Thursday, March 5, 2020

Teaching Students SMART Goal Setting

Teaching Students SMART Goal Setting If you encourage your students to set goals, make sure theyre SMART goals. SMART is an acronym for Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, and Timely. Here are a few tips to share with your students as they engage in this valuable process: Specific Avoid any vague terms. Define the goal as clearly as possible and make sure you outline the who the goal involves, what is to be accomplished, where, and why it is a goal for the student. Measurable Students need to track their progress so that they know theyre making headway (and will know when their goal is achieved). Achievable Achievable goals are within the realm of possibilitymeaning, students have the resources they need to take steps toward them. The goals must be realistic, and students must have control over the actions that are necessary to reach them. Relevant Goals must have a purpose. In other words, your students should think about whether the goals they set are worthwhile. They should be linked to their long-term visions for themselves. Timely A clearly defined timeframe with specific milestones/due dates is important for any SMART goal. Share an example of a SMART goal like the one below: Because I want to major in engineering in college (relevant), I want to increase my math grade to a 90% between now, October 10, 2019, and December 15, 2019 (specific/timely) by attending 90% of the Tuesday morning study sessions and spending 15 minutes each weeknight reviewing class notes, in addition to completing any assigned homework (measurable/achievable). Questions about setting SMART goals? Contact Huntington.

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