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Simple Questions On the First Day of School that Teach Purpose

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By the end of the first day of school, I need index cards with each of my students’ names on them. I’ll use these to randomly call on students throughout the year during Think-Pair-Shares, doing all in my power to ensure that every student speaks, every day, and I’ll use them as a quick seating chart rearrangement tool, placing them randomly on desks for the first few weeks so that I can see how my students work in different social groupings.

But these index cards also offer me a simple opportunity on Day 1: the opportunity to teach Purpose.

Purpose: a “north star” for student motivation

Before I try explaining the purpose of my class, I want my students to take a crack at defining some purpose of their own. Granted, most of them are jacked up on nerves because it’s their first day of high school, but it doesn’t matter — without purpose, they’ll struggle to focus all year long.

When we have a purpose — and when I use that word, I’m referring to it in the Dr. Bill Damon of Stanford sense; if you haven’t read his work, start with this article and graduate to this book —  we’re driven by something larger than us. Our actions each day are oriented toward some future goal or some desire to serve the greater good.

And this isn’t pie in the sky stuff — it’s a motivational fusion reactor. When driven by purpose, our students don’t need us to repeatedly explain the answer to “When will I ever use this?” Purpose, then, gets us closer to what Dr. David Conley has led me to believe is the holy grail of education: student ownership of learning.

Sadly, purpose-driven students are a tiny minority — one of Damon’s studies (2008) found that only 20% of students were “approaching their studies with a clear sense of purpose.” [1]

Simple questions for developing purpose and getting those index cards completed

I’ve written about this activity elsewhere, so I’ll just summarize it here. On the students’ index cards, their names should be on one side, and, on the other, they need to respond to these questions:

  • What kind of person do you want to be?
  • What kind of impact do you want to have? [2]

Notice how very much this teaches you about a child — so much more than the “Tell me something about yourself” questions I used to have students respond to on their index cards.

But in addition to giving me some fascinating, insightful reading on the afternoon after the first day of school, these index cards have also served a much larger goal: they’ve introduced my students to the idea that purpose is ultimately an inside job — it will only serve to motivate them when they seek to make it central to their life.

And that, dear reader, is something I’ll be teaching toward all year.

Notes:

  1. Damon, W. (2008). The path to purpose: Helping our children find their calling in life. New York: The Free Press.
  2. I’ve used questions like this in the past, but they resurfaced for me while browsing CharacterLab.org’s page on Purpose, which you can access here.

Thank you to the hard-working, purpose-driven folks at Character Lab for the inspiration for today’s post, and to Dr. Bill Damon for his thought-provoking work around purpose in education.


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