Saturday, April 11, 2026

Enhancing Learning Through Relationships

 

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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