By Ruhina Cockar
The first time we wrote about No Opt Out this year, Anita Shakya put forward the argument for the “Why” - the moral imperative of the importance of this strategy to ensure all students are learning and no student is left behind due to a lack of confidence or low expectations of them. You can read that post again here to refresh your memory.
This post is going to tackle what can affect the classroom culture and environment for learning you are trying to create: the Passive Opt Out.
No Opt Out is often focused on with regards to effective questioning, which is important but doesn’t address some of the other behaviours being communicated to you in the classroom.
How many of these behaviours do you notice in the students you teach:
Students head is on the desk while you are teaching, and/or during independent work, and/or during AfL task
Student hasn’t completed any work after the Do Now
Student hasn’t completed any independent work in the last 10 minutes
Student is doodling (looks like they’re working from afar)
Student is talking-off task whilst everyone else is working independently
This is Passive Opting Out. If we allow these behaviours to happen, we are agreeing that the work/learning is optional for them.
Changing the lens: Learning is not a suggestion
If you start to shift your lens on these behaviours, from being “defiant” to framing it as a No Opt Out issue your words and expectations will change and it will bring the students with you.
What you are saying is: No Opt Out means you will learn, and produce evidence of your learning.
Examples: Low-Level Tactics for High-Level Engagement
The key to this strategy is to “be seen to be looking”: stand where the student can see you looking at their work, check in on them regularly, praise them for doing a little more each time - building their confidence each time. Do not allow the Opting Out to happen/continue for long in the lesson - address it in one way or another.
Circling back to the “Why” - we’re doing this because these behaviours are Opting Out of the classroom community and positive learning environment you are trying to create. By employing No Opt Out in this way you are gently and insistently pulling them back in and saying: “You are part of this, and your work matters, and I want you in this lesson learning”.
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