Autonomy-supportive teaching
an instructional effort by teachers to provide students with a classroom environment that supports their need for autonomy. The teacher who applies this style highly respects student perspectives, initiative, and needs. They see the student as an ally and their role as guiding the learning process.
Practices suggested:

Pre-lesson planning:

Take the student's perspective

When preparing instruction, teachers must consider students' perspectives. This involves imagining themselves in the students' place, thinking about students' needs, wants, goals, preferences, and emotions. Teachers should anticipate potential obstacles and confusion students may face.

How to achiev this practice of take the
student's perspective

Teachers should ask themselves, "Will students find this lesson to be need-satisfying, curiosity-provoking, interesting, and personally important?"

At the beginning of the lesson, teachers should encourage conversation by asking for students' opinions: "This is the plan for today. Is it good for you? Any suggestions?" The teacher can then incorporate these suggestions into the flow of instruction.

teachers should observe students' engagement in the lesson or activity and adjust their future instruction based on this observation.

2-Lesson Begins
Invite the student to engage in the learning activity

Vitalize inner motivational resources:

Teachers use instructions as an opportunity to activate and nurture students' psychological needs for autonomy, competence, and relatedness, as well as to foster their curiosity, interest, and intrinsic goals.

This is achieved by building instructions around these six inner resources.Teachers should provide strategies that support them :

Autonomy:
Offer choices in learning activities, encourage student voice, and promote self-directed learning.

Competence:
Set clear goals, and design tasks that build skills and confidence.

Relatedness:
Use collaborative activities, build positive teacher-student relationships, and create an inclusive environment.

Curiosity:
Implement inquiry-based learning, connect lessons to real-world applications.

Interest:
Select engaging content and use varied instructional methods that capture students' attention.

Intrinsic Goals:
"Encourage goal setting, design meaningful activities, and promote self-assessment and reflection.

Provide explanatory rationales for requests:

It's crucial for teachers to provide students with reasons why they should complete a task during instruction. To do this effectively, teachers need two main skills :

They must think reflectively about why they are asking students to do the task. By mindfully considering a good rationale for their request, teachers can develop this skill to a high level.

Second, they need to communicate this rationale in a meaningful way that satisfies students who may not want to do the activity.

This aspect is very important to address at the beginning of presenting the request because it answers students' questions about why the task is necessary. Providing a clear rationale increases the value of the task and makes it more interesting to students.

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In-lesson (Addressing and solving problems that arise):

Acknowledge and accept students' expressions of negative affect:

Classrooms generally face three main problems: disengagement, misbehavior, and poor performance, which have negative effects.

teachers avoid controlling behavior when responding to students' expressions of negative affect. Instead, they acknowledge and accept the negative effect, welcoming these expressions as valid opportunities to improve rules, assignments, and learning activities.

when a teacher notices a student is disengaged, they might begin a conversation by saying, "I see you're feeling bored today." This acknowledges the student's feelings. The student might agree, prompting the teacher to ask, "What might we do differently this time? Any suggestions?" By doing so, the teacher gives the student choice and space, fostering a more supportive learning environment.

Rely on informational, non-pressuring language:
This communication style that teachers follow to help students develop autonomy by avoiding judgment and providing opportunities for them to suggest solutions and take ownership of their learning.

"Informational" means providing students with observations without judgment.

For example, if a teacher encounters a student with a low score, they might start the conversation by saying, "I noticed that you got a surprisingly low score on your test." This statement is informational because it presents a fact without judgment.

Non-pressure language is a way of communicating that avoids creating a sense of obligation or stress for the student., increasing their sense of choice and engagement..

To continue the first example of Informational with non-pressure language, the teacher might ask, "Do you know why this happened?" The student's response can be the starting point for addressing the issue.

It's important for the teacher to avoid controlling language, such as "You must improve your grade," as it can create pressure and reduce the student's sense of autonomy.

Display patience:

Displaying patience is an instructional behavior that requires teachers to develop tolerance toward students' performance. It means that the teacher calmly waits for student input, giving them the time and space they need. This is important because learning and understanding take time. According to this approach, the teacher's role is to ;

listen and watch without interfering or helping until the student asks for it, even when they struggle.

Being patient and calm helps students feel that they own their learning process and can choose to seek help based on their inner needs.