Getting (and Keeping) Early Learners’ Attention — from edutopia.org by Heather Sanderell
These ideas for lesson hooks—like using songs, video clips, and picture walks—can motivate young students to focus on learning.

How do you grasp and maintain the attention of a room full of wide-eyed students with varying interests and abilities? Do you use visuals and games or interactive activities? Do you use art and sports and music or sounds? The answer is yes, to all!

When trying to keep the attention of your learners, it’s important to stimulate their senses and pique their diverse interests. Educational theorist and researcher Robert Gagné devised his nine events of instructional design, which include grabbing learners’ attention with a lesson hook. This is done first to set the tone for the remainder of the lesson.


3 Ways to Help Students Overcome the Forgetting Curve — from edutopia.org  by Cathleen Beachboard
Our brains are wired to forget things unless we take active steps to remember. Here’s how you can help students hold on to what they learn.

You teach a lesson that lights up the room. Students are nodding and hands are flying up, and afterward you walk out thinking, “They got it. They really got it.”

And then, the next week, you ask a simple review question—and the room falls silent.

If that situation has ever made you question your ability to teach, take heart: You’re not failing, you’re simply facing the forgetting curve. Understanding why students forget—and how we can help them remember—can transform not just our lessons but our students’ futures.

The good news? You don’t have to overhaul your curriculum to beat the forgetting curve. You just need three small, powerful shifts in how you teach.

From DSC:
Along these same lines, also see:

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7 Nature Experiments to Spark Student Curiosity — from edutopia.org by Donna Phillips
Encourage your students to ask questions about and explore the world around them with these hands-on lessons.

Children are natural scientists—they ask big questions, notice tiny details, and learn best through hands-on exploration. That’s why nature experiments are a classroom staple for me. From growing seeds to using the sun’s energy, students don’t just learn science, they experience it. Here are my favorite go-to nature experiments that spark curiosity.