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7 ideas to help build students' self-esteem

It is likely there will be students in
your classroom who come to school with poor self-esteem. They won't care
about their achievements, or they'll shun your acknowledgment of their
worth. They will be afraid, though they may never say so, that they will
never be good at anything. Children need to know that others appreciate
them if they are to develop a sense of self-esteem. Here are some ideas
to help build your students' self-esteem:
l. Build in success. Create
situations where failure is not likely to occur and structure tasks into
a series of easy-to-achieve steps. Help students build a chain of
continuous, unbroken successes.
2. Make your expectations realistic.
Clearly state what you expect and explore with your students whether
your expectations resemble theirs.
3. Find ways to keep interest high!
Empathize a little. Try to keep lessons interesting, and acknowledge
when a task becomes "old." Students may appreciate your effort and
resist the work less.
4. State the positive. Stay away
from typically judgmental evaluations like "right" and "wrong," "good"
and "bad." Try describing your students' work instead. Emphasize the
positive. Tell students what you see and how you feel about it.
5. Capitalize on achievements. Use
one success to create another. Share successes with parents by sending
notes home. Use "Success Cards." Be sure to read the positive message to
the child first.
6. Share evidence of success. Keep
a portfolio of children's writing, drawings, and other work.
7. Recruit parents and guardians.
Encourage parents and guardians to display their child's work. Suggest
that they praise the work in front of friends and relatives. Tell them
to make it a point to compliment some portion of their child's work and
to recognize even a small improvement. And advise that they treasure
their child's work by saving samples from every school year.
Source:
http://www.vtnea.org/ti-1.htm
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