Thursday, March 19, 2009

Introducing TAGteach to Fishermen Part 5

An ongoing account of TAGteach introductions, triumphs and tribulations!
Chapter 5 of
TAGteach, Parrots and the Men from the Bering Sea!

Tagging the Table

By the afternoon, I thought the class was really starting to understand the TAGteach concepts and the benefits of delivering clear information and positive reinforcement.
Later that evening, I was sure of it.

While half sitting, half leaning on those cozy casino stools provided for those of us who station ourselves at nickel slot machines, I heard a louder than normal ruckus coming from the nearby roulette table.

Intrigued enough to leave my chance at nickel fortune; I found the guys from the Seafisher gathered tightly around the roulette wheel and table. Phil, yelled out, “Theresa, watch this!”
He showed me the tagger and started chanting to the roulette dealer…
“Click it, tip it…click it, tip it…click it, tip it”
The dealer just looked up a me with a big Cheshire grin.

They had been telling the dealer about TAGteach during the night’s gaming and jokingly told the dealer that every time they won, he would hear a tag (click) and that would mean a tip was coming for him. The dealer played along and soon everyone was clicking and tipping and laughing about the whole thing.

All of the laughter brought a bit of attention from the other casino customers and also produced a few security guards. Nothing illegal or suspect, just seventeen large burly fishermen chanting and making clicking noises at the roulette table…

The guys and the dealer explained to the security guards that all was quite well; they were just practicing positive reinforcement that they had learned about in a training seminar.

Although positive reinforcement can’t make a little ball fall into the desired slot of a roulette wheel, the dealer was rewarded when it did. Interesting concept…can one reinforce fate?

I told you these guys were brilliant!

Theresa

Monday, March 16, 2009

New Level II TAGteacher: Maggie Ouillette


I would like to introduce the newest TAGteacher to achieve the Level II certification status, Margaret (Maggie) Ouillette.

Maggie has been diligently practicing her TAGteach skills with many clients and introducing TAGteach to volunteers at a local humane society shelter.

Here is an excerpt from her project:
“My level II certification project involves volunteers at the local humane society shelter. The organization has recently introduced a training program for dogs awaiting adoption. Volunteers work with the dogs at the shelter each evening. The goal of the program is to reduce the dogs’ stress levels by getting them out of their kennels and teaching them basic behaviors such as loose leash walking, object targeting (go to place, push easy button, use a doggy nail file). The volunteers use clicker training/Operant conditioning techniques to train the dogs. After reading the training logs and viewing video footage of the training, I noticed that the techniques were sometimes being applied incorrectly. Because the program is new, I felt it was the perfect opportunity to get incoming volunteers off on the right foot by using TAGteach to train them.”
You can see Maggie’s project journal by going to the TAGteach Yahoo group and then links.
Congratulations Maggie and thank-you for all of your hard work!
TAGteach International
Photo from Maggie:
"What I love about the photo is how the person in black is holding her right hand.
A previous tag point was... non clicker hand to post it. The post it is gone, they're working on a different tag point, but her hand is totally plastered to her leg! TAGteach, I love it!"

Monday, March 9, 2009

Basics Article #3: Peer Tagging

TAGteach™ (Teaching with Acoustical Guidance) is a new way of teaching using positive reinforcement with a click sound marker to identify successful performance. In past articles we have talked about the tag point—the exact response, action, or position that a teacher pinpoints with a tag (the click sound) to tell the learner “YES, that was right!” and how to associate the audible tag with a tangible reinforcer.

The most powerful—and empowering—aspect of TAGteach comes from handing the taggers (handheld sound makers) over to the learners. “Tagging lets you be the teacher and you feel good about helping your teammates do better,” said one 10-year-old cheerleader from North Carolina. “When learners tag each other they learn twice and they become caring compassionate teachers,” said Theresa McKeon, coach of national level gymnasts and TAGteach pioneer.

How do learners learn twice when they tag their peers? First, they practice and learn while being tagged themselves. Second, they learn by assessing the tag point when tagging their partner—which offers a very different perspective. Suddenly everyone is busy and learning, even if it is not their turn.

All learners receive positive feedback equally, including the quietly average learners who tend to escape the teacher’s notice. The teacher is free to move from group to group giving guidance. The learner who is doing the tagging often internalizes the movement and performs it herself subconsciously while watching her partner. The teacher or coach can see right away if the learners understand the tag point by having them tag a peer. The most important benefits of peer tagging are that it promotes empathy for others, gives concrete practice in focusing on the positive (while ignoring errors), and provides a mechanism for moving away from old-style teaching based on scolding and punishment.

Peer tagging in pairs

There are several peer tagging configurations that are used to get the most out of a session. The simplest of these is tagging in pairs. Learners work with a partner and take turns tagging each other for the tag point assigned and explained by the teacher. They switch places after a preset time limit (three minutes possibly) or after the learner has earned five or ten tags.

Groups of three work together with one learner tagging the other two. This configuration works best when the activity involves actions by two participants. For example, two learners bump a volleyball back and forth while the third person tags the other two for bent knees during the bump. Once the players have 10 tags each, the group rotates so that everyone gets a chance to tag.

Peer tagging in lines

Some sports drills are conducive to tagging in lines. Learners line up and one person at a time from each line moves across the floor while another learner tags. Dribbling a soccer ball through a series of cones with the tag point being “kick with the side of your foot,” is an example. The fun of this can be increased by having two parallel lines race against each other to see which team can earn the most tags.

Peer tagging during drills

Any sports or lesson drill can be modified to include a peer tagging position. Just insert another position into the drill through which the learners rotate, handing the tagger off to the next person when the positions switch. If there are injured players, they can take turns tagging during the drills and still be involved with the practice.

Peer tagging with heterogeneous groups

Groups of learners of different ages and skill levels can work together, tagging each other. As long as the tag point is well defined, even young children or those with learning or cognition deficits can see the correct response, action, or position—and tag it. Give younger children tag points that are easier to achieve, or require fewer tags from them for prize redemption compared to older learners. Design tag points based on ability so that all learners can have fun helping each other improve. You’ll be amazed to see the effect of peer tagging on sibling relationships when competition and criticism is turned into cooperation and positive reinforcement.

Next time we’ll talk about the versatility of TAGteach and how you can seamlessly incorporate tagging into existing lesson plans, without changing the technical content of your teaching.

We invite you to join the TAGteacher discussion group at www.tagteach.com to meet others who are implementing TAGteach in various disciplines and to see the list of upcoming TAGteach seminars.

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

TAGteach Overseas!!


TAGteach fans -As we are back from a second successful trip to Japan, here's a quick reminder that we have two more very exciting overseas TAGteach certification seminars coming up…please feel free to cross post.

TAGteach International announces upcoming Certification Seminars
Madrid, Spain on the 18th and 19th of April
This seminar will be given in English and translated into Spanish

Balmberg, Switzerland on the 9th and 10th of May
This seminar will be given in English and translated into German andFrench

Guaranteed to change the way you look at teaching and learning!
TAGteach is proven to accelerate learning and improve communication
TAGteach builds positive, focused communication and self-assessmentskills
TAGteach can help you to motivate even the toughest group
TAGteach is a technology universally applicable and beneficial to any population

You can register at www.tagteach.com/events
http://www.tagteach.com/events
For more information on TAGteach
www.tagteach.blogspot.com http://www.tagteach.blogspot.com/
www.tagteach.com http://www.tagteach.com/
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/tagteach