Welcome to the latest issue of Effective Teaching.

Similar documents
Final Teach For America Interim Certification Program

Professional Experience - Mentor Information

Facilitating E-Learning Using Collaborative and Social Methods in the 21 st Century

The Curriculum in Primary Schools

Programme Specification

SCHOOL OF EDUCATION STUDIES (Edgewood Campus) BACHELOR OF EDUCATION (B.ED) EXAMINATIONS - NOVEMBER 2010

CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY NORTHRIDGE

Authentically embedding Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander peoples, cultures and histories in learning programs.

STUDENT ASSESSMENT, EVALUATION AND PROMOTION

Recursive Loops of Game-Based Learning: a Conceptual model.

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

Quality teaching and learning in the educational context: Teacher pedagogy to support learners of a modern digital society

The Evaluation of Students Perceptions of Distance Education

Professional Experience - Mentor Information

This table contains the extended descriptors for Active Learning on the Technology Integration Matrix (TIM).

1 Use complex features of a word processing application to a given brief. 2 Create a complex document. 3 Collaborate on a complex document.

The Virtual Design Studio: developing new tools for learning, practice and research in design

Theoretical Perspectives Underlying the Application of Cooperative Learning in Classrooms

TIM: Table of Summary Descriptors This table contains the summary descriptors for each cell of the Technology Integration Matrix (TIM).

Orientation project and children s agentive orientation

ROLE DESCRIPTION. Name of Employee. Team Leader ICT Projects Date appointed to this position 2017 Date under review Name of reviewer

Exploring the Development of Students Generic Skills Development in Higher Education Using A Web-based Learning Environment

CERTIFICATE OF HIGHER EDUCATION IN CONTINUING EDUCATION. Relevant QAA subject benchmarking group:

IMPLEMENTING THE EARLY YEARS LEARNING FRAMEWORK

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

Number Line Moves Dash -- 1st Grade. Michelle Eckstein

CONCEPT MAPPING; RATIONALE OF LEARNING THEORIES

Technology in the Classroom: The Impact of Teacher s Technology Use and Constructivism

Developing efficacy beliefs in the classroom.

The Use of Drama and Dramatic Activities in English Language Teaching

UNIVERSITY OF THESSALY DEPARTMENT OF EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION POSTGRADUATE STUDIES INFORMATION GUIDE

The IMPACT OF CONCEPT MAPPING TECHNIQUE ON EFL READING COMPREHENSION: A CASE STUDY

NC Global-Ready Schools

Cognitive Apprenticeship Statewide Campus System, Michigan State School of Osteopathic Medicine 2011

A Metacognitive Approach to Support Heuristic Solution of Mathematical Problems

Billett, S. (1994). Situating learning in the workplace: Having another look at Apprenticeships. Industrial and Commercial Training, 26(11) 9-16.

Adult Education and Learning Theories Georgios Giannoukos, Georgios Besas

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

Learning Styles in Higher Education: Learning How to Learn

THREE-YEAR COURSES FASHION STYLING & CREATIVE DIRECTION Version 02

Title: George and Sam Save for a Present By: Lesson Study Group 2

IMPACT OF INQUIRY-BASED TEACHING ON STUDENT MATHEMATICS ACHIEVEMENT AND ATTITUDE. A dissertation submitted to the

University of Delaware Library STRATEGIC PLAN

Concept mapping instrumental support for problem solving

A Model for Planning Learning Experiences to Promote Achievement in Diverse Secondary Classrooms

Update on Standards and Educator Evaluation

Presentation of blended learning conceptual pattern based on individual and social constructivism theory

Developing the Key Competencies in Social Sciences

Literacy Instruction in Early Childhood Education: Ohio s Third Grade Reading Guarantee

AGENDA LEARNING THEORIES LEARNING THEORIES. Advanced Learning Theories 2/22/2016

SOC 175. Australian Society. Contents. S3 External Sociology

Somerset Progressive School Planning, Assessment, Recording & Celebration Policy

KENTUCKY FRAMEWORK FOR TEACHING

Piaget s Cognitive Development

Programme Specification. BSc (Hons) RURAL LAND MANAGEMENT

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

Aurora College Annual Report

LITERACY ACROSS THE CURRICULUM POLICY Humberston Academy

From understanding perspectives to informing public policy the potential and challenges for Q findings to inform survey design

COURSE DESCRIPTION PREREQUISITE COURSE PURPOSE

Submission of a Doctoral Thesis as a Series of Publications

Practitioner s Lexicon What is meant by key terminology.

Problem solving: A psycho-pragmatic approach Abstract Introduction

ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF SCHOOLS (K 12)

Introductory thoughts on numeracy

CDA Renewal 1: Professionalism-Beliefs, Knowledge, Action

Content Teaching Methods: Social Studies. Dr. Melinda Butler

Assessment of Philosophy for Children (P4C) in Catalonia

School Efficacy and Educational Leadership: How Principals Help Schools Get Smarter

ED 294 EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS (FAQs) ON THE ENHANCEMENT PROGRAMME

Special Educational Needs and Disabilities Policy Taverham and Drayton Cluster

INSPIRE A NEW GENERATION OF LIFELONG LEARNERS

S H E A D AV I S C O L U M B U S S C H O O L F O R G I R L S

EQuIP Review Feedback

Using Eggen & Kauchak, Educational Psychology: Windows on Classrooms for the Illinois Certification Testing System Examinations

K-12 Math & ELA Updates. Education Committee August 8, 2017

Richardson, J., The Next Step in Guided Writing, Ohio Literacy Conference, 2010

Australia s tertiary education sector

Using Virtual Manipulatives to Support Teaching and Learning Mathematics

5. UPPER INTERMEDIATE

Kelli Allen. Vicki Nieter. Jeanna Scheve. Foreword by Gregory J. Kaiser

MFL SPECIFICATION FOR JUNIOR CYCLE SHORT COURSE

Factors in Primary School Teachers' Beliefs about Mathematics and Teaching and Learning Mathematics. Introduction

Curriculum and Assessment Policy

Whole School Literacy Policy 2017/18

Teaching Difficulties from Interactions and Discourse in a Science Classroom

Researcher Development Assessment A: Knowledge and intellectual abilities

Evaluation of Hybrid Online Instruction in Sport Management

Sociocultural Theory Applied to Second Language Learning: Collaborative Learning with Reference to the Chinese Context

2016 School Performance Information

Research as Design-Design as Research

Development of an IT Curriculum. Dr. Jochen Koubek Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin Technische Universität Berlin 2008

James Cook University

SNAP, CRACKLE AND POP! INFUSING MULTI-SENSORY ACTIVITIES INTO THE EARLY CHILDHOOD CLASSROOM SUE SCHNARS, M.ED. AND ELISHA GROSSENBACHER JUNE 27,2014

Presentation Advice for your Professional Review

UNIVERSITY of CALGARY

Politics and Society Curriculum Specification

Course Syllabus Chem 482: Chemistry Seminar

Global Seminar Quito, Ecuador Language, Culture & Child Development. EDS 115 GS Cognitive Development & Education Summer Session I, 2016

Transcription:

Welcome to the latest issue of Effective Teaching. A reminder the Constructivism and Assessment Workshops will be on Friday 14th, August. All staff are required to attend and relief teachers have been rostered for all classrooms. There are two sessions throughout the day - please check the roster to confirm your workshop time. Contemporary effective teaching methods embrace all learning theories and strategies, adapting and changing to best suit the needs of the child. The South Australian Curriculum, Standards and Accountability Framework (SACSA) focuses on constructivist approaches and was written to be consistent with constructivism in order to support the development of teaching and learning (Department of Education, Training and Employment [DETE], 2001, p. 11). The theory of Constructivism indicates: "Learners construct, rather than record, knowledge" (Eggen & Kauchak, 2010, p. 226). New understanding and knowledge is actively developed by reflecting and building on previous learning, everyday experiences and actions. Constructivist teachers are student focused; believing learning is not a submissive process of listening, memorisation and rote learning but requires active and interactive student involvement. Students attempt to make sense of what they see, hear and do, concentrating on thought processes to develop conceptual knowledge and the internal construction of meaning, relevant to their own previous experiences or understandings. "Learning is active and internally monitored; it is a process of acquiring, discovering, and constructing meaning from experience" (Reys et al, 2009, p. 24). Students develop at varying rates and cultural and social factors influence understanding and previous knowledge. This helps explain why each student develops their own understanding and why misconceptions of knowledge occur. "Constructivism helps us understand why differences in prior knowledge are so important in classroom learning" (Eggen & Kauchak, 2010, p. 231). Effective teachers are aware of individual student progress, thus adjusting lesson plans and providing scaffolding and feedback according to their specific needs (Marsh, 2008). Effective scaffolding is the process of supporting learning through teacher-student or studentstudent interaction to help students achieve tasks they cannot manage on their own, challenging existing knowledge and encouraging the connection of ideas to promote high-level cognitive development. Once the task has been mastered, scaffolding is withdrawn (Eggen & Kauchak, 2009; Marsh, 2008). This concept of teaching presents a range and variety of learning tasks with appropriate kinds and levels of scaffolding (DETE, 2001, p. 11). Constructivist classrooms promote cognitive and metacognitive thinking, teaching students to integrate their knowledge in other learning areas and throughout life, helping to develop a desire for lifelong learning and to utilise their knowledge in relevant and meaningful ways. Contemporary classrooms...teach learners how to learn, how to regulate their learning skills, and how to direct their own learning efforts (Killen, 2007, p. 9). The central thesis of constructivism is that the learner is active in the process of taking in information and building knowledge and understanding; in other words, of constructing their own learning. (DETE, 2001, p. 10)

Constructivism is based on the research of many different theorists, including Piaget and Vygotsky. Effective teaching for the Twenty-First Century embraces a combination of both styles, placing the student at the centre of the learning process. The Image of Piaget (Google Images, n.d.). Piaget s theory of cognitive constructivism indicates children search for understanding in their environment to develop individual internal knowledge, thus focusing on...the cognitive processes that people use to make sense of the world. (Killen, 2007, p. 7). He suggested two principles of cognitive development: adaptation and organisation. Adaptation is the process of maintaining cognitive equilibrium and when children experience something to disrupt this balance they reconstruct their knowledge accordingly. He introduced the concept of schema, defining this as a form of intellectual categorising and understanding of unfamiliar knowledge (Marsh, 2008). Piaget specified two methods for children s schemata: Assimilation occurs when a child incorporates new knowledge into existing knowledge. Accommodation occurs when a child adjusts to new information (Santrock, 2001, as cited in Marsh, 2008, p. 17). Organisation relates to the cognitive maturation of the child and the ability to categorise events in their environment into existing schemata. Vygotsky s theory of social constructivism indicates social interaction has a direct influence on the construction of knowledge suggesting surroundings contribute to learner comprehension. Vygotsky The Image of Vygotsky (Lev Vygotsky Image Gallery, n.d.). introduced the Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD) which specifies the area between where students manage their own knowledge without assistance to the stage beyond this, where support is required from someone who has required additional information, sometimes known as the More Knowledgeable Other (MKO). At school, effective teachers and sometimes other students are the MKO and by the process of cognitive social consultation offer scaffolding to assist the student to develop skills required for the task. Vygotsky believed that when a student is at the ZPD for a particular task, providing the appropriate assistance (scaffolding) will give the student enough of a boost to achieve the task. (Galloway, 2007, p. 2). When the necessary skills are developed the scaffolding can be withdrawn (Galloway, 2007; Marsh, 2008). The constructivist foundation of effective teaching and learning is experience and discovery, supporting the use of manipulatives and authentic learning opportunities....children learn math most effectively if they discover ideas while manipulating concrete objects such as blocks and sticks, rather than having them presented by a teacher... (Eggen & Kauchak, 2009, p. 227). The student develops metacognition, critical thought processes and social development skills that will be utilised throughout life.

What is the role of the teacher in a constructivist, Twenty-First century classroom? The modern classroom is no longer dominated by teacher directed instruction (Marsh, 2008) instead focussing on student centred learning, thus "...creating learning environments in which learners exchange ideas and collaborate in solving problems is an essential teacher role" (Anderson et al., 2001; Meter & Stevens, 2000, as cited in Eggen & Kauchak, 2010, p. 228). Effective future teachers will become mentors and guides to their students, teaching them skills needed for a lifetime of learning and development It will be the teacher's role to guide learners towards a broad and balanced curriculum and teach them the skills needed to embark on personal study and research. (Pryce, n.d., So what will be the role of tomorrow s teachers?, 1). The SACSA Framework places the student at the centre of learning to ensure they experience new and creative ways of making connections across concepts and processes and across multiple perspectives (DETE, 2001a, p. 31). A successful constructivist teacher involves the student in decision making and provides challenging learning experiences with consideration of all learning styles and available teaching methods. Effective techniques include: Modelling: The demonstration of skills, with ongoing verbal descriptions of the thought processes involved. Verbalisation: Ask students questions to encourage thinking and descriptions of their thought processes. Increasing complexity: Provide challenges as the ZPD expands & develops. Exploration: Provide the opportunity for students to link their knowledge with other learning areas and problems. Scaffolding: Support provided to assist skill development and autonomous learning. (Eggen & Kauchak, 2010). The importance of equality and understanding of individual student needs are recognised by self reflection and dedication to high expectations, incorporated in a positive classroom environment. Effective twenty-first century teachers...will unlock the potential within all learners and empower them with the tools for learning. (Pryce, n.d., So what will be the role of tomorrow s teachers?, 1).

Technology is a fundamental part of youth culture and has a major influence on modern life. We use multimedia tools on a daily basis and the continuous change of knowledge, education and society provides students with immediate access to knowledge in various formats and from varied locations. An effective teacher will work with students to develop the skills needed to use Information and Communications Technology (ICT) and to incorporate, analyse and critically interpret this information in daily and future lives. All human beings must be enabled to develop independent, critical thinking and form their own judgement, in order to determine for themselves what they believe they should do in the different circumstances (Delors, 1996, p. 94). Students and teachers can use ICT tools to research, collect and categorise data, present information and to interact socially on a local and global scale. Technology provides the opportunity for student centred learning, discovery and research while engaging students in authentic tasks that cater for many styles of learning. Research suggests that educational technology is most effective when used to enhance constructivist or studentcentered instructional strategies. (Association for Educational Communication and Technology, 1992, as cited in Southwest Educational Development Library, 1998, p. 1). Technology offers the use of virtual manipulatives and real world learning experiences and effective teachers will ensure tasks align with curriculum outcomes to contribute to successful learning. (Eggen & Kauchak, 2010). Technology suits the constructivist approach to social interaction and supports the development of thought processes and conceptual understanding. In the electronically connected world of the Communication Age, knowing "what" is insufficient. Knowing "how" is and will be the key to future self-efficacy and career development. (Hagstrom, 2006, p. 32).

CONSTRUCTIVIST ASSESSMENT Effective teaching includes effective assessment and within a constructivist classroom asks: What is the student learning? Why is this necessary? How is this information used? Assessment for learning becomes an integral part of the total teaching-learning experience. (Eggen & Kauchak, 2010, p. 434). Formal assessment: a conventional diagnostic method to gather the same objective specific information from each student, such as establishing levels of prior knowledge or to determine understanding of a subject. Informal Assessment: this process of observation garners details of individual students performance and progress, such as knowledge of skills or misconceptions in learning processes, attitude towards learning and behavioural problems. This is often interactive and encourages students to reflect on their thought processes. Purposeful observation involves looking at students working, listening to their ideas and reasoning, and discussing problems so that the students reveal their ways of thinking. (Brady & Kennedy, 2007, p. 224). Constructivism & Assessment: Formative assessment suits the student centred, constructivist approach of building on existing knowledge and providing scaffolding and feedback to develop higher level cognitive thinking and conceptual understanding, assisting recognition of the students Zone of Proximal Development (ZPD) (Vygotsky, 1978, as cited in Eggen & Kauchak, 2009). This is an effective way of adapting teaching to suit various learning styles, assisting the development of skills required for the tasks. "Formative assessment is better conceived of as an interactive pedagogy based on constructivist ideas about learning and integrated into a wide range of learning and support activities" (Ecclestone and Pryor, 2003, as cited in Hagstrom, 2006, p. 26). Formative Assessment: in a contemporary constructivist classroom assessment is a combination of formal and informal evaluation processes that assist continuous decision making of relevant learning opportunities, adjusting strategies as required to meet the needs of all learners. "Creating valid assessments is part of being a professional" (Eggen & Kauchak, 2009, p. 436).