Becoming a skilled teacher takes time, experience and practice. Reflecting on your lessons should be done on a regular basis to help you understand and learn how to improve and evolve as a teacher.
Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs
Physiological (or Basic) Needs
If we are hungry, we need to eat. If we are cold, we move to get the blood flowing or head inside to keep warm. A student may not tell you that they are hungry, thirsty or cold.
Safety and Security
When we’re scared, we try to change what we are doing or the environment we are doing it in. A student is trusting us to make these decisions for them.
Belonging
When we feel that we are not liked or accepted our motivation can change to focus on this instead of the task at hand. Often students have never met each other, it can be up to us to help create a sense of belonging. With young children, it is especially important to build trust and a strong group rapport to feed a sense of belonging.
Self Esteem
Giving positive feedback to our students is especially important in helping them to feel good about what they are doing and build their self esteem.
Self-Actualisation
Creating this for your students can be extremely challenging. Consider this to be the absolute pinnacle of performance and achievement.
Example
The child has gone from feeling good to not wanting to move because they are not feeling safe. They do not have the ability to deal with their need to feel safe. Their motivation has lowered from Self Esteem to the need for Safety and Security. It is up to you as the instructor to find a solution. You say, “Shall we take our boards off and see what is over the edge of the cliff?” The child agrees to have a look. As they look over the edge the child discovers that it is not a cliff, just a steeper off-trail run. She looks up at you and says, “Can we go down there?”
If we know which of Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs is affecting our student’s performance, we may then have the ability to change or adapt what we are doing to help cater to that need. We should try to be attentive to a student’s energy levels and body language as a basic indicator. If a student is struggling or looking uncomfortable, ask yourself, why is this? Is there anything I could change, say or do to help?