Your Ad Here

January 24, 2010

XAT 2010 Expected Cut- offs

Institute Expected Cut-off
Flagship Program Number of Seats Overall Cut-off in 2009 (Percentile)
XLRI - BM 34+
BM & PMIR 120 98.03
XLRI - PMIR 31+
BM & PMIR 120 95
XIM-B 31+
PGDM 120 96.21 (89.55 for Orissa Quota)
SP Jain 23+
PGDM 120 85
IFMR 22+
PGDM 60 85.29
GIM 26+
PGDM 120 93
LIBA 24+
PGDBM 120 91.5
KIAMS 20+
PGDM 60 72 (Girls); 79 (Boys)
XIME 23+
PGDM 120 90
XISS 15+
PGDPM 75 55



























































January 13, 2010

Ways To Motivate Students

1. Rewards: Rewards and privileges are great motivational tools for hard work. Teachers can use a variety of them to encourage student participation.

Examples of privileges or rewards are as follows: Lunch with the teacher allows students to come back to the classroom and it helps foster student-teacher relationship. Extra center time allows students to have a few more minutes at a computer lab. Snacks can be offered as incentives.

2. Expectations: Teachers should set reasonable objectives for every lesson that allow their students to progress in the classroom. Expect students to achieve the objectives, and they will. Studies show that students achieve at higher rates when their teachers have high expectations for them.

3. Relevance: Show students how what they are learning matters in real life. Guide students to discuss the new material, and allow students to draw on their own experiences to learn and understand the new material.

4. Incorporate different learning styles: Use a variety of strategies in the classroom to facilitate the lesson. Classroom discussions consist of whole group learning.

5. Involve the kid's family. : "The school is only one of the two principal socializing institutions in society, the other being the family," Students want more support at home for learning. Hence wherever possible involve the families as much as possible.

6. Praise Students: Recognize work in class, display good work in the classroom and send positive notes home to parents and hold weekly awards in your classroom

7. Track Improvement: In those difficult classes, it can feel like a never-ending uphill battle, so try to remind students that they’ve come a long way. Set achievable, short-term goals, emphasis improvement, keep self-evaluation forms to fill out and compare throughout the year, or revisit mastered concepts that they once struggled with to refresh their confidence.

8. Organize Field Trips

9. Have a fun incentive for doing well on standardized test

10. Hold a poetry slam: When kids are given opportunities to perform and share in a public forum, they rise to the challenge. They put out their best effort to express themselves, and it takes the learning to a much deeper place.

11. Have students participate: One of the major keys to motivation is the active involvement of students in their own learning. Standing in front of them and lecturing to them (at them?) is thus a relatively poor method of teaching. It is better to get students involved in activities or in some other way getting physically involved in the lesson. A lesson about nature, for example, would be more effective walking outdoors than looking at pictures.

12. Make learning visual: Even before young people were reared in a video environment, it was recognized that memory is often connected to visual images. We can provide better learning by attaching images to the ideas we want to convey. Use drawings, diagrams, pictures, charts, graphs, bulleted lists, even three-dimensional objects you can bring to class to help students anchor the idea to an image.

It is very helpful to begin a class session or a series of classes with a conceptual diagram of the relationship of all the components in the class so that at a glance students can apprehend a context for all the learning they will be doing. This will enable them to develop a mental framework or filing system that will help them to learn better and remember more.

13. Provide positive feedback: Inspire students and reinforce that they can do well. Evaluate student work as soon as possible after project completion, and be sure that the feedback is clear and constructive.

14. Build quality relationships with students: Students like to feel that teachers are involved in their lives. Take time to get to know the students and talk to them individually. Student engagement encourages a positive connection and motivation to work harder towards positive results.

Your Ad Here