Sunday, March 7, 2021

Monday Motivator #24 2020-21

 

 Help Students Make the Most of   Interviews

  By Elizabeth Hagan, Lisa Friesen, Casi Hodge and Sunday Cummins

  “Interview an expert on this topic!”
  “Interview a scientist in the field!”
  “Interview a relative about this period in history!”

Asking our students to interview someone sounds like an engaging learning activity,  right? For many students, though, this may be a daunting experience, and while    they may enjoy the break from traditional modes of learning like reading, writing and  classroom discussions, they may not actually learn that much.

Why? Because – similar to reading – listening to what we hear during an interview  requires comprehension and the active construction of meaning.

If our students are not prepared to engage in this kind of deep listening, they may  miss out on learning.

Setting Students Up to Succeed

So how do we prepare our students to benefit from the interview experience?    In Scaffolding Learning, Scaffolding Language (2015), Gibbons writes, “Like reading,  effective listening depends on the expectations and predictions about content,  language, and genre that the listener brings to the text” (p. 184).

In other words, for our students to get the most out of an interview, we may need to  teach them how to actively draw on three areas of knowledge:

 ✻ what they know about the topic
 ✻ what they know about the language used when talking about that topic
 ✻ what they know about the genre of “interviews”

In pursuit of exploring what this looks like, Elizabeth, a reading specialist, engaged a  small group of fifth grade students in a project driven by the essential question,  “What does it mean to ‘give back’?”

The group of students included two emergent bilinguals. One speaks Arabic at home  and the other speaks Amharic. Both are at the expanding level on the WIDA  standards for language proficiency.


Develop Background Knowledge

During lessons with Elizabeth, the students read a set of sources about people who  have “given back” to their communities in some way:

 ✻ a girl started a lemonade stand to raise money for coats,
 ✻ a young man started a free bicycle repair shop,
 ✻ a boy, Noah, started a “cool bandage” project for kids who get lots of shots during   cancer treatments.

A fourth “source of information” was an interview with Paul Long, a local motivational  speaker, who is involved in many projects that benefit others including Noah’s  bandage project.

The students were excited about the interview. One reason may have been that they  understood the topic better and had some idea of what they might talk to Paul Long  about during the interview.

Write Questions in Advance and Practice

Elizabeth’s students had never engaged in this kind of conversation with an adult  expert so it was important to prepare. Drafting questions to ask a person during a  structured conversation is one way to introduce students to the genre of the  “interview.” Students get a sense of the give and take that will occur. This is also a  chance to synthesize what a student has already learned about the topic and think  about what might be important to learn during the interview.

When Elizabeth’s students did interview Paul Long, they seemed shy. They stuck to  the questions they had drafted and did not ask Long for any additional details. On  reflection we realized the students might have benefited from practicing this interview with others.

In Scaffolding Language Scaffolding Learning (2015), Gibbons describes how when we are in a conversation with someone, we are always drawing on “those ‘scripts’  that are familiar to us through previous experiences” (185). Practicing asking others the interview questions and thinking through the answers can deepen students’  comfort with the language they need to employ during this type of meaning-making format.

This kind of practice also provides students with an experience they can draw on  later in more formal settings. In the future, Elizabeth plans to ask students to  interview people they know first, perhaps even using the same set of questions they  are planning to use later with someone they do not know as well.

 Predict What the Interviewee Might Say

 Because the students had already read and discussed three sources on the topic of   people “giving back,” they had some idea of what Paul Long might say. As listeners   we naturally draw on knowledge we already have on a topic to predict what a   speaker might say. Noticing when something is being said that’s similar to what a   listener already knows about the topic helps them monitor for meaning.

 During the interview Long talked about his work on Noah’s Bandage Project, and the   students’ eyes immediately lit up as they connected to information they had already   read and discussed. Later they seemed to remember details from this part of the   interview more easily than others.

 Making predictions about what we will learn during an interview based on   background knowledge also helps us notice when something is being said   that contrasts or adds to what we already know about the topic. Paul Long told   students that giving back doesn’t mean a person always has to give time or   materials.

 Just smiling at someone, he said, can be a way of “giving back” – a way of making   someone’s day better. This idea had not been a part of the students’ previous   discussions. They noticed the contrast and quickly latched on to this idea. (For fifth   graders, giving a smile probably feels very easy to accomplish!)


 Record the Interview for Close Listening

When our students are in the midst of an interview, it may be difficult to stop and take notes. This requires determining what’s important on the spot and then figuring out how to convey this in short bursts of writing. That’s a burdensome load for some of our students especially if they are learning English.

With this in mind, Elizabeth recorded the interview for the students to revisit later.  She chose a short clip that addressed an aspect of “Why give back?” they had not  discussed as they read the previous sources. She kicked off this follow-up lesson by  asking the students to think about the question, “What did this conversation with Paul Long add to what I already know about this topic?” They listened closely and  discussed what they heard, adding to their notes.

Interviewing others can be an engaging activity in any subject. With some intentional  instruction, it can be an even more powerful experience, expanding knowledge and  building useful skills for future learning opportunities.


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