Home        Lesson ideas        Teaching tips        Professional Development        Support        Forum    
Secondary
Strategies for keeping attention

Keeping students' attention and stopping them from getting distracted is a big challenge. Here are some reasons why students’ attention may wander and ways to keep your classes on track.


. Keep in control. Anticipation is the best form of teacher defence so keep scanning the room, making eye contact with all students. You will catch those who are starting to fidget, look out of window or chat to their mates. Then you can react accordingly before the noise level has distracted everyone and created a situation.

· Keep in tune with the class. Don’t just glide along with the best. If one student answers your questions this is not proof that all the others are following what is being discussed. Aim for responses from as wide a sample as possible. Don’t just accept answers from the 3 or 4 class leaders or you will leave the rest behind.

. Keep checking understanding. Try not to use questions like “Do you understand?” or “Has everyone got that?” Students are notoriously wary of admitting they haven’t understood, especially if their peers are feigning comprehension! Use further questions to see if they have understood the concepts.

. Keep demonstrating. Attention wanders when they don’t know what to do and are too afraid to admit it. Keep your instructions to a minimum and demonstrate what to do rather than giving lengthy or detailed explanations. If nearly half of them are clearly unsure and starting to flounder or chat in their mother tongue, take action. Call on the pairs who are doing the task successfully to demonstrate their work as an example for others then try again.

Changing the pace
Here are some tried and tested techniques for changing the pace of the lesson to keep students awake.

Chant. Select a weekly chant which rouses students. Students stand or sit, clap along or snap their fingers and repeat the rap you have devised. This can be a quotation for higher levels or a sentence construction covered by lower levels. Make it short, snappy and fun.
Drill. Use some quick fire questioning around the class and involve as many as possible. Then get the students to do the questions as well as supplying answers. Use visuals as prompts for this questioning.

Play a game. Do a 10 minute revision game involving everyone pooling ideas, words or questions. Even a spelling game for beginners does the trick. Word association or memory games work well!

Give a dictation. They do have to concentrate here ! It might be just a short piece of text or a list of words .It could be some lines from a song in the charts.
 

By Clare Lavery

http://www.teachingenglish.org.uk/language-assistant/teaching-tips/strategies-keeping-attention

Average: 1.5 (6 votes)
Print
Latest news
Inventions - 09/08/2011
Listen and draw - 09/08/2011
Pre-listening activities - 09/08/2011
Grouping students - 04/26/2011
Ways to encourage more use of English in class - 04/26/2011
Role-play - 03/20/2011
Drawing dictations - 03/20/2011
Developing pronunciation through songs - 02/18/2011
Presenting vocabulary - 11/11/2010
Pre-listening activities - 11/11/2010
Others
Make no mistake - 06/23/2010
Teaching pronunciation with phonemic symbols - 06/12/2010
Teaching speaking skills 2 - overcoming classroom problems - 06/09/2010
Monitoring - 06/08/2010
Product and process writing: A comparison - 06/01/2010
Writing and elementary learners - 06/01/2010
Integrating pronunciation into classroom activities - 06/01/2010
Personalising example sentences - 05/13/2010
Group secretary - 05/13/2010
Planning a writing lesson - 05/13/2010
Select a grade:
  345  
  101112  
Use the quick links below to go to different sections of the site
Primary
Secondary
Online Competition
British Council Online English Suite
Teaching Speaking
Sample Video Lessons
English Now
Pronunciation Tips
Premier Skills
Classroom Language
Upcoming Events & Resources
User name:*
Password:*
Register
Forgot my password
  How to sign up
  How to sign in
  How to post comment
Tags in Teaching English
Articles Innovations
Knowledge wiki literature
methodology
Podcasts pronunciation
Resources resources Tips
Online: 15; Vistitor: 443,884 Registered Members: 7,176 Newsletter Signup