Building Relationships with Students

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  • View profile for Laura Burge

    Educational Leader | Equity, Respect and Inclusion I Strategy and Impact

    4,325 followers

    Universities and colleges put enormous effort into welcoming new students. Orientation weeks are colourful, busy, and full of opportunities to connect, but research shows that the sense of belonging students gain in those early days often fades as the semester progresses. The challenge, and opportunity, is for practitioners to design approaches that sustain belonging beyond the first few weeks. A recent study (International Journal of Qualitative Studies on Health and Well-being, October 2024) examined how students navigate educational transitions and highlighted the importance of realistic preparation, sustained connection, and the role of educators in shaping belonging. Drawing on the study, here are five domains to guide practice: 1️⃣ Prepare by setting realistic expectations. Too often, students arrive with glossy images of university life, only to feel blindsided by the pace, workload, or challenges of forming new friendships. Providing honest, balanced information before arrival helps normalise difficulty and reduce the shock of transition. Examples could include current student or alumni-led Q&A sessions, “What I wish I’d known” videos and resources.   2️⃣ Connect by creating micro-moments not just big events. Large welcome events can spark initial excitement, but belonging is sustained through everyday micro-connections - someone to sit with in class, a lecturer remembering your name, a peer inviting you to coffee. Encourage tutors to use ice breakers beyond week one, support student leaders to facilitate ongoing low-barrier activities that foster peer and staff connection like weekly walks or shared study sessions. 3️⃣ Empower educations as ‘belonging builders.’ The research reinforces that educators play a critical role in student wellbeing. Approachability, empathy, and inclusivity from teaching staff often matter as much as peer friendships. Small practices like checking in, learning names, or acknowledging diverse perspectives can have outsized impact. 4️⃣ Integrate by addressing compounding transitions. Academic demands, social shifts, housing changes, and wellbeing challenges often overlap. Students rarely experience these in isolation, and when combined, they intensify stress and risk of disengagement. Consider integrated and holistic advising models where academic, wellbeing, and housing staff collaborate to support students. 5️⃣ Monitor, recognising loneliness as an early signal Finally, loneliness is often the first indicator of deeper wellbeing issues. Monitoring connection levels can provide an early warning system for support. Use pulse surveys, quick check-ins in tutorials, or digital tools to flag students at risk of isolation, paired with clear referral and early intervention pathways (e.g., peer connectors, student mentors, proactive outreach). 🔗 Read the full study: https://lnkd.in/gjvUH6sa

  • View profile for Usha Rajesh Sharma

    I am here to help you - If you’re struggling to kickstart your career, or you’re a parent trying to figure out how to groom your teen into a confident, responsible, and emotionally strong individual

    7,257 followers

    𝐓𝐞𝐚𝐜𝐡 𝐋𝐢𝐤𝐞 𝐊𝐫𝐢𝐬𝐡𝐧𝐚: 𝐂𝐨𝐧𝐭𝐞𝐱𝐭 𝐢𝐬 𝐭𝐡𝐞 𝐂𝐮𝐫𝐫𝐢𝐜𝐮𝐥𝐮𝐦 In the battle of Kurukshetra, Krishna didn’t give the Gita to everyone — he gave it only to Arjuna, and only when Arjuna was ready. He tailored his message, used relatable metaphors, and taught with empathy. “𝐼𝑓 𝑎 𝑐ℎ𝑖𝑙𝑑 𝑐𝑎𝑛’𝑡 𝑙𝑒𝑎𝑟𝑛 𝑡ℎ𝑒 𝑤𝑎𝑦 𝑤𝑒 𝑡𝑒𝑎𝑐ℎ, 𝑚𝑎𝑦𝑏𝑒 𝑤𝑒 𝑠ℎ𝑜𝑢𝑙𝑑 𝑡𝑒𝑎𝑐ℎ 𝑡ℎ𝑒 𝑤𝑎𝑦 𝑡ℎ𝑒𝑦 𝑙𝑒𝑎𝑟𝑛.” — 𝐼𝑔𝑛𝑎𝑐𝑖𝑜 𝐸𝑠𝑡𝑟𝑎𝑑𝑎 Krishna embodied this quote long before it was said. He adjusted his delivery, tone, and examples — not to show knowledge, but to spark realization. Teachers today face diverse classrooms — some students are fast, some need nurturing, some respond to visuals, while others to emotions.  A great teacher observes the emotional, intellectual, and psychological readiness of the learner and adapts teaching methods accordingly. Each student has a different pace, background, and way of understanding. Teaching becomes meaningful only when delivered at the student’s level of comprehension. Krishna teaches us that real education begins with understanding the learner first. That’s the essence of contextual teaching — adapting your lesson to the learner's mental state, emotional need, and capacity. Example:  For visual learners: use charts, diagrams, mind maps. For emotional learners: connect lessons to real-life stories or feelings. For struggling learners: break down content into bite-sized, relatable parts. For advanced learners: give higher-order thinking challenges or open-ended questions. Practical Tips for Teachers: Do a quick readiness check before starting a topic: Ask 2-3 open-ended questions. Use multiple modes of teaching: audio, visual, kinesthetic, storytelling. Pair students for peer learning, where strong learners help weaker ones. Celebrate small successes to boost confidence in underperformers. Never shame a student for not knowing — follow Krishna's way: uplift, don't humiliate. #TeachLikeKrishna #ContextualTeaching #BhagavadGitaWisdom #KrishnaForEducators #ValueBasedEducation #IndianPhilosophy #InspiredTeaching #StudentCentricLearning #EducationWithEmpathy #LifeLessonsFromKrishna #LearnerFirst #ModernGurukul #KrishnaNeSikhaya #TeacherWisdom 

  • View profile for Aisha Humera

    College Coordinator. IB certified. Transforming young minds: Dedicated and passionate educationist.

    2,426 followers

    🌱 “𝐈 𝐝𝐨𝐧’𝐭 𝐟𝐨𝐫𝐜𝐞 𝐭𝐡𝐞𝐦 𝐭𝐨 𝐠𝐫𝐨𝐰. 𝐈 𝐫𝐞𝐦𝐨𝐯𝐞 𝐰𝐡𝐚𝐭 𝐬𝐭𝐨𝐩𝐬 𝐭𝐡𝐞𝐦.” This line hit me hard—because that’s what great teaching truly is. I once had a student who struggled not with ability, but with fear—fear of making mistakes, of raising their hand, of being wrong. Traditional instruction kept nudging them to “speak up more.” But what actually worked? Giving them a safe space to think quietly, letting them submit reflections anonymously, then slowly offering low-stakes speaking opportunities. They bloomed—on their own terms. 🔍 This is what barrier-free learning looks like. Not pushing students harder, but asking: What’s in their way—and how do I remove it? Some powerful methodologies that support this mindset: ✅ Inquiry-Based Learning – Let curiosity drive the lesson. ✅ Scaffolded Instruction – Support step-by-step until confidence builds. ✅ Metacognitive Reflection – Teach students to know how they learn. ✅ Growth-Oriented Assessment – Focus on progress, not just performance. 🌿 Students don’t need force. They need conditions to thrive. #LearnerCentered #Pedagogy #InquiryBasedLearning #GrowthMindset #TeachingStrategies #HolisticEducation #Scaffolding #ReflectivePractice #BarrierFreeLearning

  • View profile for Christina Allred

    Educational Consultant & Trainer at Involvement Educational Services- Where inclusion meets instruction.

    2,047 followers

    Teacher learning goes far beyond professional development. To truly impact student outcomes, teachers must engage in ongoing learning that includes: --Accurate pronunciation of student names --Understanding student learning preferences --Awareness of culturally relevant events and influences --Building connections with families and parents --Understanding community needs Staying current on the latest best teaching practices is essential—but it’s only part of the equation. Each school year, teachers must also invest time in getting to know their students on a personal level. When educators show genuine interest in their students' lives, students are more likely to feel seen, valued, and engaged in the classroom. This relational learning is just as critical as instructional strategies when it comes to making a lasting impact.

  • View profile for Zipporah M.

    Education Thought-leader | AI & EdTech Enthusiast | Head of Department | Global Politics & German Educator (IBDP/CIE) | Content Strategist | German Teacher of the Year 2018

    15,090 followers

    As educators, we often walk a tightrope between curriculum demands and the need to keep learners engaged. Over time, I’ve learned that motivation is not something we pour into students, it's something we ignite within them. Here are 7 practical ways I’ve seen work in my classroom and in others: 📍 Build strong relationships When students feel seen, heard and safe, they show up differently; for themselves and for the learning. 📍 Promote autonomy and student voice Choice empowers. Whether it's letting them select topics or co-create rubrics, ownership deepens investment. 📍 Make learning relevant If they don’t see the “why,” they won’t commit to the “what.” Connect lessons to real life and student interests. 📍 Set clear, achievable goals Help students set SMART goals and track their progress. Small wins fuel momentum. 📍 Recognize effort, strategy and progress Praise the process, not just the product. Acknowledge the thinking, persistence and growth behind the scenes. 📍 Make it engaging and fun Games, debates, projects, movement—joy is not the enemy of rigor. It’s the gateway to it. 📍 Foster peer support and collaboration Students are deeply influenced by their peers. Build a community where they challenge and champion each other. Motivation isn’t magic, it’s design and we all have the power to design learning spaces where students want to learn. #ZippysClassroom #MakeTeachingGreat #StudentMotivation #VisibleLearning #GrowthMindset #ClassroomCulture

  • View profile for Med Kharbach, PhD

    Educator and Researcher | Instructor @ MSVU

    48,829 followers

    Student-Centered Learning Models: A Practical Visual Reference My teaching philosophy is grounded in what bell hooks calls engaged pedagogy, a student-centered model that begins with the recognition that learning thrives through mutual engagement. At its core, engaged pedagogy is informed by a unique theoretical mixture that includes, among others, Dewey’s theory of experiential learning, Vygotsky’s sociocultural theory, and Erikson’s psychosocial development theory. All of these theories reject what Paulo Freire refers to as the banking model of education, a model where teachers simply deposit knowledge into passive students. Instead, engaged pedagogy frames teaching as a relational, reciprocal process where the teacher doesn’t stand above the learner but alongside. And here’s what I find most powerful: when you add critical thinking to that mix (as hooks did), the entire framework gains structure. Critical thinking becomes the central node, the connective tissue that links reflection, engagement, and growth. Now, you might ask: What does this have to do with AI? Everything. Because you can’t effectively integrate AI into your classroom if you treat it as a bolt-on tool. Pedagogically sound AI integration requires a strong framework. One rooted in collaboration, inquiry, and student agency. That’s exactly what these student-centered models provide. Here’s my argument: if you want to use AI well in your teaching, you need to be creative within a structure that encourages engagement, critical thought, and participation. Otherwise, AI becomes a shortcut and shortcuts don’t build deep learning. But when AI is used within a framework like engaged pedagogy, it becomes a tool for amplifying curiosity, collaboration, and deeper thinking. That’s why I put together a new resource for you. It features four powerful learning models that align with this ethos of learning-by-doing and social constructivism: 1. Experiential Learning 2. Inquiry-Based Learning 3. Project-Based Learning 4. Game-Based Learning And I’ve included a fifth piece on critical thinking, which I believe should be the cross-disciplinary thread that ties all of these approaches together. Without critical thinking, none of these frameworks truly reach their potential. I compiled them into a single downloadable document completely free. My goal is simple: to support teachers who are navigating the evolving role of AI in education without losing sight of what good pedagogy actually looks like. References 1. hooks, bell. (2010). Teaching Critical Thinking: Practical Wisdom. Routledge. 2. Dewey, J. (1938). Experience and Education. Macmillan. 3. Vygotsky, L. S. (1978). Mind in Society: The Development of Higher Psychological Processes. Harvard University Press. 4. Erikson, E. H. (1969) Identity: Youth and Crisis. W. W. Norton & Company. 5. Freire, P. (1970). Pedagogy of the Oppressed. Continuum.

  • View profile for Jason Gulya

    Exploring the Connections Between GenAI, Alt Assessment, and Teaching Process (Book Forthcoming from Oklahoma UP) | Professor of English and Communications | Keynote Speaker | Mentor for AAC&U’s AI Institute

    42,226 followers

    There's a difference between creating a culture of transparency and just asking students to disclose their use of AI after the fact. Here are some ways to build a culture of transparency. ------ 1. Explain why transparency is important. In my classes, we focus on the relationship between process, product, and progress. For this sort of work, transparency is crucial. I list transparency as a "core value" on my syllabus. We talk about transparency and learning from Day 1. If you wait until after an assignment to ask for transparency about if and when students used AI, you're missing out. ----- 2. Model it yourself. I do this 2 ways. (a) I tell students if/when I use AI, and why I used it in that particular spot. I often link the chat, for those who are interested. (b) I announce -- in my syllabus and throughout the course -- what I don't use AI for and why. This isn't to establish a set of rules for using AI. It's to model how to make personal decisions about our voices, and to put up barriers to protect those voices. ----- 3. Link disclosure measures (such as AI Transparency Statements) to learning objectives. I ask my students to submit Process Transparency Statements, after some of their larger projects. But I'm very intentional about framing transparency positively rather than negatively, in those documents. Students use the AI Assessment Scale developed by Dr Mike Perkins and Leon Furze to self-describe their use of AI. Crucually, this is an example of third-party transparency (when students choose what to disclose abou theeir process) rather than first-party transpancy (such as AI detectors and process-trackers). I recently wrote about my use of Transparency Statements, for Faculty Focus. Check it out: https://lnkd.in/evR8h4gr ************** Now... This strategy isn't a silver bullet. Far from it. It creates it's own complications and issues. But to me, creating a culture of transparency is much more sustainable than asking for compliance after something is handed in.

  • View profile for Ruchi Satyawadi

    PYP 5 Homeroom Tr./Grade level Coordinator/Content creator/Curriculum developer/Olympiad Facilitator/ British Council Certified educator/National Geographic certified Teacher/PYP exhibition mentor/PDP lead IB evaluation

    2,949 followers

    🎯 How do we truly meet every learner where they are? In every classroom, we see it—the diversity of student mindsets. Some hesitate, some seek comfort, some push boundaries, and others are ready to soar. The real magic of teaching lies in recognizing these differences and responding intentionally. ✨ Differentiation isn’t just a strategy—it’s a mindset. Here’s a simple yet powerful way to think about it: 🔹 Hesitant Students These learners often struggle to take the first step. Instead of overwhelming them, we can lower the entry barrier. 👉 Use tools like dice games or guided choices to help them begin. 👉 Follow up with clear, structured, step-by-step examples. 💡 Small wins build confidence—and confidence fuels participation. 🔹 Comfort Seekers These students prefer predictability and clarity. They thrive when expectations are transparent. 👉 Provide checklists, rubrics, and modeled examples. 👉 Break tasks into manageable steps to reduce perceived risk. 💡 When students feel safe, they’re more willing to stretch beyond their comfort zone. 🔹 Outside-the-Box Thinkers These are your innovators—the ones who challenge norms and explore new directions. 👉 Offer them opportunities to research, inquire, and connect learning across subjects. 👉 Encourage creativity, alternative approaches, and independent thinking. 💡 When given freedom, they don’t just learn—they create. 🔹 Confident Students These learners are ready for more. Keeping them engaged requires meaningful challenge. 👉 Extend tasks with deeper thinking opportunities or skill-building challenges. 👉 Encourage leadership roles and peer mentoring. 💡 Growth happens when challenge meets readiness. 🌱 The takeaway? One-size-fits-all teaching misses the mark. But when we intentionally design learning experiences that respond to different mindsets, we create classrooms where every student feels seen, supported, and stretched. 💬 As educators, leaders, and lifelong learners— How are you differentiating for the diverse mindsets in your space? #Education #Differentiation #StudentCenteredLearning #TeachingStrategies #InclusiveClassrooms #LearningMindsets

  • View profile for MOHIT SAXENA

    Education Consultant | 22+ Years in K–12 & Competitive Exams | Curriculum, Assessment & Student Mindset, believer of Academics grow with Discipline of system and self discipline of students

    9,467 followers

    A small incident with big learning … Today during my son's online Hindi class, I happened to overhear something that left me unsettled. The teacher gently asked a few students about the previous lesson. First child: “Ma’am, I didn’t understand anything you taught last time.” Second child: “I don’t have my book or notebook.” Third child sat silently, not even responding. This continued — no enthusiasm, no basic courtesy. The teacher tried to stay calm, but it was clear: something was broken, not in the system, but in the connection between respect and education. As a parent, this hit me hard. Teachers are doing their best often with limited support , with less salary , and still striving to reach our children. Yet, what they get in return is disinterest, excuses, or silence, specially teacher of native language. And I realized: the root of this isn’t in the classroom. It’s in our homes. Recommendations for Parents 1. Talk respectfully and sensibly about teachers at home Children absorb our words. If we criticize or mock teachers in front of them, they carry that disrespect into the classroom. 2. Create a learning environment at home Set a fixed space and time for classes. Ensure books, notebooks, and devices are ready — just like we’d prepare for a physical school. 3. Teach accountability Excuses like “I didn’t have my book” or “I didn’t understand” are common — but they should be followed by “I’ll be ready next time” or “Can I get help with it?” 4. Reinforce classroom manners, guru shishya system created good synergy between learners and teachers , Even in online classes , children should greet their teacher, respond when asked, and show attentiveness. A simple “Yes Ma’am” goes a long way. 5. Keep communication open with teachers Stay involved , don’t wait for PTMs ,talk to teachers not to complain, but to collaborate. Ask how your child is doing and how you can help from your side, he or she knows faults in learnings and how to improve. Let’s raise children who not only gain knowledge, but also understand the value of those who give it.

  • View profile for M K HARIKUMAR

    EQUITY ONLY

    19,011 followers

    A teacher has gone viral for an innovative way of teaching physics by using characters from the popular anime One Piece . Instead of relying only on traditional textbooks and diagrams, he uses well-known characters like Monkey D. Luffy, Roronoa Zoro, and others to explain complex physics concepts in a more engaging and relatable way for students. By connecting lessons to familiar anime scenes and characters, the teacher helps students visualize difficult topics such as force, motion, energy, and momentum. For example, actions performed by Luffy or Zoro in the series are used to demonstrate real-world physics principles, making abstract ideas easier to understand. This creative teaching method quickly gained attention online, as many students and viewers appreciated how it makes learning more enjoyable and less stressful. It also shows how popular culture can be effectively used in education to capture students’ interest and improve understanding. The approach highlights a growing trend in modern education where teachers are using entertainment, memes, movies, and anime to connect with younger generations. Instead of memorizing formulas without context, students can now relate concepts to characters and stories they already enjoy. Overall, the teacher’s One Piece -based physics lessons have been praised for being both fun and educational, proving that learning can become more effective when creativity is added to traditional teaching methods.

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