Teachers have always been on the lookout for ways to keep their students engaged and interested in their lessons. One super effective technique is using lesson hooks. These hooks are designed to grab students’ attention and make them curious about what they’re going to learn. In this article, we’ll dive into what lesson hooks are, explore how to create compelling hooks for your lessons, and share an awesome example of hooks generated by Khanmigo, Khan Academy’s AI Teaching assistant.
Let’s get hooked!
A lesson hook is like a secret ingredient that adds excitement and captivates students’ attention right from the start. Its main goal? To make students curious, motivated, and fully engaged in the lesson. Whether it’s a catchy anecdote, a thought-provoking quote, captivating visuals, brain-teasing riddles, or even short videos and music, lesson hooks come in various forms to ignite curiosity and make learning enjoyable. When students are curious and interested, they become more attentive and engaged, and feel ready to absorb the lesson content.
Creating engaging and motivating lesson hooks is key to keeping students excited. Make them interesting and relevant. Remember, a good hook is challenging, creative, and thought-provoking while still being related to the topic.
Keep the hooks short and sweet—too much information can lose students’ attention. Encourage lively, active participation. Don’t forget to ask students what they enjoy and what keeps them interested. Let’s make learning fun! 🎉
Let’s use a real-world example of a middle school class about “Earth and society” (MS-ESS3-1) to talk through different alternatives and tips.
Incorporating technology and AI can create a dynamic learning experience that is relevant and relatable to students. AI-powered platforms like Khanmigo provide interactive lessons and content and include gamification principles to make learning more fun.
Let’s take a look at what we can pull up in seconds from Khanmigo using the same topic example (climate change) as above:
Khanmigo: In this activity, I’ll help you come up with some ideas for lesson hooks to spark your students’ interest in your lesson at the beginning of class! What grade level and subject are you teaching? What is the learning objective for the lesson (or at least the topic)?
Teacher: Middle school class about “Earth and society” (MS-ESS3-1).
Khanmigo: Fantastic! Middle school, Earth and society. What a fascinating subject! Let’s dive into creating some engaging hooks for your students.
Hook 1: Start with a surprising fact. “Did you know that if we continue to produce waste at our current rate, by the year 2100, we will need a landfill that is 35,000 square miles just to dispose of it all? That’s about the size of Indiana” This can lead to higher-order thinking questions like, “What are some ways we can reduce waste?” or “How does our waste production impact the Earth and our society?”
Hook 2: For a more engaging version, you could bring in a bag of trash and dump it out in front of the class. (Make sure it’s clean trash, of course!) Ask the students, “Can you imagine how much trash we produce in a day as a class, a school, a city, a country? What about in a year?” This hands-on, visual demonstration could lead to questions like, “What can we do to reduce the amount of trash we produce?” or “How does the amount of trash we produce affect our environment and society?”
Which hook do you like, and what changes would you make?
Let’s try taking the class outside!
Teacher: We’d like to take the lesson hook outside; can you give suggestions here?
Khanmigo: Absolutely, taking the lesson outside is a fantastic idea! It’s always great to get students interacting with their environment. Let’s adjust those hooks to fit an outdoor setting.
Hook 1: Start by asking students to look around and count how many pieces of litter they can see in a certain area. Then, surprise them with the fact: “Did you know that if we continue to produce waste at our current rate, by the year 2100, we will need a landfill that is 35,000 square miles, which is about the size of Indiana, just to dispose of it all?” This could lead to questions like, “What can we do to reduce the amount of litter we see?” or “How does littering affect our environment and society?”
Hook 2: For a more engaging version, you could organize a mini trash pickup event. Give each student a pair of gloves and a bag, and ask them to pick up as much litter as they can in 10 minutes. Afterwards, gather the students and ask, “Can you imagine how much trash we produce in a day as a class, a school, a city, a country? What about in a year?” This could lead to questions like, “What can we do to reduce the amount of trash we produce?” or “How does the amount of trash we produce affect our environment and society?”
What do you think of these outdoor hooks? Would you like to make any changes?
Come try Khanmigo for teachers. We are building a future where you will have your very own AI teaching assistant. Right now, we offer a lot of exciting features, such as standards-aligned lesson planning tied to Khan Academy’s world-class content library; an on-demand summary of recent student work so you can quickly assess progress and identify areas where additional support is needed; and Khanmigo-crafted learning objectives, rubrics, and even exit tickets.
Lesson hooks are the secret sauce to keeping students engaged and motivated on their learning journey. As teachers, we get to create hooks that are interesting, relevant, and relatable to our students. Let’s make learning interactive and exciting by incorporating videos, podcasts, and simulations. And guess what? We can even use cool AI-powered platforms like Khanmigo to take it up a notch. So, let’s spark curiosity, boost interest, and set our students on the path to academic success!
Khan Academy is a nonprofit with a mission to provide a free, world-class education to anyone, anywhere.