Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Teaching, Learning, and Development
- Chapter 1:
Planning for the Upcoming School Year
- Reflective Practice
- Construct short & targeted pre-instructional assessments to determine curricular starting points
- Use curricular commonalities to prepare lesson sets and units
- Schwab's (1973) Commonplaces of Education
- Someone (the teacher)
- Teaches something (the curriculum)
- To someone else (the student)
- In some setting (the classroom)
- (Diagnostic Assessment) Math & LA Skills can give global overview of student abilities, & can indicate relative strengths & needs
- Provide opportunities for students to make conwctions
- Competence Beliefs: students' evaluative perceptions about their means, processes, and capabilities to accomplish certain tasks
- Control Beliefs: students' perceptions about the likelihood of accomplishing tasks under certain conditions
- Chapter Two:
Considering Developmental Differences
- Attention is paid to:
-skills children have mastered
-skills they are in the process of acquiring
-skills they need to acquire to maximize their dev. potential
- Dev. is a series of physical, cognitive, & social changes
- Grade 1-3: Best time for most students to learn to read efficiently
- Best predictor of continued academic success is the early mastery of essential literacy & numeracy skills
- Development follows an orderly and logical progression
- Dev. is a gradually progressive process, not necessarily @ a constant rate
- Individuals learn to think & form multiple constructs for the same thing
- Individuals dev. @ different rates
- Combo of genetics (nature) & environment (nurture)
- Consider personality & temperament
- Make notes for each student regarding their dev. level (may not match up w their age or grade)
- Consider physical changes alongside cognitive & social changes
- Executive cognitive functioning: individuals organize, coordinate, & reflect on their thinking to achieve more efficient processing outcomes
- Learn by observing and direct guidance by others
- Piaget (1970) humans have 2 basic learning instincts from our natural curiosity
- 1. Desire to organize our behaviors & thoughts into coherent systems
- 2. Adaptation: innate drive to adjust to one's environment
- As independent entities, Children construct their own knowledge
- Vygotsky (1962;1978)
Children learn more & more efficiently w some assistance & on tasks just beyond their independent abilities
- Zone of Proximal Development
- Yerkes-Dodson Law: challenging-but-attainable balance
- Noam Chomsky (1957;1965) humans have a language-acquisition device, an innate capacity to learn, understand, and acquire language
- Psychological well-being
- 1. Self-worth
- 2. Self-determination
- 3. Relatedness
- Temperament: accounts for the type, quality, & intensity of emotional actions & reactions
- Teachers can help children develop moral reasoning by discussing morality & justice issues
- Bronfenbrenner's Ecological Theory (1979): influence of environmental contexts on an individuals' social development
- Chapter Three:
Establishing a Positive Learning Environment
- Children learn better & more efficiently in learning environments that are orderly & psychologically secure
- All behaviors happen for a reason
- Intrapersonal (within-person) & interpersonal (btw people)
- Bandura's (1977;1986) reciprocal determinism: constant social interactions btw students & teachers reciprocally determines how each of them will interact in the future w each other
- Dynamic Classroom Management (DCM)
- 1. Develop caring, supportive relationships w & among studnets
- 2. Organize & implement instruction that optimizes student access to learning
- 3. Use groups to encourage student engagement in academic tasks
- 4. Promote dev. of social skills & self-regulation
- 5. Use appropriate interventions to assist students w behavior problems
- Fundamental student needs:
- 1. To belong & feel connected; teachers believe in them & treat them w respect
- 2. To feel autonomous & self-determination
- 3. To feel competent, successful, & accomplished
- Student behavior & psychological needs can be satisfied & transformed by exemplary teacher behaviors
- Positive teacher behaviors:
- Provide positive feedback
- Respond supportively
- Respond w more support to low-ability students
- Ask Q's that the students can answer correctly
- Student high probability for success tasks
- Use time efficiently
- Have low-ratio of punitive to positive interventions
- Low rate of criticism
- Keep off-task time at a minimun
- Waste little time on transitions
- Chapter Four:
Making Instructional Decisions
- How teachers decide what to teach & how to teach
- Assessment & instruction to be designed together
- Put assessment considerations ahead of instructional considerations
- Backward design
- What do I want my students to learn?
- Instructional goal/ learning objective
- How will I know if they've learned?
- Assessment Q
- What will I teach?
- Topics/units that directly address the intended instructional goal/ learning objective
- How will I teach?
- Instructional method so that the objectives are fully realized
- Bloom's Taxonomy (1956): explains & clarifies the complex, hierarchical series of intellectual abilities involved in the acquisition & use of knowledge
- 6 distinct levels
- 1) Knowledge
- 2) Comprehension
- 3) Application
- 4) Analysis
- 5) Synthesis
- 6) Evaluation
- All forms of thinking classified into 6 basic cognitive processes
- Remembering
- Understanding
- Applying
- Analyzing
- Creating
- Evaluating
- Universal Instructional Design (UID): physical spaces & objects that consider the needs of all users & those w disabilities
- Equitable accessibility & utility
- Classrooms that value respect & diversity
-
Select-Organize-Integrate (SOI) information processing model of meaningful learning: learning happens when students engage in these cognitive processes
- 1) selecting relevant info
- 2) organizing it
- 3) integrating organized info w prior knowledge
- Engage students' motivations w challenging & meaningful tasks
- Problem-, Project-, Inquiry-based learning (PPIL)
- Students help teachers design comprehensive curricular tasks
- Inquiry base
- Complete tasks w peers collaboratively
- Problem base
- Create specific educational products
- Project base
- Reflect on learning
- Chapter Five:
Assessing Student Progress
- Goal of instruction is to optimize student learning
- Purpose of assessment is to measure & indicate student achievement
- Diagnostic Assessment
- Completed before instruction
- Formative Assessment
- Completed during instruction
- Type 1: Asking students curricular Q's, monitoring progress during in-class activities
- Type 2: assigned seat work, homework, class participation, short quizzes to obtain grades
- Summative Assessment
- Completed after instruction
- Assessment Q's
- Selected-response
- True/False
- Matching
- Multiple Choice
- Constructed- response
- Short answer
- Restricted Essay/Essay
- Authentic Assessments
- Students use knowledge & skills to carry out academic tasks that replicate or are similar to those found in real world activities
- Portfolios
- Chapter Six:
Individual Differences - Intellectual Abilities & Challenges
- Intelligence
- Learn from experience
- Adapt to one's environemnt
- Know about & control one's own thinking
- Most important: fluid, crystallized, Visual-spatial reasoning
- Gardner's (1983) theory of multiple intelligences (MI)
- Linguistic
- Logical-mathematical
- Spatial
- Bodily-kinesthetic
- Musical
- Interpersonal
- Intrapersonal
- Naturalistic
- Sternberg's (1985) triarchic theory of human intelligence
- Analytic/componential
- Creative/experiential
- Practical/contextual
- Genetics limit intellectual potential; environment determines how much potential is realized
- Special Education
- High-incidence exceptionalities (mild disabilities)
- Low-incidence exceptionalities (moderate & severe disabilities
- Inclusion philosophy
- IEPs
- Psycho-educational assessment
- Differentiated Instruction (DI)
- ADHD: emotional disturbance caused by a deficiency, imbalance, or inefficiency in brain chemicals that affect certain brain regions
- Autism spectrum disorder: neurodevelopment disorder incorporating several diagnoses
- Mild intellectual disability
- Gifted & talented
- Specific Learning Disorder
- Chapter Seven:
Socio-Cultural Considerations
- FNMI Oral Histories/Education
- Aboriginal Ed: many risk factors
- Many protective factors & strategies!
- Reframe Q's in ways that the student can understand
- Students: battle with the internal struggle of desiring individuality, & at the same time shared a common identity (collectivism)
- There are many differences, & degrees of differences btw individuals from w/in groups as there are btw group members and non-group members
- Cultural identity should not be positioned w/in the group, but personally contextualized w/in the individual
- Critical consciousness
- Teachers should have an awareness of the cultural capital that students bring to the classroom& take advantage of the rich resources @ their disposal
- Students & teachers work together to construct cultural meanings out of the content
- Banks' Model of Multicultural Education (2001)
- Stereotype threat: fear that a behavior will confirm a negative stereotype about your identity group
- Reduces working memory capacity & undermines actual ability
- Prejudice: an unjustified & negative perception about an individual based on their group (any kind of group membership)
- Socio-economic status (SES)
- Social class based on education, occupation, & income
- Greatest impact on scholastic achievement
- Poverty (part of SES) most negative influential factor on achievement
- Education shown to break generational cycle of poverty & low educational attainment
- Baumrind (1991) parenting style plays significant role on student scholastic achievemny
- Authoritarian (strongest negative effect)
- Permissive (openly tolerant, few consequences)
- Authoritative (highest grades, higher cognitive competence, best overall)
- Chapter Eight:
Standardized Achievement Tests
- Good for differentiating btw groups of students for instructional reasons
- Evaluate teacher competencies
- Conduct large-scale analyses of student abilities
- Set performance standards to improve scores
- Teacher-made tests: learning objectives in one classroom
- Standardized achievement tests: learning objectives common in ALL classrooms
- Criterion-referenced
- Aptitude tests: assesses a student's specific cognitive, social, & behavioral skills
- Norm-referenced
- Criticisms:
- Coerces teaching to the test
- Does not increase student learning or their motivation to learn
- Arguably biased
- Content on reflected in the mandated curriculum
- Constructing better ones
- Critical to focus on serving student LEARNING
- Can be useful, but imperfect indtruments
- Matching the tests to what teachers teach
- Tests must be specific enough to directly guide instruction
- The assessment process must be minimally intrusive on classrooms
- Constructed response Q's over M/C Q's
- Ontario's EQAO
- Teachers prepare students for test writing: teach well, practice test-taking, show optimism & positivity
- Classroom Management
- Immediately establish a calm and assertive atmosphere
- Negotiate rewards and consequences with your students
- Don't assume or expect children/youth to automatically & easily engaged in setting rules, boundaries, and limitations for their behavior (BE CONSCIOUS OF their dev. stage!)
- Understanding motivation is key to understanding why things happen in classrooms
- Nothing makes learning less efficient than emotional worries
- PROACTIVE better than REACTIVE
- Integrated within the class environment (not separate)
- Teaching Philosophy
- Teaching practice as constantly testable hypotheses
- Teacher-centered approach with some student-centered aspects
- Constructivism: knowledge is actively constructed through experience
- Competence & Control beliefs affect student learning behaviors in classrooms
- Students need to be effective self-regulators of learning
- Human beings are born with an innately powerful curiosity about the world around them
- Scaffolding: active instructional support while relating to, considering, & interacting w students' responses
- Acquisition of the ability to learn from their mistakes
- Student diversity must be acknowledged & celebrated, not merely accomodated
- A culturally responsive practice that builds broad cultural knowledge & instructional base, & grows & changes as students, contexts, & school content shift
- All students can be taught
- School = high instrumental value! (Student belief that doing well in school provides direct events to their lives
- For my students to be intrinsically motivated learners