How Students Learn Sandra
How Students Learn Sandra
How Students Learn Sandra
Keith Wayland, Ph. D. Mathematics Professor Sandra Dika Ph.D. Educational Research Professor Canny Bellido Ph.D. Educational Psychology Professor
Professional Development Orientation Academy Professional Enrichment Center Academic Affairs Deanship
There are no silly questions; If youre thinking it, others probably are
Honor times Phrase questions for the benefit of everyone
Guiding Questions
1.
2.
3.
Read the College Factoids that were distributed Choose the one that seems most significant to you and prepare to discuss why it is important with your colleagues. Why do you think your factoid is important? In your opinion, what are the principal causes? What can you do in your classes to improve the situation?
(individual 4 minutes)
Each person at the table will have two minutes to talk about his or her significant fact. Choose a facilitator
Make sure everybody at the table gets a chance to ask questions and make comments Ask for questions or comments from people who have not talked
Let people know when their time is up
Choose a timekeeper
3.
Prepare to explain the reading to colleagues who are reading other parts (5 minutes)
#1 pages 9-11, 13, 19 How People Learn
#2 pages 9, 11-12, 13-14, 19 How People Learn #3 pages 9, 12-13, 14-15, 19 How People Learn
If more than one person in the group read the same principle, be sure that both have talk time Make sure that each person at the table has an opportunity to ask a question or make a comment Ask people who have not spoken to ask a question or make a comment
No matter what the distance, the return would have to be instantaneous in order to double the average velocity from 50 km/h to 100 km/h.
Principle #1: New knowledge must be grounded in prior understanding Implications for teaching
Reflect How can we provoke effective connections with prior understanding? What are the common nave conceptions (misconceptions) that students bring to the classroom? How can we lead them to confront these nave
Even though prior understanding can be a powerful aid for learning, it can also lead to developing misconceptions that act as learning barriers.
Ex: Small children will say the world is round, but interpret that to be round like a pancake
Nave conceptions (misconceptions) are often difficult for professors to remove because they seem to work well enough in the day to day world.
If misconceptions are not confronted directly, they dont go away completely. Students memorize the right answers for the exam, but later they go back to their original misconception.
How People Learn Principle 2: Organize knowledge in the context of conceptual frameworks
2. To develop competence in an area of inquiry, students must: (a) have a deep foundation of factual knowledge, (b) understand facts and ideas in the context of a conceptual framework, and (c) organize knowledge in ways that facilitate retrieval and application.
How People Learn Principle 2: Organize knowledge in the context of conceptual frameworks
Learning for understanding requires: A deep foundation of factual knowledge. Understanding facts and ideas in the context of a conceptual framework.
How People Learn Principle 2: Organize knowledge in the context of conceptual frameworks
Geography can be used to illustrate the manner in which expertise is organized around principles that support understanding. A student can learn to fill in a map by memorizing states, cities, countries, etc., and can complete the task with a high level of accuracy. But if the boundaries are removed, the problem becomes much more difficult. There are no concepts supporting the students information. An expert who understands that borders often developed because natural phenomena (like mountains or water bodies) separated people, and that large cities often arose in locations that allowed for trade (along rivers, large lakes, and at coastal ports) will easily outperform the novice. The more developed the conceptual understanding of the needs of cities and the resource base that drew people to them, the more meaningful the map becomes. Students can become more expert if the geographical information they are taught is placed in the appropriate conceptual framework.
How People Learn Principle 2: Organize knowledge in the context of conceptual frameworks
Experiment: If each has 5 seconds to look at a chessboard in the middle of a game, who do you think remembers more, a chessmaster or a good player?
Experiment: If each has 5 seconds to look at a chessboard with the pieces placed randomly, who remembers more, a chessmaster or a good player?
How People Learn Principle 2: Organize knowledge in the context of conceptual frameworks
Petals around the Rose: The game consists of throwing 5 dice to figure out how 4there veces el nmero de 5s that there is a many petals are around the rose given unique correct answer for each toss. After each toss you can ms find out the correct answer to try to discover the pattern.
Solucin aislada:
2 veces el nmero de 3s
The game only has 3 rules: The name of the game is "Petals around the Rose". The name is important. The answer is always an even number.
http://weavervsworld.com/docs/think/rose/
How People Learn Principle 2: Organize knowledge in the context of conceptual frameworks Implications for teaching
How can we provoke students to organize a solid base of declarative knowledge (data, facts, information) around the key concepts of the discipline? How can we get to the big ideas and include enough of the details to sustain those ideas at the same time? (The tendency
has been to cover a mile in width, but at depth of one inch.)
How can we strike a balance between the rich, factual details that help them make sense of everything and the multiple abstract representations that let them analyze and understand?
Metacognitive Practices
Exercise Look at the object. 15 seconds after erasing it from the screen, Ill ask you what the object was.
Metacognitive Practices
Exercise
Read the following passage from a literary critic, and pay attention to the strategies you use to comprehend: If a serious literary critic were to write a favorable, full-length review of How Could I Tell Mother She Frightened My Boyfriends Away, Grace Plumbusters new story, his startled readers would assume that he had gone mad, or that Grace Plumbuster was his editors wife.
SOURCE: Whimbey and Whimbey (1975, p. 42).
Principle #3: The importance of selfmonitoring: (metacognitive knowledge) Implications for teaching
Reflection
It is not enough to tell our students how to monitor their learning to get them to do it, for that we have to provide the setting and actively promote it. How can you do this in your classroom?
Resources
lvarez Prez, H.J. 2007. Los Hallazgos de las Neurociencias y su Aplicabilidad a la Sala de Clases: Teora y Prctica. Grupo Santillana. Baer, J.D., Cook, A.L. & Baldi, S. (Eds.). 2006. The Literacy of American College Students, American Institute of Research. Bok, D. 2005. Our Underachieving Colleges: A Candid Look at How Much Students Learn and Why They Should Be Learning More. Princeton University Press. Bransford, J.D., Brown, A. L., & Cocking, R. R. (Eds.). 2000. How People Learn: Brain, Mind, Experience, and School: Expanded Edition. National Academy Press. Donovan, S. & Bransford, J. (Eds.). 2005. How Students Learn: History, Mathematics, and Science in the Classroom. National Academy Press. Pellegrino, J.W., Chudowsky, N., Glaser R. (Eds.). 2001. Knowing What Students Know: The Science and Design of Educational Assessment. National Academy Press. Wiggins, G.P. & McTighe, J. 2005. Understanding By Design Expanded 2nd Edition. ASCD.
Rules of collaboration
College factoids to create disequilibrium confront prior knowledge/beliefs Petals around the Rose visualize thinking 3 HPL principles cooperative learnning Jigsaw