Teach Middle East Magazine May-June 2019 Issue 5 Volume 6 | Page 28

Sharing Good Practice CULTIVATING STUDENT EFFICACY AT UNIVERSAL AMERICAN SCHOOL CO-WRITTEN BY: MICHELLE HAAG, SUSAN PRICE, PAUDGE BRENNAN, AND SHELLEY REINHART “Really!?,” exclaims a 10th grade girl at Universal American School. “There’s actual research that explains why I always do my very best work at the last minute?” The research she's discovered is found in her Myers Briggs Type Indicator personality type profile. The MBTI is a statistically validated tool based Carl Jung’s theory of psychological type, proposing that people are born with preferred ways of interacting with the world around them, gathering information, making decisions and organizing time. Insights gained from understanding these individual preferences are relevant for people of all ages. Specifically, for students at Universal American School, understanding individual preferences through the MBTI helps build self- efficacy and facilitates students’ self- awareness. Shelley Reinhart is an MBTI Practitioner, and uses personality theory to help students and teachers gain self-understanding. Reinhart administered the Murphy-Meisgeier Type Instrument for Children to classes of students at Universal American 28 | May - Jun 2019 | | School. The MMTIC measures psychological type for children under 18 years of age. Using the same model and preferences as the MBTI, the MMTIC gives students a sense of the way they like to study, the ways in which they learn best and ways to advocate for themselves at home and with their teachers. They can use what they learn through the MMTIC to develop good study habits and increase their confidence in the classroom. Reinhart is working with instructional coaches Dina Coppes and Michelle Haag to use the MMTIC as a tool to build self- efficacy at UAS. Universal American School is owned by Al Futtaim and offers a full American curriculum from grade pre-K to 12. The elementary school uses the US Common Core standards to inform a rigorous Primary Years Program (IBPYP) and secondary students can earn an International Baccalaureate Diploma (IBDP) as well as a US accredited high school diploma. A majority of UAS high school students have reported that they organize their time to study for summative exams only a day or two before the date of the Class Time test. Fewer than 50% of Math teacher Paudge Brennan’s 10th graders had been attending extra tutorial sessions, and even less completed nightly homework. Students did not have a workable sense of time management and stress levels were high before tests. Teachers were aware that not all students were achieving their potential. Reinhart administered the MMTIC to Brennan’s Math students and worked with the teacher-coach teams on strategies for helping students understand how they could better use their time for higher summative scores and longer term retention of material. One strategy Brennan adopted was “Don’t Break the Chain.” Students were asked if they thought they could pledge to complete at least two homework practice problems each day for the two weeks leading up to the exam, thereby encouraging a “chain” of daily Math review. Almost all students signed the large colorful posters and agreed to NOT “break the chain,” but after three days it became apparent that many had already done so. By the end of the first week, less than one- third of the students had an unbroken