Plenary Session The School as a Home for the Mind. Presenters Angela Salmon, FIU Erskine Dottin, FIU

Similar documents
Ideas for Plenary Session. Erskine

What is Thinking (Cognition)?

PEDAGOGICAL LEARNING WALKS: MAKING THE THEORY; PRACTICE

RED 3313 Language and Literacy Development course syllabus Dr. Nancy Marshall Associate Professor Reading and Elementary Education

innovation from exploration whether teacher or student - learning is a lifelong adventure!

Critical Thinking in Everyday Life: 9 Strategies

Full text of O L O W Science As Inquiry conference. Science as Inquiry

PROCEDURES FOR SELECTION OF INSTRUCTIONAL MATERIALS FOR THE SCHOOL DISTRICT OF LODI

2020 Strategic Plan for Diversity and Inclusive Excellence. Six Terrains

Results In. Planning Questions. Tony Frontier Five Levers to Improve Learning 1

Introduction. 1. Evidence-informed teaching Prelude

Indicators Teacher understands the active nature of student learning and attains information about levels of development for groups of students.

The International Baccalaureate Diploma Programme at Carey

Assessment and Evaluation

Refer to the MAP website ( for specific textbook and lab kit requirements.

Classroom Teacher Primary Setting Job Description

George Mason University College of Education and Human Development Secondary Education Program. EDCI 790 Secondary Education Internship

Document number: 2013/ Programs Committee 6/2014 (July) Agenda Item 42.0 Bachelor of Engineering with Honours in Software Engineering

Maximizing Learning Through Course Alignment and Experience with Different Types of Knowledge

Last Editorial Change:

4.0 CAPACITY AND UTILIZATION

Additional Qualification Course Guideline Computer Studies, Specialist

MYP Language A Course Outline Year 3

University of Delaware Library STRATEGIC PLAN

THE HEAD START CHILD OUTCOMES FRAMEWORK

Curriculum Policy. November Independent Boarding and Day School for Boys and Girls. Royal Hospital School. ISI reference.

MFL SPECIFICATION FOR JUNIOR CYCLE SHORT COURSE

Educational Psychology

Design Principles for Learner-Centered Schools:

SPECIALIST PERFORMANCE AND EVALUATION SYSTEM

YMCA SCHOOL AGE CHILD CARE PROGRAM PLAN

International Baccalaureate (IB) Primary Years Programme (PYP) at Northeast Elementary

Arizona s English Language Arts Standards th Grade ARIZONA DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION HIGH ACADEMIC STANDARDS FOR STUDENTS

Disciplinary Literacy in Science

FEEDBACK & MARKING POLICY. Little Digmoor Primary School

The Consistent Positive Direction Pinnacle Certification Course

Final Teach For America Interim Certification Program

Politics and Society Curriculum Specification

Executive Summary. Sidney Lanier Senior High School

EDUC-E328 Science in the Elementary Schools

Types of curriculum. Definitions of the different types of curriculum

Vision for Science Education A Framework for K-12 Science Education: Practices, Crosscutting Concepts, and Core Ideas

Math Pathways Task Force Recommendations February Background

Analyzing Linguistically Appropriate IEP Goals in Dual Language Programs

DIOCESE OF PLYMOUTH VICARIATE FOR EVANGELISATION CATECHESIS AND SCHOOLS

Unpacking a Standard: Making Dinner with Student Differences in Mind

Developing an Assessment Plan to Learn About Student Learning

The Mission of Teacher Education in a Center of Pedagogy Geared to the Mission of Schooling in a Democratic Society.

TEACHING QUALITY: SKILLS. Directive Teaching Quality Standard Applicable to the Provision of Basic Education in Alberta

Researcher Development Assessment A: Knowledge and intellectual abilities

Types of curriculum. Definitions of the different types of curriculum

eportfolio for Your Professional Teaching Practice

Oklahoma State University Policy and Procedures

RESPONSE TO LITERATURE

Florida Reading Endorsement Alignment Matrix Competency 1

Cognitive Thinking Style Sample Report

EQuIP Review Feedback

SACS Reaffirmation of Accreditation: Process and Reports

By Merrill Harmin, Ph.D.

Indiana Collaborative for Project Based Learning. PBL Certification Process

Delaware Performance Appraisal System Building greater skills and knowledge for educators

ERDINGTON ACADEMY PROSPECTUS 2016/17

How to Apply for Fellowships & Internships Connecting students to global careers!

Relating Math to the Real World: A Study of Platonic Solids and Tessellations

Practitioner s Lexicon What is meant by key terminology.

Multiple Intelligences 1

No Parent Left Behind

St Matthew s RC High School, Nuthurst Road, Moston, Manchester, M40 0EW

Curriculum and Assessment Policy

Michigan Paralyzed Veterans of America Educational Scholarship Program

Just Because You Can t Count It Doesn t Mean It Doesn t Count: Doing Good Research with Qualitative Data

Evidence-based Practice: A Workshop for Training Adult Basic Education, TANF and One Stop Practitioners and Program Administrators

California Professional Standards for Education Leaders (CPSELs)

November 2012 MUET (800)

Examinee Information. Assessment Information

JiED EARLY ACCESS: Under final review by author(s). NOTE: PAGE NUMBERS AND MEDIA PLACEMENT ARE NOT FINAL

Writing the Personal Statement

PLCs - From Understanding to Action Handouts

Are You a Left- or Right-Brain Thinker?

Loughton School s curriculum evening. 28 th February 2017

E-3: Check for academic understanding

Student-Centered Learning

Helping your child succeed: The SSIS elementary curriculum

Field Experience and Internship Handbook Master of Education in Educational Leadership Program

Course Syllabus Art History II ARTS 1304

PEDAGOGY AND PROFESSIONAL RESPONSIBILITIES STANDARDS (EC-GRADE 12)

Texas Woman s University Libraries

Critical Thinking in the Workplace. for City of Tallahassee Gabrielle K. Gabrielli, Ph.D.

Passport to Your Identity

Cognitive Development Facilitator s Guide

Colorado Academic. Drama & Theatre Arts. Drama & Theatre Arts

eportfolio Guide Missouri State University

Primary Years Programme. Arts scope and sequence

Northern Virginia Alumnae Chapter of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Incorporated Scholarship Application Guidelines and Requirements

THE RO L E O F IMAGES IN

Earl of March SS Physical and Health Education Grade 11 Summative Project (15%)

Helping Students Get to Where Ideas Can Find Them

Language Acquisition Chart

Differentiated teaching in primary school

MULTIPLE SUBJECT CREDENTIAL PROGRAM HANDBOOK. Preparing Educators to Be Effective Reflective Engaged

Transcription:

Plenary Session The School as a Home for the Mind Presenters Angela Salmon, FIU Erskine Dottin, FIU

Noting Important Advice Give the pupils something to do, not something to learn; and the doing is of such a nature as to demand thinking, or the intentional noting of connections; learning naturally results John Dewey. (1916/1944). Democracy and Education. Chap. 12, p. 154.

ACTIVITY Spell the following words

LEARNING as Making Connections TO ACT spell words with similar sounds TO UNDERGO consequences incorrect or correct answer to question based on real situation; suffer error or enjoy correct answer TO Change thinking (judgment) see erroneous pattern for self or with assistance TO MAKE CONNECTIONS between acting and undergoing. What did you learn? Following like sounds may lead to thoughtless errors in real life.

Thinking as Making Connections Making connections between doing and undergoing or trying and undergoing is a cognitive process through which we acquire meaning (children learn to speak and walk by trying and undergoing). This cognitive process requires the use of judgment (the use of the mind)

THINKING THINKING is the intentional endeavor to discover the connection between DOING/UNDERGOING. Thinking makes it possible to act with an end in view. As soon as child begins to expect he/she begins to use something which is now going on as a sign of something to follow STARTS MAKING JUDGMENTS takes one thing as evidence of something else, and recognizes a relationship INFERENCE. Making good connections requires good judgments, that is being thoughtful and not thoughtless. Being thoughtful requires reflection on what one was doing or trying to do and what happened, what you underwent and the connections you discovered [REFLECTIVE INTELLIGENCE]

SO, A CRITICAL QUESTION If good reflection will be enhanced by being thoughtful, that is, being interested in what one is doing, then in teaching and learning, what should come first, the subject matter or the student s interest?

SO Why do schools create a Mind Body dualism? STUDENT brings BODY (energy) AND MIND (contemplation) TO SCHOOL. The school suppresses the student s energy which takes his or her mind away from the SUBJECT. The student must be silent, have uniformity of posture and movement. MIND when seen as separate from ACTIVITY/DOING leads to DUALISM (the abstract mind and the body with doing with bodily activity/senses) To separate MIND from the occupation with things throws the emphasis on things at the expense of MAKING CONNECTIONS

Thinking as a Process of Inquiry THINKING (reflecting on doing and undergoing) IS A PROCESS OF INQUIRY looking into things/investigating. ACT OF INQUIRING AND ACQUIRING (what is acquired to continue act of inquiring CONTENT AND SKILLS) All thinking is research. Conclusion of thinking HYPOTHESIS (cannot be certain in advance) KNOW WHAT WE ARE AFTER (COMPLETE KNOWLEDGE) DO NOT KNOW (IGNORANCE) COMING TO KNOW zone of inquiry

THE SCHOOL AS ENHANCING ACQUIRING AND INQUIRING SCHOOL to foster good habits of thinking. ACQUIRE information (history, geography, etc.) Skills (reading, writing, etc.) INQUIRE use skills and information thoughtfully INSTRUCTION to render student conduct about self and the world more intelligent To acquire information and skills apart from thoughtful action is dead (John Dewey).

Pedagogical Mindfulness The FIU College of Education is working to develop, in teacher education and other school personnel candidates, dispositions as habits of pedagogical mindfulness and thoughtfulness (reflective capacity) by which [the unit s] candidates have a disposition toward enhancing the growth of all learners through the application of their thinking to things already known (content, process skills) for the purpose of improving social conditions. This requires that teachers and other school personnel demonstrate commitments to patterns of intellectual activity that guide their cognitive and social behavior in educational settings with students, colleagues, families, and communities, thus enhancing their conduct in the world of practice, in other words, [as] mindful educators ( The Conceptual Framework of the College of Education, n.d., pp. 10-11).

ACTIVITY What qualities or characteristics does one expect to see when an educator (teacher, administrator, etc.) is DEMONSTRATING MINDFULNESS or thoughtfulness? [THINK-PAIR-SHARE]

WORDS OF WISDOM from Dr. David Perkins http://www.journeytoexcellence.org.uk/videos/ expertspeakers/thinkingwithwhatyouknowdavid perkins.asp

SO, what is Dr. Perkins saying? It is not just about content but getting better at things, it requires thinking with what you know to go further, it is about finding explanations and justification. It involves curiosity, discovery, creativity, and camaraderie. It is not just discovery learning - it needs strong guidance gradually faded back. Perkins, 2009

The College of Education at FIU and Dr. Perkins Words of Wisdom A key assumption, for the college, is that cognitive connections made through the acquisition of subject matter (content) and process skills (how the subject is experienced) influence the formation of dispositions (habits of mind) and moral sensibilities. Hansen, D. (2001). Exploring the moral heart of teaching: Toward a teacher s creed. New York: Teachers College Press. There is a cognitive connection to habits of mind (dispositions) in that knowledge and skills must be acquired and used to enhance MINDFULNESS and THOUGHTFULNESS.

SO The College of Education at FIU is about the formation of teachers and not simply about teacher training.

THE COLLEGE OF EDUCATION FOSTERING HABITS OF MINDFULNESS The habits of mindfulness may be fostered if the doing and reflecting is done in the kind of environment [an educative environment] that enhances the acquisition of the habits/dispositions. Problem posing/solving environments facilitate mindfulness, and habits of intelligent conduct are acquired: e.g., habits of questioning, thinking, being open-minded, managing impulsivity, and so on.

SO What are the qualities of thought and effective characteristics that we can expect to see when one is responding intelligently to new circumstances or to revising one s judgments in light of the consequences of acting on them? If one accepts that all thinking starts with the recognition of a problem, a fork in the road, then the dispositions for effective problem-solving and continuous learning include the habits of mind of persisting, managing impulsivity, listening with understanding and empathy, thinking flexibly, thinking about thinking, striving for accuracy, questioning and posing problems, applying past knowledge to new situations, thinking and communicating with clarity and precision, gathering data through all senses, creating, imagining, innovating, responding with wonderment and awe, taking responsible risks, finding humor, thinking interdependently, and remaining open to continuous learning. Costa, A. and Kallick, B. (2000) Habits of Mind. A Developmental Series. Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development.

Dispositions/Habits of Mind Dispositions are the habits of pedagogical mindfulness and thoughtfulness (reflective capacity) that render professional action and conduct more intelligent. Habits of pedagogical mindfulness and thoughtfulness mean pedagogues having a disposition toward enhancing the educational growth of all learners through the application of their thinking to things already known (content, process skills) for the purpose of improving social conditions. This requires that pedagogues demonstrate commitments to patterns of intellectual activity that guide their cognitive and social behavior in educational settings (with students, families, colleagues and communities). Dottin, E.S. (2006). A deweyan approach to the development of moral dispositions in professional teacher education communities: Using a conceptual framework. In Sockett, H. (Ed.), Teacher dispositions: Building a teacher education framework of moral standards (pp. 27-47). Washington, DC: American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education.

The framework for thinking in The College Taken from Learning and Leading With Habits of Mind By Costa & Kallick (2008) HABITS OF MIND COGNITIVE TASKS THAT DEMAND SKILLFUL THINKING THINKING SKILLS CONTENT

Arthur Costa In a school that is a home for the mind, there is an inherent faith that all people can continue to improve their intellectual capacities throughout life; that learning to think is as valid as a goal for the at-risk, the handicapped, the disadvantaged, and the foreign-speaking as it is for the gifted and talented ; and that all of us have the potential for even greater creativity and intellectual power.

Temple Grandin Video http://www.ted.com/talks/temple_gra ndin_the_world_needs_all_kinds_of_ minds.html

THE LINK Using Visible Thinking Strategies to Enhance Habits of Mind

SEE/THINK/WONDER. This routine encourages students to make careful observations and thoughtful interpretations; it sets the stage for inquiry, using the following questions: What do you see? What do you think? and What do you wonder? Persisting going back to an image over and over again; Listening with empathy - people share their observations, thoughts and inquiries, others listen and try to understand with empathy; Thinking flexibly while sharing observations, thoughts and inquiries, people have the capacity to change their minds; Questioning and posing problems upon observing and thinking, people ask questions about what they know and they don t know; Applying past knowledge to new situations while observing, people connect images with prior knowledge or experiences; Gathering data though all senses using any type of prop (e.g., artwork, science experiment, photograph, essay, music piece, dance), people can collect data with any of their senses (e.g., what do you feel/smell/hear/taste?); and Thinking interdependently since people have different perspectives, they can interpret things differently when they are prompted to think or wonder about things.

WHAT MAKES YOU SAY THAT? This routine encourages interpretation with justification, using the following questions: What is going on? and What do you see that makes you say that? Thinking with clarity and thinking about thinking with these questions, people have to plan what they want to say and reflect on their thoughts. They have to use their ability to know what they know and what they don t know. Gathering data though all senses people have to gather data to justify any claim with evidence; Taking responsible risks people take the opportunity to get a message through, based on prior knowledge and experience; Striving for accuracy people have to check over their messages for accuracy, they have to invest more thinking; Managing impulsivity when people know that they will be asked these types of questions, they think before they act or say something. Learning continuously when people are allowed to revisit their thoughts before saying something, they are always modifying and improving themselves; and Applying past knowledge to new situations people learn from experience. When confronted with these questions they have to make connections with past experiences.

Visible Thinking and Habits of Mind Producing an Educative Experience An educative experiences requires the following: Characteristics of educational environment (conditions in which teacher can best educate students) The teacher must take the lead in bringing such an environment into being (Hansen, 2002, p. 272). Simplified...draw students into acting and avoid lecture/transmission. Purified feature activities and exchanges that fuel emergence of moral dispositions, understandings and outlooks characteristic of habits of mind: habits of thinking to increase efficiency in acting and learning thus rendering conduct to be more intelligent. Balanced Students pursue their own educational adventures/interests while interacting with others in ways that widen and deepen social sympathies Steadying invite students to harmonize/see interrelatedness of knowledge, insight, feeling, viewpoints rather than see life in divided/dualistic domains that have nothing to do with one another.

Expectations Opportunities Routines & Structures Language and conversations Modeling Interactions and relationships Physical environment Time Cultural Forces at Work For thinking & learning For engaging in thinking That scaffold thinking & learning Centered on thinking products & stances Of thinking That show respect for students thinking In which the products of thinking are made visible For reflecting about thinking and understanding Ritchhart, 2002

Thinking Back on What was Shared Reflecting on action must be more than simply personal ruminations; in fact, there must be specific criteria used to guide the reflection. According to Dottin (2010) enhancing reflective thinking is guided by the following: Description of the activity for reflective analysis (Does the reflection describe a specific activity, its circumstances, situations, or issues (e.g., who was involved? What were the circumstances, concerns or issues involved? When did the event occur? Where did the event occur?) An analysis of the activity (Have you derived any insights about the school as home for the mind from the presentation?) An appraisal of the activity (Do the insights derived (if any) enable you to provide an interpretation of your experience in your educational environment (e.g., school, college, etc.?) Reflective insight (Can the insights gained from the presentation help you to improve your educational endeavors?).

TO CONCLUDE What if education were less about acquiring skills and knowledge and more about cultivating the dispositions and habits of mind that students will need for a lifetime of learning, problem solving, and decision making? What if education were less concerned with the end-of-year exam and more concerned with who students become as a result of their schooling? What if we viewed smartness as a goal that students can work toward rather than as something they either have or don t? Reenvisioning education in this way implies that we will need to rethink many of our wellaccepted methods of instruction. We will need to look beyond schools as training grounds for the memory and focus more on schooling as an enculturative process that cultivates dispositions of thinking Ron Ritchhart, (2002) Intellectual Character, p. xxii