My fiancée, Chloe, told me about a couple of ways she’d used sudent voice in her classes today (she’s Head of Drama at a London secondary), so I asked her to write them down for your enjoyment.
Asher
I’ve tried out a couple of little ideas for increasing the student voice in my classroom recently, neither took any extra effort on my part, but I think both have increased the engagement of students in their own learning.
- The first was to offer students the choice of how long they should get on the task, we set this by popular vote. They had either 3, 5 or 7 minutes to do the task. The group chose 7 but when they performed the pieces they were not as good as they or I had expected. So we discussed this and how if they have longer shouldn’t it mean the piece is better? We learnt together that they work better under more pressure and so when given the choice in the next lesson they chose the middle option.
- I was a bit stuck as to what to set Year 9 for homework so asked them to talk to the person next to them about what written homework they thought they’d like to do. Some suggestions were quite similar and so we ended up with three choices, they took a vote as a class. Thinking about it I wonder if they could have chosen to do the one they wanted from the list. It certainly makes for more varied and interesting marking. Most of them looked more keen than usual writing it in to their planners; hopefully they’ll put more in to it too, I’ll find out next week when it’s due in.