Teaching Multi-Grade Classes: Topic 19. Administrative Strategies To Support Multi-Grade Schools
Teaching Multi-Grade Classes: Topic 19. Administrative Strategies To Support Multi-Grade Schools
Teaching Multi-Grade Classes: Topic 19. Administrative Strategies To Support Multi-Grade Schools
It is obvious that a combined class of students differs a lot from the conventional type of a
student class of a single grade. That means that the way that the students of the multigrade class
should be taught must be different as well. It is true that the function of the teacher in the
multigrade classroom is multidimensional or to be more accurate it is much more complicated and
demanding than the role of the teacher in the monograde school respectively.
This is the main subject of the MUSE project to assist teacher professionals to be able to
work effectively in the multigrade school environment and be trained on teaching in the different
ways referring to the multigrade classroom. For children to learn effectively in multigrade
environments, teachers need to be well-trained, well-resourced and hold positive attitudes to
multigrade teaching. Multigrade teaching in many views represents a more demanding teaching
situation and special attention should be given to it. However, many teachers in multigrade
environments are either untrained or trained in monograde pedagogy; have few, teaching and
learning resources; and regard the multigrade classroom as a poor cousin of the better-resourced
monograde urban schools that are staffed by trained teachers. In addition, at the majority of the
cases, the multigrade teachers are very young without significant experience, "chosen" by the state
to teach at the specific rural areas. These teachers are left alone without resources and support to
handle the demanding multigrade classes. The former has serious negative impact on teachers'
psychology and attitude towards the multigrade class, and affects in a negative way their teaching
performance.
The effort should be focused by the educational authorities to reverse the teachers' negative
view for multigrade teaching and the rural school and provide them with the resources and support
to be able to overcome any difficulties. Teachers should attend special training programs before
introduce themselves at the multigrade classroom and try to adjust to their multidimensional role
as multigrade teachers. A training program like the MUSE project which represents an effort to
address the specialized needs of the multigrade school teachers ought first of all to record and
analyze the multiple role that these teachers possess in the multigrade class.
With that being said, how do we manage to put together an effective MG lesson plan? Where
do we find the resources? How do we go about it? Well, aside from looking for answers on the
internet, we can actually find time to delve more and find people who have actually experienced
handling and managing a multigrade classroom. It is better to get the facts straight, firsthand. If no
one is available to mentor you, then, tough luck, we’ll just have to rely on other countries’ curriculum
and guidelines and try to fit it in the Philippine MG Education setting.
To help lessen your problems in how to make an effective MG lesson plan, here are some of
the tips I’ve found:
For each grade level for which the teacher is responsible, he or she must determine the
answers to the questions:
1. Whom do I teach?
2. What must I teach?
3. How do I teach?
4. When do I teach?
5. Why do I teach this?
This does not only analyze and assess each learner’s prior knowledge; it also lets us know
how we should teach them in a way that they can understand. Once these questions have been
answered, only then we can devise a lesson plan that would suit the needs of our learners.
Integrated approaches assume that multiple resources will be used by students during the
course of the lesson. Textbooks will be one of these resources, but these will be supplemented by a
variety of additional print, audio-visual, and community and human resources. Field trips,
community speakers, videos, library books, newspapers, and magazines may be used as resources
if available in rural, remote areas. Learning how to use a variety of resources to find information is
one of the intended learning outcomes of integrated learning.
When developing a sequence of learning activities for an integra ted unit, you have to aim
for maximum variety. In the course of a thematic unit, therefore, students in different grades will
need to work as a whole class, in small groups, in pairs and sometimes individually. Students will
interact with you, other students, members of the community, and various learning materials. The
core theme and sub- topics are seen as natural contexts for students to use and further develop
their skills and abilities in language and literacy, arts/social studies, arithmetic, science, and the
creative arts.
Lesson planning for multigrade teaching depends on the number of grades combined in the
classroom. But whatever the number of lesson plans needed per day, there are three stages of
planning to consider: planning activities before the lesson, during the lesson, and after the lesson.
Set the objectives of the lesson, know the materials needed (if there is none, create one).
Decide on the methods of presentation and prepare all the needed materials beforehand.
Evaluate the lesson plan. Note the things that needed revision and think about what went
well and what did not so that it can help you prepare for a better lesson plan next time.
Also, here are some practical tips for teaching Multigrade Classes according to UNESCO:
LESSON PREPARATION is one of the activities that a multigrade teacher should master.
Definition of Terms
Lesson Preparation
B. Lesson Planning:
o Visualizing a lesson before it is taught
o Prediction, anticipation, sequencing, simplifying
o Hallmark of effective teaching
Wiggins and McTighe (1998) suggest a backward design model for planning that begins NOT
with the lesson, but with our expectations for the END RESULT. There are three basic steps to
designing a lesson using backward design:
1. Identify the desired results.
2. Determine acceptable evidence.
3. Plan learning experiences and instruction. (Tileston, 2004)
B. Lesson Proper
a) Main part of the lesson
b) Teacher explains, models, demonstrates, and illustrates concepts, ideas, skills, or
processes
c) Continuation of a previously introduced topic
C. After the Lesson
a) Closing or end of the lesson
b) “wrap-up” activities
c) Summary of the lesson
d) Recall lesson’s key activities and concepts
e) Reinforce what the teacher has taught
f) Assessment of what learners have mastered