Learning Forward Saturday, hosted at the Mayoor School Jaipur, My Good School Retreat - 10-14 April 2026
To read and discuss Chapter 3 of Wanted Back-bencher & Last-ranker Teacher.
Key Takeaways
Empathy is the Foundation: A teacher’s personal experience with struggle builds empathy, which is essential for connecting with students and creating a safe learning environment.
Emotions Drive Learning: Research shows that emotions dictate attention, which in turn impacts academic performance. Positive interactions release endorphins, counteracting stress and improving learning.
Unconventional Methods Work: Teacher Roma’s strategies—such as using the news for vocabulary and a student-led “buddy system”—successfully engaged students and improved their performance.
Teachers Have Immense Influence: A teacher’s words carry significant power, as demonstrated by Sophie’s grandmother, who thanked Roma for helping her granddaughter eat vegetables after years of trying.
Topics
Recap: The “Productive Failure” Framework
Manjula Sagar (Sunbeam Gramin School) provided a recap of the previous session’s “Productive Failure” framework, which views mistakes as the starting point for learning.
This framework was directly applied to the book’s theme of supporting students who struggle, connecting theory to practical classroom experience.
Chapter 3 Reading: Teacher Roma’s Journey
The chapter opens with Roma’s personal history of struggling with math and feeling “not clever,” despite passing.
This experience shaped her teaching philosophy: success is tied to having kind and understanding teachers, not just innate ability.
The Science of Learning & Emotion
Research shows emotions dictate attention, which directly impacts academic performance.
Positive social interactions (e.g., encouragement, smiles) release endorphins, counteracting stress and improving learning and behaviour.
A lack of healthy social encounters can reduce the physical development of the cerebral cortex by up to 20%, highlighting the importance of Social and Emotional Quotient (SQ/EQ).
Teacher Roma’s Classroom Strategies
Building Rapport:
Stood while teaching and discussed non-academic topics (politics, cricket) to build trust and create a safe space for students to share personal issues.
Caution: Maintain a professional boundary; be friendly, not a peer.
Engaging Content:
Made newspaper reading mandatory to connect lessons to current events and build vocabulary.
Used storytelling (e.g., vegetables as “specialists” like Popeye) to make healthy eating appealing.
Personalised Learning:
Sat beside students during explanations and used humour to break the monotony.
Learned from a student (Shreyas) how to solve a Rubik’s Cube using algorithms, demonstrating that academic performance doesn’t define a student’s full potential.
The “Buddy System”:
Paired high-achieving students with struggling peers for tutoring.
Rationale: Harness the “high voltage intelligence” of mischievous students and leverage the fact that teaching others improves retention.
Incentives: Tutors earned bonus marks; the class earned extra free time for timely assignment submission.
Outcome: Significant improvement was observed, with students such as Shreyas passing a surprise math test.
Next Steps
All Participants:
Reflect on Chapter 3, specifically identifying all the teaching strategies used by Roma.
Read Chapter 4 for the next session.
Sandeep Dutt:
Host the next session on Saturday at 3 p.m.
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