A direct instruction presentation in the elementary and secondary classroom is not like the college lecture you may be familiar with. The typical college lecture rarely will be suitable for your classroom, because your learners’ attention spans, interest levels, and motivation will not be the same as those of college students. (P.222) | I chose this section because I think it constantly evolves from each level of school you go to. You can be in middle school and then go to high school where you will see this same thing. I noticed this mostly when I began the transition from my two year degree to my four year degree. I had to begin thinking differently and modify my interest and learning styles. | Research indicates that direct instruction strategies are among those that correlate highest with student achievement, as measured by standardized tests, which tend to emphasize facts, rules, and sequences (P.223) | While I do agree with this statement, I do wonder if it isn’t because we do things in repetition so that these students can memorize what we are teaching rather than actually learning it just so they score well on state tests. | Your active participation in the presentation of content can change these misperceptions by mixing interesting supplemental or introductory infor-mation with the dry facts, by showing the application of the material to future schoolwork or world events, and by illustrating with questions and answers that the material is neither easy nor previously mastered. (P.226) | I think active participation is what can set a good teacher apart from a great teacher. Being active does help deliver more information most effectively and can be helpful to teach it by indeed placing the information around real world events. | Review and checking at the beginning of a lesson also is the most efficient and timely way of finding out if your students have mastered task-relevant prior knowledge sufficiently to begin a new lesson; if not, you may reteach the missing content (P.230) | . I recall my teachers doing this in school, but I never quite felt it was that important. However, as an adult and as a student now myself who is learning to teach, I can see the importance. If we as educators decided to just continue on with each lesson while the majority of the students seem lost, there is no way that the future lessons will be retained either. | When high performers answer questions correctly but average performers do not, some reteaching should be undertaken before the start of the lesson. (P.230) | I think this is an interesting statement and I do agree. I also think this is a great opportunity for those who clearly get the objective well to be some peer tutors and allow them to assist in bringing the other students along. | Lessons must be served in small portions that are consistent with the previous knowledge, ability level, and experience of your students. Likewise the content within the lessons must be partitioned and subdivided to organize it into small bits. No portion can be too large, or you will lose your students’ attention. (P.231) | Small portions are most key here in my opinion. I think there is such an issue in many classrooms where kids are loaded down with so much homework that they cannot retain all of this information in such a short time frame before they move to the next lesson. Many classrooms seem more like machines on a production line rather than interactive learning environments. | Unfortunately, many beginning teachers stick tenaciously to these formal headings without realizing either the volume of content that falls within them or the time it takes to orally explain, illustrate, and practice this content. (P.232) | I believe new teachers walk into the classroom thinking they have learned everything there is to know to prepare themselves as educators. The reality is they never are fully prepared because there are too many unique students and situations they will see in their tenure that will teach them new ideas. | Constructivist lessons are designed and sequenced to encourage learners to use their own experiences to actively construct meaning that makes sense to them, rather than to acquire understanding through exposure to a format exclusively organized by the teacher (P.259) | I think a lot of people learn this way. I also believe higher learning has lead educators down the path to realize it is important to tie real world experience to new learning techniques and ideas. It makes the classroom time much more interesting. | When you present instructional stimuli to your learners in the form of content, materials, objects, and events and ask them to go beyond the information given to make conclusions and generalizations or find a pattern of relationships, you are using the indirect model of instruction. (P262) | This reminds me of a speech teacher I had in highschool who gave us an assignment where we had to research the JFK assassination and write a speech on our findings. We could not simply read a book or watch a movie and write our paper. We had to really do some research and look at every thought or clue that may or may not have led to the actual end result. It made me really go beyond the norm. | Deductive thinking includes testing generalizations to see if they hold in specific cases. Typically, a laboratory experiment in the sciences follows the deductive method. In these fields, the experimenter begins with a theory or hypothesis about what should happen and then tests it with an experiment to see if it can be confirmed (P.275) | I always loved health and science classes because of the way it made you think like this. We would always have some sort of project where we had to develop a theory and then begin testing that theory. I think this makes students get more active and is also a good way to introduce working in groups. | In direct instruction, answering questions is how students show what they know so you may provide clues, hints, and probes. In indirect instruction, your questions guide students into discovering new dimensions of a problem or ways of resolving a dilemma. (P.279) | I had a teacher who used to drill us with answers when we walked in the door. We then had to tell her what the question to her answer was. It was a lot like Jeopardy, but I like the creativeness about it and it made me look forward to her class every day. | Until recently, the use of student ideas was considered the centerpiece of indirect instruction. Using student ideas meant incorporating student experiences, points of view, feelings, and problems into the lesson by making the student the primary point of reference. (P. 280) | I think it is very vital to use student input into the lessons being taught. It creates more experience that can get other students interested in the topic and then help to tie the whole lesson together for them. | A third way to incorporate student ideas into your lesson is to allow students to respond using their own interests, concerns, and problems. (P.281) | I think it would be interesting to see how a student can teach other students by being the teacher for the day. They could have the lesson itself but then find a way to deliver it through sharing real life experiences or situations. | When student-to-student-to-teacher exchanges grow into protracted interactions among a large number of students, a full-group discussion has begun (Burbules & Bruce, 2001). In this type of discussion, you may intervene only occasionally to review and summarize main points, or you may schedule periodic time-outs to evaluate the group’s progress and to redirect, if necessary. (P.283) | | Some research data indeed show that not all questions actively engage students in the learning process. Early studies estimated that 70% to 80% of all questions require the simple recall of facts; only 20% to 30% require the higher-level thought processes of clarifying, expanding, generalizing, and making inferences (P.299) | I do not see myself as being much of an educator that would use a lot of recall questions. I think that having some recall questions makes sense to get an idea of the retention level of the class, but I think real learning comes from more in depth critical thinking. | Questions at various levels of cognitive complexity can be directed to individuals, to groups, or to the entire class. Occasionally posing questions over the heads of some learners and under the heads of others will keep all students alert and engaged in the learning process (P.302) | I do agree that there should be a variable to the types of questions being asked because no two learners are the same. However, I think the teacher certainly should have a good grasp on each student and their learning style before they should attempt questioning like this. | Your students may not need to be able to recite the names of the presidents, the Declaration of Independence, or the elements in the periodic table, because these facts may not be task-relevant prior knowledge for more higher-order outcomes. However, your learners will likely need to recite the multiplication tables, the parts of speech, and the rules for adding, subtracting, multiplying, and dividing signed numbers, for these facts will be used countless times in completing exercises and solving problems at higher levels of cognitive complexity. (P.306) | I believe any student you ask will tell you they do not understand why they need to take Geography or perhaps even science if they are never going to use these skills in the future. While I do agree these classes are necessary and help shape minds and prepares them for continued education, there is some truth in the concern. I am not so certain some of the greatest CEO’s of our time was great in these classes either and really gained most of their skills hands on. | Self-directed learning helps students construct their own understanding and meaning and helps them to reason, problem solve, and think critically about the content (P.330) | I love to see kids go off on their own path of learning and bring back what they had discovered and their story to how they got there. No two students will be the same and may arrive at the same answer, but have found that answer in very different ways. | The knowledge and skills that learners are to acquire are not given to them in the form of finished products. Instead you provide cognitive stimulation at just the proper times for students to acquire the end products through their own reasoning. (P.334) | I think it is important to give just enough information at times to not only spark interest in the subject matter, but to stimulate their minds and get them to begin the process of independent thinking and reasoning. | If your reaction promotes an inaccurate and meaningless response, the interplay may not be so gentle, at least not in the learner’s mind. But if your reaction creates (or even intentionally promotes) a student response that is inaccurate but meaningful, the interplay returns to a gentler state. (P.337) | I would much rather hear something creative in answering even if they are exactly correct in their response. If they show they have tried and can discuss how they arrived there, I think that does indeed deserve credit of some sort. | As students gradually accept the shift in responsibility from teacher to student, you reduce the amount of explaining, explicitness of cues, and prompting that may have marked the earlier part of the lesson. (P.340) | This is so true and you really begin noticing this as a student in high school, but then really begin noticing it when you start college. I think teachers start evolving from being an instructor 100% of the time to being somewhat of a facilitator who helps direct the students’ minds in the right path of reasoning. | Jingles or trigger sentences can cue sequential letters, patterns, or special historical dates. For example, most music students learn some varia-tion of the statement “Every Good Boy Does Fine” to recall the musical notes EGBDF on the lines of a music treble staff. (P.347) | You can put a jingle test or a logo test in front of most kids and they will tell you the business it belongs to. While it may be true that this is in part due to repetition of radio ads and television commercials, it is also from these ads being creative and capturing attention from the beginning. I think it is important and lasting for a teacher to do the very same thing. | Note taking can improve information processing in several ways. It enhances reception by prompting learners to attend better to what they are hearing or seeing. (P.348) | This is true because note taking is a form of repetition to what you have recently read or heard. This allows the learner to return to your notes and keep studying them to memorize what you need to learn. I am not sure that once a test is over that a student will actually remember what they wrote in their notes. | Educators have urged school reforms that engage learners in hands-on learning activities as the best way to develop self-directed learning (P.352) | I think hands on is for sure a great way to learn something and not just a task either. I believe you can make just about any subject interactive in some way. | Students who fail to see the purpose or personal relevance of class activities perform more poorly than those who do see the connection between their classwork and their lives. (P.352) | This is a profound statement in my opinion. The problem with schools these days is that kids do not want to go. Simply put they are bored when they are there. This is why teachers should really pull personal connections into their lesson to get the kids more engaged and wanting to return each day. | Adult learners form their attitudes and values from social interaction. Although we learn much about the world from books, magazines, newspapers, and television, most of our attitudes and values are formed by discussing what we know or think with others. (P.364) | I think this is why my last two years of my undergrad program focused heavily on working in teams. It gave us the chance to learn from one another in a controlled environment with the understanding that everyone has something different to bring to the table, but equally as important. | With the decreasing presence of adults in the homes of working parents, the class-room has become an important vehicle for bolstering home and community values. (P.364) | Sadly this is a true statement because economic changes throughout the last several decades has demanded homes run on two incomes. This has caused an issue on the amount of time and interaction parents have with their kids when it comes to their studies. I mostly see parents only get involved when they see a progress or report card. At that point too much time has gone by and there have been opportunities lost. | Books and lectures may be useful for teach-ing knowledge, comprehension, and application, but they seldom are sufficient to bring about the private, inner speech required for thinking critically, reasoning, and problem solving in real-life settings. (P.365) | You can read a book or listen to a speaker all day long. The fact is it takes excitement and passion to deliver interest in the subject itself and create an atmosphere where learning can be fun. | Your role is to intervene at critical junctures and then to retreat, allowing the group to grapple with the new perspective or information given. (P.366) | I love to teach people new things in groups and walk around and listen to how each group is handling the task. You can always find one person who seems to take the lead and begin developing trust among their peers. | If a group produces an outstanding report but only a few students have contributed to it, the group as a whole will have learned no more than if each member had completed the assignment alone. (P.367) | I used to have to write 15 page essays with a group of four other students when I was in my undergrad program. You could always count on at least two, sometimes three, other students who would either not assist at all or would only help a little. The only good thing is that we also had to grade our teammates on their involvement which helped curb their part of the grade some on the project. | Thus the rule of thumb is to compose groups of four or five members for single-period activities and slightly larger groups (of five or six) for activities that stretch over more than a class period, thus requiring greater task complexity and role specialization. (P.370) | I think you have to be careful in regards to the amount of people you have in groups. It is highly likely that the more people you have in a group project, the more likely it is they will develop groupthink. | Group work can easily get out of hand in the excitement, controversy, and natural dialogue that can come from passionate discussion. (P.371) | I have lived this statement before when other students get into heated debates over the task. Most of the time it is because they are both strong leaders who both feel they are right and will not take time to listen to each other. | Providing feedback to the groups on how well they are collaborating is important to their progress in acquiring collaborative skills (P.378) | This is the most important part to working in a group. My facilitator used to always drop a note or an email to check in on the group and read the comments back and forth and provide us with feedback. This was especially true if she seen us getting off track. |
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