Using SMART Goal Setting to Advance Student Achievement and Confidence

Credit: iStock.com/DaLiu
Credit: iStock.com/DaLiu
Students often struggle academically due to an inability to organize their lives around achievable goals. Students beyond early adulthood may have already reached certain personal goals but now must balance their priorities, time, and resources in striving for academic goals while still maintaining structure and commitments in family and personal relationships. Faculty can help by teaching goal setting and having students establish goals around a particular class or degree using the SMART goals method.

To continue reading, you must be a Teaching Professor Subscriber. Please log in or sign up for full access.

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Related Articles

I have two loves: teaching and learning. Although I love them for different reasons, I’ve been passionate about...
Need some advice about getting along with coworkers? Try your children’s bookshelves. Here’s what I learned from my...
PNC Bank recently rolled out a national ad campaign touting the virtues of boring money management. Rather than...
Many of us would like to assume that students who complete an assigned reading must thereby understand it....

Writers often evoke movies to describe the threats posed by artificial intelligence. Although AI has been around in...

In Rasselas, Samuel Johnson’s philosopher Imlac offers the following bleak assessment of life: “Human life is every where...

Most instructors breathe an inner sigh when they see a roomful of students on laptops in their classroom....

Are you signed up for free weekly Teaching Professor updates?

You'll get notified of the newest articles.

The Teaching Professor Conference 2024

June 7-9, 2024 • New Orleans

Connect with Fellow Educators at The Teaching Professor Conference!