Joyful Learning in Classroom
Joyful Learning in Classroom
Joyful learning is important teaching strategy .mostly teacher ignore joyful learning or
teacher is not trying for joyful learning in classroom. Teacher should try for joyful leering in
our pedagogical subject. As teachers, we always want to create joy in the classroom as it
facilitates more learning and certainly faster learning. The challenge is how do we create
joyful learning in the classroom? How do we infect our students with enthusiasm? How do
we bring fun and joy in the classroom? Here are some simple techniques which will help us
have the most joyful learning possible. In this paper I discussed what joyful, joyful learning
in the class room.
Joyful learning-
"Engaging, empowering, and playful learning of meaningful content in a loving and
supportive community. Through the joyful learning process a student is always improving
knowledge of self and the world."
Joy, according to the Oxford English dictionary, is described as a vivid emotion or feeling
Of pleasure. The adjective of joy is joyful which also describes a kind of feeling, expressing
and causing great pleasure. The joyful learning is a kind of learning process or experience
which could make learner feels pleasure in a learning scenario/process. Children deserve
school experiences that foster a sense of well-being; that all children should experience
success; and that all children must have opportunities for good fortune - all this, while
making certain that all primary school meet the academic standards that fosters future school
and personal success. Yashpal committee (1993) also opined that burden of school bag
should be reduced drastically to make learning enjoyful. It recommends, There is no
jurisdiction for torturing the young children by compelling them to carry very heavy bags of
books everyday to schools. Textbooks should be treated as school property and thus, there
should be no need for children to purchase the books individually and carry them daily to
homes. A separate time-table for the assignment of home work and for the use of textbooks
and notebooks be prepared by the school and be made known to the children in advance.
Kohn (2004) as a neurologist and classroom teacher has shown that there are several benefits
of joy in the classroom. Neuro imaging studies and measurement of
Brain chemical transmitters reveal that students' comfort level can influence information
transmission and storage in the brain (Thanos et all, 1999). When students are engaged and
motivated and feel minimal stress, information flows freely through the affective filter in the
amygdale and they achieve higher levels of cognition, make connections, and experience
aha moments. Such learning comes not from quiet classrooms and directed lectures, but
from classrooms with an atmosphere of exuberant discovery (Kohn, 2004).
Joyful learning in the classroom
Find the Pleasure in Learning
If we want students to be charged with enthusiasm, if we want them to see school and
learning as joyful, we need to rethink how and what we teach. Let them enjoy learning as
well as they enjoy games. Find ways to increase laughter in the classroom.
Music and Rhythm
many of the things I remember most easily were learned with song. Ask your students to
create songs and rhythm when learning something new and they will remember much longer
and have an easier time retrieving the information for a test.
Give Students Choice
I tell my students to decide on the topic they want to study for that week and then as
experts they will teach the next week. Try this in your classroom.
Let Students Create Things
People like to create things. The list of what students can create across the curriculum is
virtually limitless: newspapers and magazines, brochures, stories, picture books, posters,
PowerPoint presentations, interviews, oral histories, models, diagrams, blueprints and floor
plans, plays and role-plays, mock trials, photographs, paintings, songs, surveys, graphs,
documentary videos etc.
Show off Student Work
I tell my teacher education students that the walls of their classrooms should speak to people;
they should say exactly what goes on in that space throughout the school day. I can tell what
teachers value by simply walking into their classrooms and looking at the walls.