About Me
Title: Developing an Engaging and Effective Teaching Style 1. Understand Your Students First Know their age group, interests, and learning styles (visual, auditory, kinesthetic). Use ice-breakers and friendly conversation to build rapport and reduce fear or hesitation. Be approachable and patient—students learn better when they feel safe and respected. 2. Start with a Hook Begin each lesson with something catchy: a question, a short story, a riddle, or a real-life example. Example: Instead of starting a history lesson by reading the chapter, ask, “What if you woke up in 1857? What would life be like?” 3. Make Content Visual and Interactive Use colorful charts, diagrams, flashcards, animations, videos, and real objects when possible. Replace plain board writing with mind maps, doodles, and visual aids. Include students in drawing or building visuals. 4. Keep It Simple, Break It Down Avoid long lectures and complex explanations. Break concepts into small, digestible parts.