Monday, January 21, 2013

Make Relationship a Routine


The fact that I have a task-oriented personality means that I have to be intentional about building relationships.   During class, it is easy for me to get so focused on skills and content that I forget the most important piece.  Simply chanting “relationship, relationship, relationship” to myself at the start of the day doesn’t make it happen (and it sounds really strange to the people I run into).   As one who naturally thinks more often about schedule than relationship, I find it necessary to build “relationship time” into the daily class routine.

Here are three concrete ways that I schedule opportunities for relationship:

1. Bonus Trivia
Every day in my Algebra II class begins with review and a short quiz.  After the quiz, I ask my students three or four questions from 7th Grade Brain Quest (trivia) and offer a bonus point to those who can answer first.  This does not take long (five minutes at most), but it is a daily reminder for me to set aside quadratic equations and matrices for a moment and interact in a different way.  Students get the opportunity to show off their knowledge of other subjects, which is especially great for those who struggle with math.  My favorite moments come when I get to say to a student: “Great job- I would not have known the answer if this question was asked of me.”

2. Sharing a Picture
At the beginning of each class I have a student share a picture and talk about something meaningful to him or her.  Each semester has a different theme.  Currently my students are sharing something that changed them last semester.  This takes three or four minutes and gives each student the opportunity to give classmates a fuller view of who they are.  I have gained insight and had some great follow-up conversations because of these pictures.  Of course, I start the semester off by sharing a picture myself.

3. Seating Chart
Although students often complain when given a seating chart, I believe that they want to be told where to sit.  A seating chart eliminates tough decisions for insecure teens and gives students a better opportunity to focus.  It also gives me closer proximity to those students who are trying to avoid me.  I have observed that students who don’t complete their homework assume I am angry at them.  If they are successful in avoiding a conversation about the missing work, they go away thinking I don’t like them and are less motivated to work.  Increasing my proximity to students who have trouble getting their work done is one way that I improve my ability to address missing work or other situations.  A brief conversation shows the student that I am paying attention to them and that I care about them even when they are out of line.  Keeping certain students close allows me to converse with them more freely and more often.

If you are more relationship-oriented than I am, the idea of scheduling “relationship time” probably doesn’t sound like relationship at all.  And you are right; turning relationship into objective tasks is no guarantee that I will build relationship with my students.  I certainly do not want to downplay the importance of taking advantage of the unplanned opportunities for relationship that occur every day. Building “relationship time” into my daily routine is merely a catalyst.  It must be followed by a desire to know and care about my students.   

Ask yourself this question: “How am I intentionally getting to know my students during class?”  Your answer might be that you are just wired that way.  If you are more task-oriented, like me, then find ways to plug “relationship time” into your class routine.  Give it a try, and see what you can learn about your students.    





2 comments:

  1. Agreed. The relationship piece is completely underrated this day in age. Check out this related article: http://growingleaders.com/blog/the-currency-of-generation-iy/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+TimElmoreOnLeading+%28Tim+Elmore+%29

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  2. Good stuff Daniel! Really like idea #2. I ask questions from time to time and share about myself from time to time, but I like that you are intentional about getting details from students on a regular basis.

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