Archive for November, 2009

Your Song Your Joy: Trixi Field’s Voice Workshops

Sunday, November 22nd, 2009

Sometimes one of our tutors does something remarkable, and we’re happy to get right behind them.

Trixi Field is a multi-talented voice, piano, musicianship and language tutor who has a profile on The Tutor Pages here. She gives lessons and workshops in and around Hemel Hempstead.

She’s just been on the local Cambridgeshire radio station 209Radio explaining her unique approach which help adults get into singing. Here’s a part of what she had to say:

Now I run something called ‘Song Meditation’ … To begin with, I get them in a place where they start to appreciate rather than hate their voices because, very often, people begin by hating their own voice … The world is full of all sorts of different pitches of voices, and they all have their own beauty.

The other thing I would say is, we all have a lot more range than we think we have – you know, people often think ‘I’m a soprano’ or ‘I’m a tenor’ or something – I have never met anyone, not one person has so far passed through my door, who hasn’t had at the very least two ranges and half of another one. We have a lot more range, it’s just that we don’t exercise it – in much the same way that, if you never touch your toes, you never know that you can touch your toes …

When people apply to come on workshops, one of the most cited reasons that they think they can’t sing is that somebody early in their life told them to shut up in the choir, told them just to move their lips, and then they’ve gone through their whole life not daring. And then in the workshop, what I try to do is make it a safe place, where it’s ok to get it wrong but do it. They actually find that, hey, they’re not so bad and that they’ve been singing in harmony… The minute they’re given permission to get it wrong in order to find out what getting it right is, I would say very very few have not been able to do it …

You can hear the complete interview with Trixi on John Levine’s Happy and Healthy Hour here. The interview with Trixi is about 24 minutes into the programme.

As well as all her other activities, Trixi’s also recently just published a book Your Song Your Joy which has already been getting excellent reviews. Click on the book cover below to see it for yourself on Amazon:

Trixi Field

If you know of any tutor with a remarkable story to tell, just let us know, and we’ll help spread the word.

Why On Earth Is Tutoring So Effective?

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

Last month I reported on the fledgling research into the mechanisms of tutoring which suggests that it’s the most powerful of all learning mediums.

Controversially, it seems that the power of one-to-one tutoring lies less in the instructional ‘moves’ of an expert tutor, and more in the constructive contributions of the student themselves. In other words, tutoring works because it provides a framework for students to actively construct knowledge by themselves.

Last Saturday, the Guardian Money section ran a feature on home schooling. In contrast to the social, philosophical and ethical points raised by most respondents, Mairead Patton instead drew readers’ attention to the pedagogical benefits of home learning – and pointed us in the direction of recent research which echoes the research into one-to-one tutoring. The research in question was published last year in Alan Thomas and Harriet Pattison’s book How Children Learn at Home. In Mairead’s words,

The authors discovered that home-schooled children absorbed information mainly by “doing nothing, observing, having conversations, exploring, and through self-directed learning”. They liken the “chaotic nature” of informal learning to the process that leads to scientific breakthroughs, the early stages of crafting a novel, coming up with a solution to a technical problem, or the act of composing music.

Thomas and Pattison’s work is accurately researched. It is particularly strong on the way home schooled children are self-directed in their learning, and how they can acquire literacy and numeracy effectively. In the publisher’s description, the book provides “not only an insight into the powerful and effective nature of informal learning but also presents some fundamental challenges to many of the assumptions underpinning educational theory”.

This book, together with Micki Chi’s research into how tutoring works, challenge the orthodox understanding of the learning process. In the words of one reviewer,

The children concerned learn almost by accident through their everyday experiences, when they feel like it and are ready for it. Some of them receive input from their parents, while others learn with complete autonomy.

The families and the authors describe how the majority of the children observed are actively engaged in their own learning and, therefore, establish their own learning agendas guided by what suits them best. The removal of competition, restrictive curricula and the time-wasting built into the school day create the space for children to develop their self-motivation and thereby enable them to learn more efficiently.

As a retired teacher with thirty years experience, I find that this book provides me with evidence of the value of home schooling and throws out a powerful challenge to the skeptics.

How to Motivate Your Students

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

student motivation

The Times Educational Supplement last week published new research by Emma Dunmore into student motivation. It concluded that while rewards such as points, stickers or treats can improve behaviour in the short term, over time they actually tend to cause pupils to lose motivation. This is because rewards can be perceived as bribery, and cause students to lose their sense of autonomy. In Ms Dunmore’s words:

Receiving the reward may reduce the individual’s sense that they were doing the task because they chose to … Instead, they felt that they were doing it for a reward, and so were being controlled by someone else.

So, what’s the answer? In fact, Ms Dunmore’s study simply feeds into what is already known about student motivation. In the clearest book on this subject, Motivating students to learn (1998), Jere Brophy explains that motivation depends on both students’ expectations of success and the value they place on the task. As the diagram above neatly illustrates, if either one of these is missing (i.e. zero) then there will be no motivation.

Brophy has identified a number of useful strategies that teachers can employ to increase both expectation of success and perceived value.

In summary, these are:

Strategies for increasing expectation of success

  • Provide opportunities for success
  • teach students to set reasonable goals and to assess their own performance
  • help students recognize the relationship between effort and outcome
  • provide informative feedback
  • provide special motivational support to discouraged students

Strategies for Increasing Perceived Value

  • relate lessons to students’ own lives
  • provide opportunities for choice
  • model interest in learning and express enthusiasm for the material
  • include novelty/variety elements
  • provide opportunities for students to respond actively
  • provide opportunities for students to interact with peers
  • provide extrinsic rewards

It is the last strategy (‘provide extrinsic rewards’) which Emma Dunmore’s research relates to, and which can be controversial.

For a full explanation of Jere Brophy’s strategies as listed above, just read p.59 of our free e-book, Tutoring: The Complete Guide, available for free download here.