How much fun happens in your classroom? – 7 Ways to Make Learning Fun
How much fun happens during your class? Think of it this way: If you had a choice, would you want to be doing the things you ask students to do? There are seven simple ways you can make learning fun for your kids.
1. Scavenger Hunts
Chad Maguire, a former middle school teacher, uses a numeration scavenger hunt, during which students must find 50 real-world uses of math. “The students are excited to do this project, and it also opens the awareness that math is not just a subject in school,” Chad says. It doesn’t take much time or effort to turn something into a game. Add some points and a little competition (either by the group or team or as separate individuals) and voila!
2. Research Projects
Chad Maguire, also using a creative way for his students to research and write about a famous mathematician. After giving students an overview of the project and sharing brief biographies of mathematicians, he randomly draws students’ names, and they hold a draft similar to a professional sports draft to select their subjects. The finished report must include standard information about the person, but students also present the information in a creative way, such as role-playing the mathematician or creating a game. As a final incentive, students earn bonus points based on the number of characteristics they have in common with their mathematician.
3. Field Trips
4. American Idol
Erin also uses a popular television show for inspiration in her classroom. “My students share a great deal.
5. Act it Out
In Texas, Karen Eliason livens up grammatical instruction with her ninth graders by asking students to “create a play with nouns, verbs, adjectives, etc. as characters. It was memorable, creative, and much more effective than endless pages of drills in the textbook.”
6. Invent a Game
Scott Bauserman, a teacher at Decatur Central High School in Indiana, asks his students to choose a topic from the social studies unit and design a game. The finished product must teach about the topic, use appropriate vocabulary and processes, and be fun to play. As he explains, “Students have to construct
7. Real-Life Connection
Jason Womack points out that connecting with real life is also fun and engaging. “My favorite example of this was when I was working with a student group on World War II and postwar years testing of nuclear and atomic devices. I had a group of students [in Southern California] who were surfers, and one of the assignments that I gave for this group of students was to go and find out what the surfing was like through the 1950s and 1960s, which was when it was just starting in that community. A lot of students came back and said they did not realize how much damage was done in the Pacific Ocean around nuclear testing and atomic testing.” His purpose wasn’t to make a judgment on whether the decisions about testing were good or bad; he wanted his students to think about how things impact their daily life.
A Final Note
If we want students to learn at higher levels, it’s important to incorporate fun into our classrooms. If we do, student motivation and engagement will increase, and students will understand and apply the concepts they are learning.
Further Reading
- Chicago Tribune – Down to Business: Striving to make learning fun
- Psychology Today – Teaching math the fun way
- Scholastic – Make Learning Fun for Your 3rd Grader