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Teaching, No Greater Call: A Resource Guide for Gospel Teaching

Helping Learners Be Attentive

"17: Helping Learners Be Attentive," Teaching, No Greater Call: A Resource Guide for Gospel Teaching, 71

A Sunday School teacher shared the following insight about a lesson he had taught:

"I felt like I had taken the class on a hike through the forest. As we started to walk down the trail together, I pointed out interesting scriptural insights as we passed them along the way. I carefully explained the ideas of the lesson, like a guide would explain the different kinds of foliage found along a forest trail.

"At one point, I turned around, as it seemed, to look for my class members. I discovered they were quite a ways back on the scriptural trail. None of them had kept up with me. Some were lingering; some were stuck; others had wandered off the trail and were lost. It was as if I had to go back down the trail, gather the class up, and try to move forward again."

As this experience illustrates, a teacher can sometimes get "separated" from learners during lessons. Learners sometimes lose interest or become distracted.

How can teachers help learners remain attentive? There is no single answer to this question, but there are things you can do that will make a difference.

Observe and Listen to Those You Teach

You can often tell if those you teach are getting "separated" from you. You may notice that they are more restless than usual, that they are not reading along when others read scripture passages aloud, or that they are talking to each other about things that do not relate to the lesson. You may sense a lack of thought or enthusiasm in their responses to questions that you ask.

Be careful when interpreting clues to learners' attentiveness. Some who appear to be "separated" may actually be following a lesson closely. For example, a class member who is not looking at you may be thinking about something that has been said in class or pondering a prompting he or she has received from the Holy Ghost.

When you are teaching by the Spirit, you will often be blessed to discern the attentiveness of those you teach. At times you may be prompted to make changes in a lesson to help redirect learners' attention.

How to Help Learners Be Attentive

The following suggestions can assist you as you help learners be attentive:

Individuals' Responsibility to Participate

As you seek to help learners be more attentive, remember that they are ultimately responsible for their own participation. If someone does not participate, do not pressure that person to participate. Instead, continue to be interested, respectful, and helpful, remembering this counsel from the Lord to priesthood bearers: "No power or influence can or ought to be maintained ... , only by persuasion, by long-suffering, by gentleness and meekness, and by love unfeigned" (D&C 121:41).

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