The Beauty of Student Work and Why it Matters
Seeing Success and Student Work
Success comes in many different ways. Some students crave it, others long for it, and a few have no clue what success looks like to begin with. A common complaint many students have is not seeing the fruits of their labor. I'm sure every teacher is familiar with the outcries of "is this graded?" or "when are you handing it back?" or "how do I do better?". Many students, after working tirelessly, feel they don't see the success and learning they've put in, which can lead to a decrease in motivation or a "why do I care if you don't seem to care?". As a Social Studies teacher, there's nothing more imperative then building up student success and showing why their work does matter through a variety of different strategies including timely feedback, work shown on the wall and hall, and multiple opportunities with different skillsets.
One of the most critical things I've observed in seeing student success is timely feedback on assignments. There's nothing more important to getting students involved and caring then to show you care with just as much urgency for the hard work they've put in. Not only does this show that you care, but also you give feedback before they move on to the next assessment. This gives the students the ability to see their mistakes and what they did well, what they can improve for next time and where they had their success at. This is imperative to building up confidence with students. Showing that you care enough about their work to give feedback is a huge boost to classroom community, as well as building up your own connection to your students. Timely and consistent feedback shows you are in this together, and can effectively articulate student success and highlight strengths and weakness, creating a different version of "success" for every student involved.
Another way to see the beauty of student work is displaying work on the walls and in the hallway. While many students may profess to be shy, students love to see the hard work they've done up for others to see.

Hey Christopher!
ReplyDeleteThis is a super fascinating topic. I really like what you said about even when students say that they are shy, they still enjoy seeing their hard work posted up on the wall. I remember that each teacher when I was in high school was allowed to decorate the bulletin board outside their classroom however they decided. Many of those teachers did what you discussed and posted students work. It was always so fun to walk through the halls and see what other students were learning through extravagant posters displayed proudly in the hallway. Excellent post!