Each MegaSkills Workshop for Parent Involvement includes Five Complementary Instructional Components.
To provide an overview of how this works, here are examples of each component drawn from five different MegaSkills Parent Workshop Programs.
1. Setting the Stage
Confidence
and Motivation: My Child's Special Quality (10-15
minutes)
This warm-up exercise introduces participants to each other and begins the work session.
- Think
of one positive quality about your child (or a child
you know) and tell this "secret" to the
person on your right. Each participant will then
know a special quality of someone else's child.
Share these together with the group.
2. Mini-Lecture and Discussion
Effort and Responsibility: Then and Now (20-minutes)
- Sometimes
we hear that "children just aren't like they
used to be." Were children really "better"
in the good, old days? Did you, when you were a
child, make more effort and act more responsibility
than your own children do?
- If you made more effort than your children, why is this? Perhaps the reverse is true and your children today work harder and are more responsible.
Talk
about parent expectations and children at different
ages and stages. What, for example, does "responsible"
mean at age 3 or 6, or 10 or 15? How does it change?
Ask participants for examples from their own experience.
- Are we asking too much of our children? Too little?
- Can
we look to people prominent in their fields to provide
examples of what to do? Or are we seeing what
not do?
3. Small Group Sharing
Caring and Teamwork: Down Memory Lane (15 minutes)
Form small groups of 4-6 participants
- Think
about and remember a time when someone was particularly
helpful to you. These need not be big moments. They
can be small but meaningful caring times. Share
these memories with your group.
- Think
about a time when you were helpful and caring to
someone else. What did you do? What did the person
say? Share a memory of one or two of these incidents
with your group.
4. Whole Group Discussion
Focus and Lack of Focus (15 minutes)
- Ask
participants to think of an individual who has Focus.
List some of these "focused" people-celebrities
and just plain folks. How do they demonstrate Focus?
What do they accomplish?
- Do we each pay attention in different ways? Some people need quiet; some people need noise. Finding "novelty" in what we experience has been identified as one way to help us pay attention.
- What keeps us from being focused? Ask participants to brainstorm a list of "distractions" in their daily lives - at work and/or at home.
- Next
to each distraction, ask participants to identify
at least one solution. These
can be easy, daily ideas, such as turning off the
TV, not taking phone calls at dinner, etc. Don't
edit. List
as many of these you can cover in the time period.
Ask participants to think to themselves which
of these solutions to daily distractions can work
for them. (See Optional Activity:
Using Focus to Battle Stress)
At
times we can get so distracted that we forget what is
really most important to us. Use the Appreciation Plan
to get focused and refocused on the everyday experiences
that really matter.
5. Wrap Up
Getting
Ready for School: Taking Heart and Toughening Up
There are, as cited in MegaSkills, five basic messages children need to hear about "having heart" for the everyday rough and tumble of school:
- These things happen.
- They don't kill us.
- There is always another day.
- Have courage.
- Remember, we love you.
Tell parents: Before you
leave this workshop, say one of these aloud or make
up your own "have heart" message. Say it aloud
now to a member of this group, say it to yourself, and
when you get home today or tomorrow, say it loud and
clear to your child.
_______________________
The
samples above are drawn from five of the twelve complete
MegaSkills Workshops provided in the MegaSkills Leader
Training for Parent Involvement Program. Each workshop
provides a consistent, sustainable narrative with participant
experiential exercises for leaders conducting the program.
Sampling the MegaSkills? Essentials Programs
MegaSkills Achievement Essentials Lessons Include Six Complementary Instructional Components
Here
are examples of each component drawn from six different
MegaSkills Achievement Lessons. These can be used as
"stand-alone" activities or can be integrated
into the academic subjects as outlined in the Essentials
Sourcebook.
1) Presenting the MegaSkills
What is Confidence?
It gives me the courage to do what I think is right and not worry about what others think.
2) Defining the MegaSkills
Motivation -Wanting to do something.
| We recognize motivation when we see it in ourselves: |
We recognize motivation when we see it to others: |
| We tend to say YES more than we say NO. |
These are people who have goals and who work toward them: |
| We say, "Tell me about that. I want to learn more. That's interesting." |
Mary is learning to play the guitar. |
| When someone says, "You won't be able to do that," and you say, "Let me try it." |
Tom is learning how to cook. |
| |
These children say; "That's something I want to learn about!" |
| |
These children remind themselves of what they need to do to reach their goals. |
3) Talking About the MegaSkills
Responsibility? Conversation Starters.
Early Grades |
Middle/Upper Grades |
| Did you draw yourself at home? at school? at another place? |
Can we recognize responsibility by what people say about us? |
| Are you more responsible at school or at home? |
"I can count on you."
"You are reliable and dependable."
"When you tell me something, I can believe in you." |
| Do you turn off the TV when you have other things to do? That's a sign of self-discipline? |
Who or what helps you be more responsible? |
| That's responsibility. |
Is there anyone who encourages you to responsible? |
| |
Is there a special person who helps you to act responsibly? |
| |
What have you done recently that shows you are a responsible person |
4) Seeing the MegaSkills Work
Initiative:
Early Grades: Seeing Initiative Work in Me
One way I
can take charge of my TV watching is to check how many
hours I watch. Two hours a day is a top limit.
If
I watch more than that, what can I do instead? In my
promise to myself below,
I
will try to list what I can do instead of TV: Maybe
I will learn new games, or play with friends, read good
books, practice the guitar?
That's INITIATIVE!
Now I can tell myself and my friends:
Take INITIATIVE!
Using
My Own Initiative: I promise
___________________________________________
___________________________________________
___________________________________________
___________________________________________
Middle/Upper
Grades: Seeing Initiative Work in Others
Inventors,
artists, politicians use initiative. Let's think together
of people who have good ideas and work to make them
happen.
Let's
think of men and women from all walks of life:
famous people like Thomas Edison and Martin Luther
King and not such famous people like our own teachers
and parents. What do they do that shows Initiative?
Recognizing
Initiative in Others: I see
____________________________________________
____________________________________________
____________________________________________
____________________________________________
5)
Thinking
about the MegaSkills
Perseverance? Moving to Bigger Questions
Upper Grades
Try these
for a lively discussion:
When we are
first learning to ride a bicycle, we fall off a lot
but most of us keep on trying? When we are learning
to ice skate, we fall down a lot but many of us keep
on trying? When we have a hard homework assignment,
we work on it but many students don't keep on trying?
What's the
reason? Sometimes it's very hard to keep at something.
Is there a secret, maybe the idea of a reward, that
makes it easier to keep on going?
Is the journey
to something really the best part, or is the best part
finally getting there? That is, is the experience of
trying to learn something as exciting as having learned
it?
How
do we make ourselves do things that we don't want to
do? 6)
Technology
Tips
Focus? Technology Tips
There is so much to be found on the
Web; it can seem like a very strange land. When we know
what we're looking for, it is a wondrous land. When
we don't, we may retreat. There is help. Every day new
guides and maps to the Net are appearing in newspapers
and magazines. Start notebooks of favorite Web sites:
you will create your own map to this new land
and you will stay on track, focused and able to meet
your goals.
_______________________
The
samples above are drawn from six different MegaSkills.
The MegaSkills Essentials Sourcebook provides consistent
and tested components for each MegaSkill.
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