Student Engagement Techniques. Elizabeth F. Barkley

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how they define engagement, many of their descriptions echo those of faculty, as they say things like: “student engagement means feeling motivated, being challenged, excited about the new.” Both teachers and students affirm the feeling aspect of engagement.

      The Glossary of Education Reform's (2016) definition supports the feeling or affective component of student engagement, as follows:

       In education, student engagement refers to the degree of attention, curiosity, interest, optimism, and passion that students show when they are learning or being taught, which extends to the level of motivation they have to learn and progress in their education. Generally speaking, the concept of “student engagement” is predicated on the belief that learning improves when students are inquisitive, interested, or inspired, and that learning tends to suffer when students are bored, dispassionate, disaffected, or otherwise “disengaged.” (para. 1)

      A similar definition also suggests the feeling aspect of student engagement, describing such engagement as “students' willingness, need, desire, and compulsion to participate in, and be successful in, the learning process” (Bomia et al., 1997, p. 294). Much of the literature about engagement describes this factor of engagement as “affective” or “emotional” engagement (see, e.g., Fredericks, Blumenfeld, & Paris, 2004). This feeling aspect of engagement relates to what the learner is thinking about in the classroom. It includes student feelings about the content or activity and also may involve something outside the classroom.

      The feeling aspect of engagement at its most fundamental level boils down to motivation and whether students are motivated for learning in a particular course. The Latin derivative of motivation means “to move.” Brophy (2004) defines motivation in the classroom as “the level of enthusiasm and the degree to which students invest attention and effort in learning” (p. 4), which echoes many of the feeling definitions of student engagement. Motivation, then, is a theoretical construct to explain the reason or reasons we engage in a particular behavior. It is the feeling of interest or enthusiasm that makes somebody want to do something. In the classroom, we hope students will want to learn. Research demonstrates that motivation to learn is an acquired competence developed through an individual's cumulative experience with learning situations. It is a web of connected insights, skills, values, and dispositions that is developed over time (Brophy, 2004).

      The Thinking Aspect of Engagement

      In addition to describing a feeling aspect to engagement, when we ask them for their definitions, college teachers also describe student engagement with phrases like “engaged students are trying to make meaning of what they are learning” or “engaged students are involved in the academic task at hand and are using higher-order thinking skills, such as analyzing information or solving problems.” They recognize that learning is a dynamic process that consists of making sense and meaning out of new information by connecting it to what is already known. Students likewise respond to questions about engagement with something along the lines of “getting the student more involved in their own learning and becoming active learners.” They too recognize the thinking aspect of engagement.

      In the literature, the thinking aspect of student engagement has been described as “the student's psychological investment in and effort directed toward learning, understanding, or mastering the knowledge, skills, or crafts that academic work is intended to promote” (Newmann, Wehlage, & Lamborn, 1992, p. 12). This thinking aspect is what is referred to in the literature as “cognitive engagement” (Appleton, Christenson, & Furlong, 2008; Fredericks et al., 2004; Marks, 2000; Reschly, Huebner, Appleton, & Antaramian, 2008; Skinner, Kindermann, & Furrer, 2009). This type of engagement focuses on student intellectual investment in the content, lesson, or activity.

      Whether teachers think primarily of the feeling or thinking elements of student engagement, they are quick to point out that both are required. A classroom filled with enthusiastic, motivated students is great, but it is educationally meaningless if it does not result in learning. Conversely, students who are learning but doing so reluctantly and resentfully are not engaged, and they are probably not learning to the extent that they could be.

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