of specific cities.
• Credible: See for yourself, using this
tank, how temperature affects water
current.
• Emotional: Think of the hope and mys-
tery and anxiety involved with tossing
an important message into the sea and
wondering where it will go.
• Story: The tale of thousands rubber
duckies that fell overboard—and the
journey they took around the world.
Teaching that Sticks 11