Wayside Teaching
Connecting With Students to Support Learning
- Sara Davis Powell - Belmont Abbey College
May 2010 | 200 pages | Corwin
Wayside Teaching: Connecting With Students to Support Learning is about intentionally practicing what building level educators do every day in perhaps intentional and/or unintentional ways: relate to students.
Wayside-teaching practices enhance academic learning and complement academic rigour because they build student self-concept, motivate learners to engage in the curriculum, and provide a sense of belonging and safety that can help free learners to participate more fully in their own education.
In this practical guide, Sara Davis Powell uses the framework of attitude, approach, and action to demonstrate how wayside teaching—the informal curriculum, the implicit instruction, the teaching and learning that happens in sometimes unintentional ways—can be intentionally practiced across all grade levels to facilitate learning and bring about enhanced student outcomes.
List of Figures
Preface
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Introduction: What Is Your Current Wayside Teaching Profile?
1. What Is Wayside Teaching, and Why Does It Matter?
2. 12 Components of Wayside Teaching: Attitudes, Approaches, and Actions
3. What Does Wayside Teaching Look Like in Elementary School?
4. What Does Wayside Teaching Look Like in Middle School?
5. What Does Wayside Teaching Look Like in High School?
6. Wayside Teaching: The Power of One
Resource A: Surveys
Resource B: Annotated Book List for Promoting Acceptance and Compassion
References
Index