Avoiding Expensive Mistakes: Moving toward learnercentered teaching - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 9
About This Presentation
Title:

Avoiding Expensive Mistakes: Moving toward learnercentered teaching

Description:

Over 25% of freshmen in 4 year college do not return for sophomore year ... Institutional behavior aligned with 'instruction' mission or misaligned. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:42
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 10
Provided by: nancys64
Learn more at: https://www.usmd.edu
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Avoiding Expensive Mistakes: Moving toward learnercentered teaching


1
Avoiding Expensive MistakesMoving toward
learner-centered teaching
  • Nancy S. Shapiro
  • April 9, 2007
  • University System of Maryland
  • nshapiro_at_usmd.edu

2
Why the students we have are not the students we
want
  • Over 25 of freshmen in 4 year college do not
    return for sophomore year
  • Over 40 of freshmen in 2 year colleges do not
    return for sophomore year
  • 60 of high school students say they cheat on
    tests
  • 90 of high school students say they copied
    someones homework
  • Most spend less than 4 hours a week on homework.
  • John Tagg, The Learning Paradigm College, pp
    40-43.

3
What do we know about learning?
  • New science of learning
  • Learning with understanding
  • Pre-existing knowledge
  • Active learning
  • Deep learning vs. surface learning
  • Deep learning is active/surface learning is inert
  • Deep learning is holistic/surface learning is
    atomistic
  • Deep learning integrates/surface learning
    externalizes
  • National Academies, How People Learn, p. 8-13.
  • John Tagg, Learning Paradigm College, p. 81.

4
Implications for teaching and institutional
priorities
  • Deep Learning
  • Emphasizes intrinsic goals
  • High levels of cognitive activity, highest
    rewards for high cost activities, deep
    approaches, complex cognition
  • High ration of feedback to evaluation
  • Long time horizons decisions bear consequences
    in the long run
  • Strong support community
  • Institutional behavior consistent, aligned with
    learning mission.
  • Surface Learning
  • Emphasizes extrinsic goals
  • Low level of cognitive activity high rewards for
    low cost activities surface approaches,
    retention
  • Low ration of feedback to evaluation
  • Short time horizon decisions bear consequences
    in the short run
  • Weak support community
  • Institutional behavior aligned with instruction
    mission or misaligned.
  • John Tagg, Learning Paradigm College, p. 101.

5
Creating conditions for student success in
college DEEP Project
  • Lay out a path to successstudents need to know
    what to expect (orientation, communication, intro
    to college courses)
  • Frontload resources to smooth transition
    (mentors, tutors, peer groups)
  • If activities are important, consider requiring
    certain learning activities (study abroad,
    service learning, student-faculty research)
  • Create reward structures congruent with mission
    and priorities.

6
Lessons Learned from DEEP continued
  • Improve performance through frequent feedback
  • Experiment with engaging pedagogies and active
    learning
  • Use electronic technologies to enhance active
    learning
  • Create company of peers outside the class through
    study groups and learning communities
  • George Kuh, Student Success in College, pp.
    295-317.

7
Principles of Course Redesign
  • Define the problem to be solved
  • Analyze, deconstruct and document the resources
    currently used to teach the course
  • Redesign the whole course
  • Encourage active learning
  • Provide students with individualized assistance
  • Build in ongoing formative assessment
  • Ensure sufficient time on task and monitor
    students
  • National Academic Course Transformation Project,
    www.theNCAT.org

8
Why move toward learner-centered teaching?
  • All learning involves transfer from previous
    experiences.
  • Ability to transfer what they have learned to new
    situations provides an important index of
    adaptive flexible learning.
  • Active learning promotes understanding and
    understanding is more likely to promote transfer
    than memorizing information.
  • Transfer of learning is an active process.
  • Major goal of schooling is to prepare students
    for flexible adaptation to new problems in new
    settings.

9
For Further Reference
  • Kuh, G. et al. (2005). Student Success in
    College. San Francisco Jossey Bass.
  • National Academies. (2000) How People Learn
    Brain, Mind, Experience, and School. Washington,
    DC Author.
  • Shulman, L. S. (2004). Teaching as Community
    Property. San Francisco Jossey Bass.
  • Tagg, J. (2003). The Learning Paradigm College.
    Bolton Ankar Publishing Co.
  • Twigg, C.A. (2005). Increasing Success for
    Underserved Students Redesigning Introductory
    Courses. Saratoga Springs National Center for
    Academic Transformation. http//www.thencat.org.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com