Title: Success Seminars in Developmental Algebra
1Success Seminars in Developmental Algebra
- An experiment from popular motivational
literature.
Russ Baker Gabriel Ayine Betty Anderson
AFACCT Conference January 10,11 2002
2Why would we do this?
- Student attitude seems to be more of a hindrance
than aptitude. - There is a growing gap between expectations of
teachers and expectations of students - Vast body of motivational literature from the
corporate world generally untapped in academia.
3Scheduling the Seminars
- Students in MATH 067 were given the option of
doing projects or attending Success Seminars for
a 25 point total out of 800 points. - Students signed up and gave their schedules to us
- We grouped students by availability, found rooms
in which to meet, and began on September 6 with a
schedule of 5 seminars including two evening
sessions. Students were assigned but could
attend any of the sessions.
4The Turnout
- Signing up was easy over 90
- Showing up was not so easy 54 students attended
regularly - The median number of sessions 9
- The mean number of sessions 8.3
- Seminars met a total of 10 or 11 times
5What did we do?
- Goals
- Continuous Improvement
- Self-talk
- Test-taking
- Team building
6Results
- Survey- At the end of the semester we gave each
student who had been in the seminars a survey (in
your handout) - We were looking for student perceptions of the
results of attending
7Goals
- Formal goal-setting
- difficult concept for everyone, not just our
students. - selling it to them was tough many are not
prepared to even try. They feel it is kind of
silly or embarrassing.
8Welcome toSuccess Seminar 1Goal Setting
- What is it?
- Why should I do it?
- What if I dont meet them?
9Why set Goals ?
- Everyone needs a target
- No one can tell how they are doing if they don't
know where they are going - People who set formal goals are generally more
successful
10Steps to Successful Goal-setting
11Choosing a goal
- Hard enough to be worth it
- Reasonable enough to attain
- Specific enough to be measured
- lay out details
- have a definite deadline date
12Planning Stage
- List anything that could possibly prevent you
from achieving the goal - List who can help you and where you can get help
- Break down the goal into small steps--
13Break down the goal into small steps--
- Increments may be times -- daily or weekly
- Increments may be amounts-- minutes, hours, or
scores increased by a small amount toward an
eventual goal
14 Be cautious about sharing goals
- Give-up goals can be broadcast
- Go-up goals should be kept to a small support
group
15Putting the Goal into Action
- Write down your goal and post it
- Somewhere you'll see and read it often
- Keep track of progress
- Use your list of resources to keep going when it
gets tough
16Making Adjustments -
- Push back the deadlines
- Temporarily lower your "numbers"
- Rejoice at failure-- it gives you something to
fix - Renew your Commitment
- review why you set the goal
- be persistent--greatness takes time
- be kind to yourself--everyone makes errors
- be flexible--look for other ways to do it
17Adjusting after Disappointments
- Attendance-- Could absences be avoided?
- Working too many hours?
- Need childcare?
- Is there a time to make up missed work?
18Adjusting after Disappointments
- Homework--
- Applying your learning style knowledge?
- Need more time to do the problems?
- Have to do more than the assigned set to
understand? - Check and correct answers before class?
- Ask questions in class about troublesome
exercises?
19Adjusting after Disappointments
- Study
- Apply your learning style knowledge
- Review past sections/ units every study session
- Spend time beyond homework problems
20Goals...
- They do work !
- They motivate, not frustrate
- They focus, not confine
- They straighten the road to success, not
block it. - They are for everyone, not just special people.
21Student survey results
- GOALS
- 1. What have you done with goal-setting?
22Basic Idea of Continuous Improvement
23Sources of Weakness
- Study time
- Are you studying enough ?
- Long enough to do some good,
- Short enough not to get inefficient
- Are you studying at a good time of day?
- Are you alert?
- Have you energy to work?
- Are you free from distractions that interfere?
24Keeping Track
- Keep it simple--but keep it
- Its not meant to take lots of time
- Make it handy, and easy to do
- Once you get in the habit, itll get better
- Use record-keeping charts to find weaknesses
- If you dont know whats happening, you cant
expect to improve it.
25Student Survey results
- 1. How helpful were the tally sheets in helping
you keep track of your study habits? - Very helpful
- Somewhat helpful
- Not very helpful
- Not at all helpful
- 2. Did you change any of your habits as a result
of your tally sheets? - Definitely
- For a time
- Not really
- 3. How EASY did you find it to keep up with
recording in the tally sheet? - Very easy
- Quite easy
- Not very easy
- Hard
Question 1 Question 2 Question 3
26Self-talk
- Students found this topic easy and fun, not as
intimidating as goal-setting. - We offered three types.
- Affirmations
- Academic self-talk
- Personal self-talk
27Self Talk Sample Pages
28Welcome!
- to
- Success Seminar, session 3
- for 2001
Whatever the mind of man can conceive and
believe, it can achieve.
by Russell Baker
29WORDS ARE THE MOST POWERFUL THINGS IN THE UNIVERSE
- The words you speak will either put you over in
life or hold you in bondage. Many people have
been held captive in their circumstances by their
own words. - Quoted from THE TONGUE A creative force by
Charles Capps
30How to end the NEGATIVE self-talk
- When you catch yourself in negative self-talk,
mentally shout STOP! - Say something like, Thats not really me. I am
capable and can be successful.
31How to end the NEGATIVE self-talk
- Replay the event that caused the negative
outburst with a positive twist - Im having trouble with this, but Ill get help
and then Ill be ok. I can do this.
32Affirmations
- We tend to let ourselves get boxed in by false
limitations. - Affirmations help to permanently end negative
self-talk and remove the limits to our success. - Make up a positive statement reflecting the way
you WANT it to be...
33Affirmations
- I am enjoying learning algebra I am finding it
easier and more understandable each day. - Seeds of Greatness, Denis Waitley
- Start with I
- Use present tense
- keep it short
- keep it positive
- avoid competitive statements
- strive for improvement, not perfection
34Academic Self-Talk
- Listen between the lines
- The obvious part of the lesson is information
that the instructor writes on the board - The hidden part is what is SAID while the
information is being written. - The first is usually an example,
- The second is usually a procedure.
- CAN YOU LEARN BOTH????
35Academic Self-Talk
- If you only have time to take notes for one part,
either the self-talk series of questions or the
sample problem... - Jot down the self-talk
- Then when you are doing homework you have the
procedural questions. - This can be a big help if you often say I can do
it in class but not at home.
36Academic Self-Talk
- Start-up self-talk
- What type of problem is this?
- How is it like the previous problem?
- How is it different?
- What is the method used in class to solve it?
- What should I do first?
37Try it What have you got to lose?
- If you always do
- what youve always done
- youll always get
- what youve always gotten
38What to do this week
- Write an affirmation and repeat it daily.
- Catch yourself in Negative self-talk and STOP
it. - In class, pay more attention to the lesson
between the lines take notes on what the
instructor says about a problem instead of the
problem itself.
39Student survey results
- SELF TALK
- 1. Have you tried affirmations to make you more
aware of things that will help you meet your
goals? - 2. Have you tried academic self-talk to help with
homework and testing? - 3. Have you used personal self-talk to be more
positive?
- Yes, and it has helped
- Yes, but it hasnt helped yet Ill keep trying
- Yes, but I gave up
- No, I havent tried that
40Test-taking
- This topic, of course, was also very popular.
- Some students were amazed at some very simple
ideas-- like not doing a test in numerical order.
41Test-Taking Sample Pages
42Welcome toSuccess Seminar 4Test Taking Skills
- Preparation
- Taking the Test
- After the Test
43Preparation Time-line
Review EVERY day
Do a few EASY warm-up exercises just before you
enter the classroom
Correct every error in your homework
Build your own sample test from the text,
Calm jittery nerves with hot chocolate
Get a good nights sleep
Seek answers to questions immediately
44Taking a Test
- If you are tense and anxious,
- Tighten and relax your legs, then arms, then
hands. Then let your arms hang limply from your
shoulders and shake them a bit. - Take several deep breaths. Count as you inhale
to 3. Hold your breath to the count of 6, then
exhale to the count of 9. - Close your eyes and visualize yourself in your
perfect environment, feeling great and confident.
45Taking a Test
- Getting to work
- As soon as you have permission, write down any
formulas or facts you will need for the test. - Scan the entire test--how many problems, point
values, style of questions - Do all the problems you are SURE about
- Go back through the test to work on the tougher
questions.
46Taking a Test
- Getting to work
- If a problem really stumps you, leave it until
last. Be sure you have answered all the
questions you know before returning to it. - If there is time, check your work. Know whether
your tendency is to change right answers to wrong
or wrong to right. - When finished, remind yourself that you have done
your best. Be satisfied with your effort.
47POST-Test Activities
- When you get your test back
- check each error
- is it a skill error or
- is it a knowledge error
- Correct every error know what you did wrong and
what should have been done.
48Adjusting after Disappointments
- Panic and forget during the test?
- set aside more time for preparation
- spend time memorizing formulas and procedures
until they are as easy to remember as your
telephone number - do relaxing exercises when you begin to tense up
- Use Positive affirmations about being calm and
confident.
49Adjusting after Disappointments
- run out of time?
- plan ahead to have more time next time
- time yourself on a pretest to get an idea how
long it will take to complete the test
50Student Survey results
- 1. Have you tried any of the testing strategies?
- Yes, and they have helped
- Yes, but they havent helped yet, Ill keep
trying - Yes, but I gave up
- No, I havent tried them
- 2. Do you believe that using the testing
strategies has improved your test scores? - Definitely
- Maybe
- Probably not
- No
Question 1 Question 2
51Team building
- The final week of presentations was an eclectic
bag of ideas. - The remaining weeks, we encouraged students to
build study teams, using the seminar time to
meet. - We tried to offer them something to try or think
about, and asked them to relay any experiences
they had.
52Team Building and Misc.
53Success Seminar 5 Odds and Ends--Attitudes
and Habits
Russ Baker
54Curiosity- Cure for Boring Classes
- Make the class a game. Can you guess what the
next question will be? - Can you figure out why the instructor picked that
particular example? - Do you know how two examples in class are
different? How they are the same? - This game is often more fun if you read ahead in
your text.
55Try to Remember
- Make 3 x 5 card of special facts and formulas.
Carry them with you to glance at in line at the
super market, bank or while waiting for a green
light. - Tape yourself quoting information you need to
memorize -- play it in the car and at night
before you go to sleep.
56Try to Remember
- Study with a friend or a group. Study casually
during lunch or formally - Teach someone else the material.
- Create a poem, chart, poster, jingle, song
parody, or any other creative invention about the
material.
57Im tryingIts not working!
- Are you spending enough time outside of class?
- Do you do all homework problems and fix all
errors? - Do you mark examples on which you need help?
- Do you read the examples in the text?
58Im tryingIts not working!
- Are you really tuned in to class every minute?
- Do you sit where you can hear and see well?
- Do you take careful notes?
- Do you attempt to answer to yourself every
question asked by the instructor? - Do you come to class prepared and ready to learn?
59Will you be my study buddy?
- Serious and even casual study with others is a
great benefit - You dont feel so alone
- More ears and eyes miss less material
- Discussion of material clarifies understanding
- Peers are less threatening than instructors
60How are your NOTES?
- Take notes during class
- Annotate your notes after class
61Satellite-format notes
62Student survey results
- Study Groups
- 1. Have you formed a study team or study
partnership?
63Results
- scores/grades
- We didnt expect to change everyones lives in a
few weeks. - We are building awareness planting seeds for the
future. - Grade data is encouraging.
64Grade results
Seminar participants were 44.63 of the total
population of 121 students.
73.08
66.67
60
33.33
6.25
65Student Survey Results
Do you thing that Success Seminar contributed
positively to your grade in MA067?
Definitely Maybe Probably No
not
66Student Survey Results
Do you think everyone should learn about the
topics of Success Seminar?
Definitely Maybe Probably No
not
67Plans for the future
- Track both the successful and those that repeat
the course. - Improve the interaction of participants.
- Have more experiments for students to attempt and
report on.
68What can you do?
- Suggest some success concepts to your students.
- Tell us if you have a success seminar student in
your class. - Mention their participation in class.
- Join our team to help develop the sessions for
next Fall.