Title: Middle School Students
1Chapter 2
2Young Adolescents
- Ages 10 (5th grade) to 14 (8th grade)
- Teacher needs to utilize info of children that age
3Transescence
- Donald Eichhorn defined transescence
- Begins w/ onset of puberty extends to early
adolescence - Based on physical, social, emotional, and
intellectual changes - 1962 Tanner reports that children are maturing
biologically at an accelerated rate - Age ten through fourteen is the chronological age
of the transescent
4Transescence cont.
- Developmental stages and relation to academic
performance - A matter of degree rather than of kind
- Success related more to affective domain
- Student attitude is directly related to learning
- School climate relates to learning
5Characteristics of Middle School Students
- Intellectual Development
- Exhibit independent critical thought
- Face decisions
- Intensely curious
- Academic goals are secondary
- Displays a wide range of individual intellectual
development - DAP___________________________________
6Characteristics of Middle School Students (cont.)
- Physical development
- Biological development for MS is five years
sooner than nineteenth century students from 17
yrs. To 12 yrs. - Mature at varying rates
- Boys tend to lag behind girls
- Health science curriculum emphasizes
self-understanding - Opportunities for interaction among students of
different ages - Emphasis on intramural programs
- DAP___________________________________
7Characteristics of Middle School Students (cont.)
- Psychological development
- Easily offended and sensitive to criticism of
personal shortcomings - Erratic and inconsistent in their behavior
- Psychologically at-risk
- Searching for adult identity and acceptance
- Encouragement of self-assessment
- DAP________________________________
8Characteristics of Middle School Students (cont.)
- Social development
- Act out unusual or drastic behavior
- Fiercely loyal to peer group values
- Challenges authority figures
- Desires love and acceptance from significant
adults - An active student government allows students to
establish their own standards - DAP___________________________________
9Characteristics of Middle School Students (cont.)
- Moral and ethical development
- Idealistic and have a strong sense of fairness in
human relationships - Opportunities for students to examine various
behaviors and study the consequences of various
actions - DAP________________________________
10Characteristics of Middle School Students (cont.)
- DAP to you
- _______________
- _______________
- _______________
- _______________
- _______________
11The Middle School in a Nation of Rapidly
Increasing Diversity
- To most effectively teach students who are
different from you need skills in - (1) Establishing a classroom climate in which
students feel welcome and that they can learn - (2) Building on students learning styles,
capacities, and modalities - (3) Techniques that emphasize cooperative and
social-interactive learning and that deemphasize
competitive learning - (4) Strategies and techniques that have proven
successful for students of specific differences
12Middle School in a Nation of Increasing Diversity
(cont.)
- The traditional two-parent, two-child family now
makes up about 6 of U.S. households. - One-half of the children in the U.S. will spend
some years being raised by a single parent. - By the year 2010, minority youths in the
school-age population will average close to 40.
13Middle School in a Nation of Increasing Diversity
(cont.)
- That population boom will be led by Hispanics and
Asian Americans. - The U.S. is truly a multilingual, multiethnic,
and multicultural country.
14Styles of Learning and Implications(Refer to
separate BBL, MI, LS handouts)
- Brain Laterality
- Term referring to the left and right hemispheres
of brain. - Referred to as brain laterality or brain
hemisphericity.
15Styles of Learning and Implications(Refer to
separate BBL, MI, LS handouts)
- Learning Modules
- Refers to the sensory portal means by which a
student refers to receive sensory reception, or
the actual way a student learns best. - As a general rule, young adolescents prefer and
learn best by touching objects. - Feeling shapes and textures, by interaction, and
by moving things around. - Learning by sitting is difficult for them.
16Styles of Learning and Implications(Refer to
separate BBL, MI, LS handouts)
- Learning Modules (cont.)
- Learning style traits are known that
significantly discriminate between students who
are at risk of not finishing school and students
who perform well. - Students who are underachieving and at risk need
- (1) Frequent opportunities for success
- (2) Options and choices
- (3) A variety of instructional resources,
environments, social groups, rather than routine
and patterns - (4) Opportunities to learn during late morning,
afternoon, or evening hours rather than early
morning - (5) Informal seating
- (6) Low illumination
- (7) Visual introductory resources reinforced by
kinesthetic
17Styles of Learning and Implications(Refer to
separate BBL, MI, LS handouts)
- Learning Styles
- Defined as independent forms of knowing and
processing information. - Classifications
- A learning style is not an indicator of
intelligence, but rather an indicator of how a
person learns. - David Kolb describes two major differences in how
people learn how they perceive situations and
how they process information.
18Styles of Learning and Implications(Refer to
separate BBL, MI, LS handouts)
- Learning Capacities The theory of MI
- Many educators believe that many of the students
who are at risk of not completing school are
those who may be dominant in a cognitive learning
style that is not in sync with traditional
teaching methods. - Traditional learning methods are typically
presented in a logical, linear, sequential
fashion (Verb/Ling, Log/Math, Intrapersonal). - See the classroom example show in Figure 2.1 on
P. 44. - Howard Gardners Project Zero Web site at
http//pzweb.harvard.edu/HP Zpages/Whatsnew.html
19Instructional Practices that Provide for Student
Differences General Guidelines
- (1) Plan learning activities so they follow a
step-by-step sequence from concrete to abstract. - (2) Collaboratively plan with students
- (3) Concentrate on employing student-centered
instruction - (4) Establish multiple learning centers in
classroom - (5) Maintain high expectations
- (6) Make learning meaningful by integrating
learning with life
20Instructional Practices that Provide for Student
Differences General Guidelines
- (7) Provide a structured learning environment
- (8) Provide ongoing monitoring of individual
student learning - (9) Provide variations in meaningful assignments
- (10) Use direct instruction to teach to the
development of observation, generalization, and
other thinking and learning skills
21Instructional Practices that Provide for Student
Differences General Guidelines
- (11) Use reciprocal peer coaching and cross-age
tutoring - (12) Use multilevel instruction
- (13) Utilize interactive computer programs and
multimedia - (14) Use small-group and cooperative learning
strategies
22Recognizing and Working with Special-Needs
Students
- To the extent possible, students with special
needs must be educated with their peers in the
regular classroom. - Public Law 94-142, The Education of Handicapped
Act of 1975. - IDEA, Individuals with Disabilities Education
Act. - This legislation requires provision of the LRE.
- An LRE environment is one that is as normal as
possible.
23Recognizing and Working with Special-Needs
Students (cont.)
- Inclusion is a commitment to educate each
special-needs child in the school and, when
appropriate, in the class that child would have
attended had the child not had a disability. - Individualized Educational Program (IEP), is
devised annually for each special-needs child. - An IEP is developed for each student each year by
a team that includes - Special education teachers, the childs parents
or guardians, and the classroom teachers.
24Recognizing and Working with Special-Needs
Students (cont.)
- The IEP contains a statement of
- Students present educational levels
- Educational goals for the year
- Specifications for the services to be provided
- Extent to which the student should be expected to
take part in the regular education program - Evaluative criteria for services to be provided
25Guidelines for Working with Special-Needs Students
- Break complex learning into simpler components.
- Move from most concrete to the abstract, rather
than the other way around. - Maintain consistency in your expectations and in
your responses. - Plan interesting learning-bridging activities
that help students connect with the real world. - Use PowerPoint in class.
26Guidelines for Working with Special-Needs
Students (cont.)
- Provide for and teach toward student success.
- Use student portfolios which can give evidence of
progress and help in building student confidence. - Provide help in the organization of students
learning. - Have a three-hole punch available for putting
papers into notebooks. - Ask students to read their notes aloud to each
other in small groups. - Encourage and provide for peer support.
27Recognizing and Working with Students of
Diversity and Differences
- Avoid jargon or idoms that might be
misunderstood. - Divide complex language into smaller, more
manageable units. - Use a variety of examples and observable models.
- Encourage student writing.
- Learn as much as possible about the students
native language. - Plan for and use all learning modalities.
- Use techniques that emphasize cooperative
learning.
28Recognizing and Working with Students who are
Gifted
- Estimated that between 10 and 20 of school
dropouts are students who are in the range of
being intellectually gifted. - Giftedness must be identified first.
- Personal behaviors may identify them as being
gifted, but academically disabled, bored, and
alienated.
29Recognizing and Working with Students who are
Gifted (cont.)
- Behaviors to recognize
- Antisocial students
- Creative, high-achieving
- Divergent-thinking students can develop
self-esteem problems. - Perfectionists may exhibit compulsive behaviors.
30Recognizing and Working with Students who are
Gifted (cont.)
- Behaviors to recognize (cont.)
- Sensitive students who are also gifted may become
easily depressed. - Students with special needs may be gifted. ADD,
Dyslexia, hyperactivity, and other learning
disorders sometimes mask giftedness. - Underachieving students can also be gifted
students that are seldom or never challenged by
classroom teachers.
31Recognizing and Working with Students who are
Gifted (cont.)
- Providing meaningful curriculum options
- To ensure success, most experts agree that
schools should be organized around nontracked,
thematic programs of student design. - This prepares students for entry into both higher
education and high-skill employment through
intellectually rigorous practical education.
32Recognizing and Working with Students who are
Gifted (cont.)
- Additional Guidelines for Working with Gifted
Students - Identify and showcase the students special
gifts. - Involve the students in selecting and planning
activities. - Plan and provide optional and voluntary
enrichment activities. - Plan assignments and activities that challenge
the students to the fullest of their abilities.
This does not mean overloading them with homework
or giving identical assignments to all students.
33Recognizing and Working with Students who are
Gifted (cont.)
- Additional Guidelines for Working with Gifted
Students - Provide in-class seminars for students to discuss
topics and problems that they are pursuing
individually or as members of a learning team. - Use pre-assessments.
34Recognizing and Working with Recalcitrant Students
- Slower-learning students who are willing to try
are simply slower learners. - They may be slow because of their learning style
or for genetic reasons, or a combination of the
two. - Being a slow learner may, in fact, be quite
gifted or talented in some way.
35Recognizing and Working with Recalcitrant
Students (cont.)
- Guidelines to follow
- At the beginning, learn as much about the student
as you can. Look into past history of student,
but do not use this as something to be held
against the student. - Avoid lecturing to these students.
- Work out an IEP with each student.
- Engage the students in active learning with real
world problem solving.
36Recognizing and Working with Recalcitrant
Students (cont.)
- Guidelines to follow (cont.)
- Concentrate instead on students learning some
things well. - Help students develop their studying and learning
skills. - When appropriate, use frequent positive
reinforcement. - Be sure to praise the deed, rather than the
student.
37Teaching Toward Positive Character Development
- Reminiscent of the 1930s and late 1960s.
- Resurgence of interest in the development of
students values. - Stimulated by a perceived need to act to reduce
students antisocial behaviors and to produce
more respectful and responsible citizens. - Many school districts are developing curricula in
character education with the ultimate goal of
developing mature adults capable of responsible
citizenship and moral action. (ie., Character
Counts)
38Teaching Toward Positive Character Development
(cont.)
- (1) Provide a classroom atmosphere conductive to
such development. - (2) Be a model the students can emulate.
- (3) Build a sense of community.
- (4) Collaboratively plan with students action and
community-oriented projects. - (5) Teach students to negotiate and conflict
resolution. - (6) Advocating a particular stance on a
controversial issue. - (7) Make student service projects.