Teach Middle East Magazine May-June 2019 Issue 5 Volume 6 | Page 29

Sharing Good Practice chain. Brennan and instructional coach Haag analyzed the students’ MMTIC profiles to identify patterns in those who had completed their chain and those who did not. They found striking correlations. All but one of those who were able to do homework every night had shown to be a “Judger,” a type with clear personality preferences for early starts, respecting deadlines, and valuing completion. The “Perceivers” (a type valuing flexibility, spontaneity and tend to work best in bursts of energy) broke the chain within the first 48 hours. Reinhart and Brennan led the students in a discussion of how each personality type approached this challenge. Students clearly saw the differences between Judger and Perceiver preferences and how these preferences reflect in their individual study habits and motivations. Brennan then asked the students to create study plans according to their preferences and to pair up with a student with an opposite preference for the next round of “Don’t Break the Chain.” Students gained insight into how they can best study, and most received higher test scores as a result. In IB English Language-Literature, Susan Price was also curious about how her twelve students were coping with the preparation for the demanding Paper 2 examination looming at the end of the course. During Grade 11, she had noticed that whilst the class excelled and soared with analysis in discussion, many failed to reach a commensurate level in written responses. Conversely, a few students knew the texts in some detail, but were unable to take their knowledge into the more abstract realm of analytical thought required by the Assessment Criteria. Two students had achieved this combination, but what of the others? Was it actually possible to help them or was it mainly a case of innate cognitive aptitude as indicated by the results of the CAT 4 predictions, based on one verbal battery? Teaming up Shelley Reinhart and Instructional Coach, Dina Coppes, Price arranged for all the students to sit the MMTIC and reflect on the recommendations for study and experiment with different ways of working. Price organized some lessons according to the MBTI preferences; grouping was arranged with “Sensors” (a type who values specifics and details) working with “Intuitors” (a type who values big-picture ideas and making connections). The Intuitors were pleasantly surprised to see that working with someone who instinctively veers towards a more detail-oriented approach could draw them into more grounded, evidence- supported analysis; the Sensors learned that through seeing the bigger picture and making connections, the micro-elements of a text could lead to more abstract conclusions. Likewise, in the arena of independent study, many of the students discovered much about themselves as learners - some realizing that study for them should be an ‘arena’, rather than an isolated activity. Students who had not contemplated group study sampled it and found it beneficial. An ISTJ (an introverted, sensor, thinker, judger) student who had wandered, unfulfilled academically, through English, is now preparing for the May Paper 2 with the only other ISTJ in the class, and is finally happy and achieving. Alongside all this student-centered activity, Price began, from the September of Grade 12, tracking the results for the specific IB Literature criteria: • IOC: Knowledge and Understanding - 92% of students in class showed growth with an average growth rate of 122% from the first assessment to the last. • IOC: Appreciation of Writer’s Choice - 92% of students in class showed growth with an average growth rate of 241% from the first assessment to the last. • IOC: Organization - 83% of students in class showed growth with an average growth rate of 101% from the first assessment to the last. • IOC: Language - 42% of students in class showed growth with an average growth rate of 17% from the first assessment to the last. Whilst the MBTI cannot be said to be a panacea to the many ways which cause unfulfilled potential, Price feels that her students became much more self- aware as learners. The final IB results will emerge in early July; whatever the outcome, the MBTI means the students have been given the opportunity to learn about themselves and from each other - and have certainly engaged with texts and analysis in ways they may not have encountered otherwise. Class Time | | May - Jun 2019 | 29