Chase Mielke

Author. Speaker. Well-Being Expert.

A Call to Help Students Find Purpose

Each trimester, I take my students on a service learning field trip. We spend a morning volunteering at a local homeless shelter. In the afternoon, students pick up trash at a local park and do random acts of kindness. It can sound unglamorous, especially in the winter. But most students love it and look forward to it for months. Some of the most meaningful moments of my career happen on this trip. And, apparently it means something to the students as well.

After each trip we debrief the experience. It was during this that a student cried. Her words are what motivate myย philosophy of teaching:

โ€œI have never felt like I had purpose in school until today.โ€

Those words are both the most inspiring and frustrating words Iโ€™ve heard from a student. On one end, it saddens me that she isnโ€™t alone: so many students go through over a decade of education without feeling like it has (or they have) purpose.

On the other end, her words represent a critical opportunity for teachers. When students see their education as an opportunity to help others, it motivates their action and inspires their purpose.

I talk with students and educators about how we live within spheres of influence.

On the first level, our actions are motivated by one goal: to help myself. At this level a student does work simply to get a grade, to avoid being grounded, to look good for colleges. At this level a teacher tries a strategy to boost an evaluation or to minimize his/her own stress. At times we all live at this levelโ€”and at times we need to in order to prioritize our survival.

But at this level our actions are often shallow, our motivation is weak, and our sense of meaning is non-existent.

Meaning begins when we as teachers move into sphere two: Helping myself in order to help others [students].

sphere2

For a teacher, this means improving our craft with a focus on helping students thrive, such as implementing new technology that we know students will need in their dad-to-day lives.

A student in this sphere looks at how education can help him or her improve the world. And it is this lens that can change a studentโ€™s education and purpose.

David Yeager and a team of researchers published a series of studies in 2014 on โ€œSelf-Transcendence,โ€ the idea that oneโ€™s actions go beyond the immediate gain. Some of their key findings:

  • Students with a greater self-reported self-transcendence persevered on mundane tasks and were less likely to drop out of college even months later;
  • Student GPAs in math and science improved short and long term when given a simple intervention in which they read student testimonials describing a self-transcendent purpose for learning;
  • Brief self-transcendent interventions created deeper learning for students, even with mundane study tasks.

As a basic strategy, we can invite students to consider how their daily learning can transcend the day.

Other studies confirm this idea: Allowing students to link their learning to long-term benefits can improve engagement and learning.

A study lead by Chris Hulleman asked students to write brief summaries before science tests. An experimental group was asked to describe how the topic they learned could help themselves or others. Compared to the control group, which just wrote summaries, the โ€œvalueโ€ group improved their performance. Students who anticipated doing poorly in the class averaged almost an entire letter grade better than those in the control group.

In short, even asking students to think about how their learning can benefit their future or others can deepen their relationship with school.

As teachers, then, we need to transcend our own thinking and move into the outer sphere of influence. ย This is the circle that got us into teachingโ€”the one that, when realized, makes every stress of education seem worth it. It is the circle in which we help others to help others. Within this circle of influence we propel our purpose and help students find their own meaning.

spheres-of-purpose

Imagine if we shifted our lessons so that students applied their learning to help other people. Imagine having your tech students volunteer to help local library patrons learn technology. Picture your students utilizing their literacy skills to help organize and advertise for a larger cause.

There is no need to overcomplicate service-based learning.

Helping others to help others can be as simple as asking students to generate review videos to help future classes. Have a few minutes to spare in a class? Ask your students to write a note of gratitude to someone who has helped them.

To help our students find meaning, we need to shift our lens and ask ourselves, โ€œHow can my content help students help others?โ€ Consider what small tasks, what prompts, what projects can help your students transcend their world.

It is this outer circle that has helped my students find meaning and purpose more than any other. And, itโ€™s this circle that gets kids motivated to go pick up garbage in freezing rain or spend the day giving instead of getting.

We stereotype young adults as lazy. Selfish. Spoiled. But how often do we give them a chance to challenge these notions? ย This is a call to remember our calling: To help others help others. In doing so, I guarantee you will remember why you teachโ€”and why we should have faith in humanity.

This post originally appeared on WeAreTeachers.com

8 responses to “A Call to Help Students Find Purpose”

  1. Reblogged this on Learn for Lyfe and commented:
    I’ve never really thought about this, but it’s so true: one of the most beautiful parts about teaching is helping our students find their own meaning and enabling them to help others.

  2. Myself and another teacher are working with a brand-new crop of students during our intervention time. We get 30 minutes a day to make a difference with these kidults. Our group was referred to us because they are not completing work. We know we can’t “fix” that issue with the time we have. We’re both on the positive psychology band-wagon, advice on how to get student buy-in with our suuuper short time frame?

    • Hi Chris, I have MANY thoughts! The big idea I once learned from a colleague is “Connection before content.” No matter how short the time frame, always try to do a brief life-check-in before talking content.

      My personal favorite is a la Freedom Writers by having students jot down a quick (3-5 sentence) note telling me what’s going on in their world. Bonus points if you can write some supportive, non-judgmental responses to their notes and hand them back the next time you see them.

      And now I just got a flood of ideas to share! SOO much! I’ll write ideas up as a post to share with everyone. In the meantime, you can shoot me an email at chase.mielke@yahoo.com and I’ll give you some more specific ideas to your situation.

  3. So true! There are so many who complain about how lazy and self-absorbed teens and young adults are but what are we doing to change that? Thank you for taking the extra time to plan and implement service learning projects for your students! I have been studying and planning service learning projects for my students and look forward to implementing them when school starts.

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