Learn to Teach Teach to Learn

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Transcription:

Learn to Teach Teach to Learn Learn to Teach explores the most up-to-date findings on how children learn in order to help teachers create effective learning environments and plan for teaching. Drawing on a neo-vygotskian approach to learning, Learn to Teach covers the purpose of education; socio-cultural approaches to human cognition; attention and intelligence as cognitive tools; and the role of mindsets, memory and language in learning. It promotes the idea that the mind is a cultural product and that education is best understood as fostering the development of valued cognitive tools appropriate for the 21st century. To provide readers with a holistic understanding of learning, the book explores the significant contributions to the study of learning and teaching from psychologists, sociologists and cultural theorists. Readers are encouraged to critically engage with and challenge some of the prevailing learning theories in order to better understand their students. Each chapter features classroom observation exercises, discussion questions and links to further reading. Lively, engaging and thought provoking, this is a must read for pre-service teachers and anyone interested in developing a comprehensive understanding of learning. is a Senior Lecturer in the Melbourne Graduate School of Education at the University of Melbourne. She is a registered psychologist and has spent the past three decades researching and teaching developmental, social and cognitive psychology in a variety of universities, both in Australia and overseas.

Learn to Teach Teach to Learn

477 Williamstown Road, Port Melbourne, VIC 3207, Australia Cambridge University Press is part of the University of Cambridge. It furthers the University s mission by disseminating knowledge in the pursuit of education, learning and research at the highest international levels of excellence. Information on this title: /9781107647190 Cambridge University Press 2015 This publication is copyright. Subject to statutory exception and to the provisions of relevant collective licensing agreements, no reproduction of any part may take place without the written permission of Cambridge University Press. First published 2015 Cover designed by Leigh Ashforth Typeset by Newgen Publishing and Data Services Printed in Australia by Ligare Pty Ltd A catalogue record for this publication is available from the British Library A Cataloguing-in-Publication entry is available from the catalogue of the National Library of Australia at www.nla.gov.au ISBN 978-1-107-64719-0 Paperback Reproduction and communication for educational purposes The Australian Copyright Act 1968 (the Act) allows a maximum of one chapter or 10% of the pages of this work, whichever is the greater, to be reproduced and/or communicated by any educational institution for its educational purposes provided that the educational institution (or the body that administers it) has given a remuneration notice to Copyright Agency Limited (CAL) under the Act. For details of the CAL licence for educational institutions contact: Copyright Agency Limited Level 15, 233 Castlereagh Street Sydney NSW 2000 Telephone: (02) 9394 7600 Facsimile: (02) 9394 7601 E-mail: info@copyright.com.au Cambridge University Press has no responsibility for the persistence or accuracy of URLs for external or third-party internet websites referred to in this publication and does not guarantee that any content on such websites is, or will remain, accurate or appropriate.

To all those who have taught me, teachers and students alike, but especially to my children Megan, Gareth, Susannah and Olivia and my husband, Steve Dinham

Contents INTRODUCTION 1 What do you need to know, to teach well? 2 Why another textbook? 3 Why do people believe things? 4 Cognitive bias 5 The science of infant feeding 6 The place of values 8 The book 9 CHAPTER 1 IDEAS THAT SHAPE THINKING ABOUT TEACHING AND LEARNING 11 Chapter objectives 11 Introduction 12 Psychology s contribution: A brief history 13 The little scientists: Inquiry learning 21 New and improved: Beware of gurus 22 Other ideas that influence education: The social context of teaching 24 The really big picture: Education and culture 29 Further reading 29 CHAPTER 2 CULTURE AND EDUCATION 30 Chapter objectives 30 Introduction: What do we value? 31 Mary Douglas s cultural theory 31 English-speaking cultures 34 Schools in a competitive world 35 Devolving responsibility to schools 36 Inside schools: Which culture? 37 Choice: Is more better? 39 Choice in schools 39 Personalised learning 40 vii

Contents Competition 41 An important role for teachers 45 Further reading 47 CHAPTER 3 NATURAL PEDAGOGY 48 Chapter objectives 48 Introduction: Nature and nurture yes, again 49 What makes us human? 49 The role of culture: Vygotsky 51 Cognitive tools 51 The role of schooling 53 Language: The ultimate cognitive tool 54 The Zone of Proximal Development 57 School and culture 60 The costs to children of segregation 61 We are all teachers now 61 We have always all been teachers 62 Further reading 63 CHAPTER 4 INTELLIGENCE 64 Chapter objectives 64 Introduction 65 The first of the names: Francis Galton 65 Alfred Binet 66 David Wechsler 68 Culture fair tests 69 One ability or many? 70 Charles Spearman 70 Louis Thurstone and primary mental abilities 71 J P Guilford and lots of mental abilities 72 Raymond Cattell 73 The Cattell-Horn-Carroll model of cognitive ability: There is a g 73 IQ: The dark side 74 viii

Contents Robert Sternberg 74 The Flynn effect 75 Group differences 77 The curious case of mathematics 78 The Flynn effect and cognitive tools 78 Other consequences of the Flynn effect 79 What about Multiple Intelligences? 79 There is a g, but what exactly is that? 81 Further reading 81 CHAPTER 5 COGNITIVE TOOLS IN THE CLASSROOM 82 Chapter objectives 82 Introduction 83 Structures and processes 83 Sensory memory 83 Working memory 84 Working memory in the classroom 86 Working memory and intelligence: At last we track down g 88 Long-term memory 89 Brain building 94 School improves memory too 95 Further reading 95 CHAPTER 6 MEMORY PROCESSES: MAKING IT STICK 97 Chapter objectives 97 Introduction: May I have your attention? 98 Attention and memory 98 Remembering 99 Ideas for avoiding Luigi moments : Storytelling 102 Look it up on the Web?: Teaching facts 103 The role of repetition 104 Massed versus distributed practice 105 Meta-memory 106 ix

Contents Growing memory 109 Increasing memory capacity 110 In conclusion 112 Further reading 112 CHAPTER 7 NON-COGNITIVE FACTORS IN SCHOOL SUCCESS 113 Chapter objectives 113 Introduction: More to success 114 Explaining people and their actions 115 Attribution theory 115 Patterns of attribution 116 Stereotype threat 118 Carol Dweck and mindsets 120 Giftedness 121 Some more cross-cultural observations: Potentials and limits 122 Avoiding the fixed mindset: Harming by praising 123 Meanwhile, back in the Anglosphere: Achievement and ability 124 Other non-cognitive factors in success 125 Other labels to be wary of 126 In conclusion 128 Further reading 129 CHAPTER 8 EXPERTS AND NOVICES 130 Chapter objectives 130 Introduction 131 Researching the transformation of novice to expert 131 Models of the development of expertise 133 Propositional and procedural knowledge 137 Developing other aspects of teaching expertise 138 The knowledge base of teaching 140 Your development as a thinker and a practitioner: Perry s theory of intellectual and ethical development 141 Your students are novices too 143 Thinking skills, creativity and other higher order attributes 143 x

Contents Bloom s Taxonomy 144 How to build expertise 146 In conclusion 147 Further reading 148 CHAPTER 9 TEACHING UNPLUGGED: TALK FOR LEARNING 149 Chapter objectives 149 Introduction 150 Social psychology in the classroom 150 Nurturing autonomy: Knowing when to let go 152 Talk for learning 153 Classroom talk 154 Culture and Pedagogy : A comparative study from five countries 155 Where dialogue is practised 161 What children currently learn 162 What children could learn 162 I did it myself? 165 Dialogic teaching, again 165 In conclusion 166 Further reading 166 CHAPTER 10 ASSESSMENT AND FEEDBACK: TEACHING S ENGINE ROOM 167 Chapter objectives 167 Introduction 168 Assessment 169 Types of assessment 169 Designing assessment: The first steps 172 Validity and reliability 173 Reliability 174 Rubrics 176 Assessing teaching: An example of rubrics in action 178 Normative and criterion-referenced assessment 181 Student involvement in assessment 182 xi

Contents Feedback 183 Level of feedback: Not all feedback is equal 184 In conclusion 186 Further reading 187 References 188 Index 197 xii