Weekly Journal 1 Noise Making in Class
Weekly Journal 1 Noise Making in Class
Weekly Journal 1 Noise Making in Class
Date:27/2/2020
1. Focused Issue
I realised pupils make noise in a variety of ways. They tap their pencils, click
their tongues or talk something irrelevant to the lesson.
6. Follow-up Actions
In addition to speech recognition and concentration, background and outside
noise can increase stress levels, which can impact many aspects of our
health, as well as memory and information retention. In order to make sure
pupils are paying attention at me and are not distracted by something else, I
train my pupils to make eye contact with me to show they are listening. When
all eyes are on me, at least I know they aren't distracted doing something
else.
Noise distraction increases the difficulty in understanding the lesson
and also effects on pupils’ learning in the areas of concentration and recall.
Therefore, I try to determine the pupil who is most likely to make noise. I take
him/her aside and tell him/her specifically what he/she is doing that is
distracting to others. If the pupil makes that noise again, I signal him/her to
stop.
References
Cohen, S., Glass, D.C., Singer, J.E. (1973). Apartment Noise, Auditory
Discrimination, And Reading-Ability In Children. J Exp Soc Psychol. 9, 407
422