Self-Study Teaching Strategy
Self-Study Teaching Strategy
Self-Study Teaching Strategy
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(( SELF-STUDY TEACHING STRATEGY ))
Introduction: -
The philosophy of self-learning has developed since the 1970s and early
1980s and has become one of the main features in education in the late 20th and
early 21st centuries. Self-learning goes by many other labels including self-
directed learning and self-access learning (Ranabahu and Tamala, 2006).
Language learning and self-learning has a fundamental philosophy which is based
on the idea that students need to learn how to learn. At the same time, they need to
learn how to be critical thinkers and learners, thus making them active and
productive global citizens. This philosophy of learning came as a reaction to the
mechanized individual programmed learning of the 1950s and 1960s, where
learning a language was considered as a mechanical process where practice and
learning of drills were considered as the new way of learning languages (Ranabahu
and Tamala, 2006). Peters (2000) pointed out that the term self-learning was used
in 1970s when Moore (1973) defined it as the ability that learners have in order to
decide on their learning.
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mastered the new strategies and lastly; expansion, where the teacher provides more
opportunities for learners to test the strategies they have learned. (Fuming, 2007).
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Definition: -
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research process or in teaching (p. 607). Self-study employs diverse methods and
uses primarily qualitative research to analyze and represent findings. averse
methods and uses primarily qualitative research to analyze and represent findings.
Bullough and Pinnegar (2004) argue that the inclusive nature of self-study
and its multiple definitions provoke a continuous and communal conversation
about its characteristics. Regardless of the stance, Hamilton and Pinnegar (1998a)
conclude “acritical examination of the self’s involvement both in aspects of the
study and in the phenomenon under study” are central to self-study (p. 240).
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complexities and possibilities in their teaching, and the interplay of their teaching
Actions within that exploration.
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place their values on the table. These values become the impetus for their research.
The inquiry into these beliefs and values through practice provides insights into the
manner in which the teacher-researcher imbue their teaching with their beliefs and
values. These insights are transformational in that they inspire the teacher-
researcher to respond, to make change, to transform practice as the teacher-
researcher progresses toward the goal that is the envisioned belief.
While the hierarchical model relates well to the novice and master teacher
phenomena, a non-hierarchical model can also be used to examine the elements
that foster reflection: cognitive, critical and narrative (Sparks-Langer & cotton,
(1991). The cognitive element refers to the knowledge about content and pedagogy
teachers have that leads to the decisions made about instruction. The critical
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element relates to the moral and ethical views that influence the decision-making
process and, the narrative element is the teacher’s actual account of the classroom
experiences. In this model, both novice and experienced teachers use these three
elements in their teaching, but the degree to which they address these elements
may vary by experience, which spirals ever broader as their experiences increase.
These elements of reflection work well with the idea of self-study in terms of what
knowledge is known, the ethical issues surrounding that knowledge, and the
subsequent instruction.
Using self-study strategy helps to get students more engaged in the learning
process , so it’s useful to use when I want students to learn at their own pace ,
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because ‘knowledge acquisition’ now takes place outside the classroom, each
student can control it to match their own personal abilities and appetite. In a
traditional classroom instruction-based method relies on every student absorbing
and understanding at the same time and pace. But self-study learning strategy
doesn’t. This can be particularly liberating for slower learners. No longer do they
feel the burden of having to ‘keep up’; they’re free to learn in a way that works for
them. And if they want to go back and study something again, they can.
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Methods of self-study teaching strategy
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gives the learner the skills and abilities to solve the problems facing him
creatively, and this develops learners thinking.
Learning through acting and drama: As the self-educational process is
represented by the learner's own role in representing the material to be
learned.
Field learning: This type of learning is based on the learner’s actual visits
to museums, monuments, parks and forests, and various institutions, as they
confirm and document information on the real life.
Learning through personal projects: The learner is assigned to create an
integrated project, plan and implementation, so that it takes care of all its
details, and the learner is responsible and the main focus of this project to
achieve the best results.
Test-reinforced learning: The enhanced learning strategy is known as
testing or retrieval of information as the student’s ability to remember
information based on the tests that are given to learners. They may be
written tests and the answers are more extensive and detailed, in which
knowledge is activated and information is retrieved for the educational
content. The second is objective tests such as multiple choice, as it is
limited to choosing the correct.
Elaborative self-explanation : The elaborative self-interpretation strategy
relies on the student to raise questions about the educational content that
stimulate memory and recall, which in turn stimulates information
memorization, which helps to better understanding of the material and use
that knowledge to solve problems.
Distributed practice : it’s used to ensure that the information in the
educational content is remembered for a long time, and that is by dividing
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the academic content and distributing the effort and studying it over different
sessions, which constitutes the ability to retrieve the information for a long
time, for example it is recommended when studying the material for the
exam to divide it into parts to study it over a long period of time and not
repeat for long hours before the exam.
Interleaved practice: it depends on studying different topics or multiple
subjects at the same time instead of studying the same subject, and focus on
them well before moving on to study other subjects, and this method is
considered more effective in developing the skills of the mind in solving
problems and classification, and the ability to transfer the information that
has been acquired, and keep it for a period long.
Monitoring the student's learning process : The student should follow up
on what has been learned, and check the extent of his ability to achieve his
goals that he set, follow them up and evaluate them on an ongoing basis, and
this will be in accordance with the standards set by the student himself.
The student's sharing of what he learned with others : By discussing
what he has learned from the experiences and information of the other
students, and thus confirming that information, and developing his self-
confidence in front of them.
Make something out of what the student learned: means the necessity of
reviewing and summarizing what was learned through a diagram, summary
book, or song, and this helps to retrieve information and establish it in the
student’s mind, and set new goals that complement the goals that have been
achieved.
Using game-based learning strategies: It is necessary in the educational
process to use motivation and reinforcement in learning, and that is that the
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student puts a reward of some kind upon achieving a goal, which gives him
an incentive to reach this goal to obtain the reward.
Development of internal motivation: This self-motivation comes through
the desire to learn, it only comes with training and education, and this
motivation can be enhanced by reading, searching for information and facts,
and sharing what has been learned with others.
Understand the student's approach: it lies in the student's identification of
the method or method that suits him in the learning process, and the
selection of subjects that fit his directions.
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Students Role:-
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of my study was actually others, their understandings and their voice.
At that time in my research, I felt comfortable studying my practice
through others’ voices and perceptions. It gave me a sense of being
objective in my research. And, indeed, it was a way to look at the
manner in which the content I taught was manifested in my students’
language. While this was not a self-study that placed self in the center
of the research focus, it was a form of action research that answered
questions about my own teaching, about my self as teacher through
the lens of the students. Yet for me, it was a large step away from the
science model of research. It made me somewhat uncomfortable to
not be able to demonstrate statistical significance. However, I realized
the importance of examining the environment of my teaching in a way
that could not be quantified. There’s a research in teacher beliefs had
used qualitative methods of inquiry to examine patterns in the ways
teachers talked about and represented their beliefs. Specifically, I used
the constant comparative method of analysis to develop categories
emerging from the data. This type of research provided me with a
handle to hold on to in discussing self-study. It was important for me
to be able to justify my self-study research method using a
triangulated design for data gathering and a recognized method for
data analysis” (International hand book of self-study of teaching and
teacher education practice p75&83)
The learner takes a positive and active role in learning.
Students should have the ability to communicate with others and
coexist with them.
Having the ability to innovate.
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Awareness of self-interests and responses.
Considering the credibility of content.
Being open to new sources of information and perspectives.
Continuing to build on the combination of feelings, information and
new discoveries.
Adapt to changing conditions.
Search, experimentation, and be organized.
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Teachers Role: -
We should realize that objectivity is elusive and that the research decisions
to create that objectivity belie subjective beliefs, places the decisions for research
questions and research design in the meaningful base of context. As the heading
for this section suggests, it is more than the object or subject that we study, it is the
context in which the object or subject exists and the relationship between that
context and the object/subject that is the point of study. In teaching, the classroom
context and the relationship between students and teachers in that context provide
the focus for examination of self and practice. In the classroom, self-study of
teaching. there are some practical procedures that the teacher should follow in
order to enhance self-learning; first, the teacher must give the learner enough
respect especially to those whose English is not good, to help them build up self-
confidence in learning a foreign language like English . next, the teacher should
vary and use extra-curriculum activities that can meet the needs of learners at
different levels and increase their sense of participation. The role of the teacher in
the classroom should shift from the classical teacher/textbook model to the more
self directed model. In this situation, teachers should vary the use of extra
curriculum activities that meet the learners’ interests and thus increase sense of
participation, they should conduct continuous evaluation of learners and develop
an acceptable criteria of performance for the collective whole.
The teacher has to follow the satisfaction strategies in which he/she should
know that learner will desire to do well, will think about success, and will feel bad
if he/she fails; give infrequent feedback; continue to monitor learner’s progress
when needed; require self-evaluation at intervals and at the end of the task shares
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ideas-in-progress with learner and suggests topics learner can write about for
publication.
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Students can take control over their own learning , so they become
more interested in learning
Students learn more effectively
Students discover more about the topics they’re studying
It can boost students’ self-esteem
Students can learn at their own pace
Encourages curiosity
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Learning conditions: The factors of strength and weaknesses are
meant in terms of senses and circumstances in general.
(( References ))
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