Title: The Concept of Flow and Its Educational Applications
1The Concept of Flow and Its Educational
Applications
- Lorin W. Anderson
- The Anderson Research Group
2The Problem
3http//vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseactionvids.
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4- BLOOMINGTON, Ind. -- Today's high school students
say they are bored in class because they dislike
the material and experience inadequate teacher
interaction, according to a special report from
Indiana University's High School Survey of
Student Engagement (HSSSE). The findings,
released today (Feb. 28, 2007), show that 2 out
of 3 students are bored in class every day, while
17 percent say they are bored in every class.
5- Some of the key findings were
- Fewer than 2 percent of students say they are
never bored in high school. - Seventy-five percent of students surveyed say
they are bored in class because the "material
wasn't interesting." - Nearly 40 percent felt bored because the material
"wasn't relevant to me."
6And the predictable results are
7Surrender (often with humor)
8Hopelessness
9"The implicit hope has been that if we discover
more and more rational ways of selecting,
organizing, and distributing knowledge, children
will learn more effectively. Yet it seems
increasingly clear that the chief impediments to
learning are not cognitive in nature. It is not
that students cannot learn, it is that they do
not wish to."
10Activity 1
- Divide into groups of 3.
- On a 3 x 5 file card, each member of the group
briefly describes in writing an experience he or
she had in which he or she simply lost track of
time. It may be a recent experience or an
experience some time ago. - Each member shares his or her experience with the
group. - The group develops a list of things that your
experiences had in common. - Select a spokesperson to share your list with the
whole group.
11Results of Activity 1
12What is Flow?
13The question is not Who is Flo? The question is
What is Flow?
Hi, Im Flo!
14- Flow is the state in which people are so involved
in an activity that nothing else seems to matter
the experience itself is so enjoyable that people
will do it even at great cost, for the sheer sake
of doing it. - The concept of flow was developed by Mihaly
Csikszentmihalyi.
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16Its pronounced "chick-sent-me-high-ee."
17- Csikszentmihalyi used the word flow because
people tend to describe the experience using the
metaphor of a current carrying them along.
18Flow
19Components of Flow
- Clear goal
- Complete involvement (concentration, focus)
- Sense of personal control and self-reward
- Direct and immediate feedback
- Distorted sense of time
- Balance between ability level and challenge
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22Activity 2
- The Riddle The game is in the name of the game
polar bears around an ice hole invented in
the days of Genghis Khan. A clue for you to keep
you true like petals around a rose, you can
count each bears nose. - Question How many polar bears do you see?
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26A Story from Camp Caraway
27Lets Analyze the Polar Bear Activity in Terms of
Flow
- Clear goal
- Complete involvement
- Personal control and self-reward
- Direct and immediate feedback
- Distorted sense of time
- Balance between ability and challenge
- Yes or No
- Yes or No
- Yes or No
- Yes or No
- Yes or No
- Yes or No
28What Do We Have to Change to Increase Flow
- Changes in the Curriculum
- Changes in the Classroom
- Changes in Teaching
- Changes in Lessons
29Changing the Curriculum
- Inquiry-Based
- Rigorous
- Relevant
- Vertically Articulated
30Inquiry-Based
- http//homeschooling.gomilpitas.com/explore/crimes
cene.htm - http//www.keystonecurriculum.org/
- http//bestwebquests.com/bwq/wqdetail.asp?siteid1
75 - http//bestwebquests.com/bwq/wqdetail.asp?siteid1
77
31What Rigor Isnt
- Rigor DOES NOT mean more difficult.
32Which of this items is more difficult? Why?
- When was the first college-level gemology course
taught in the United States? - 1888
- 1909
- 1921
- 1933
- When did William Jefferson Clinton serve as
President of the United States? - During the 1960s
- During the 1970s
- During the 1980s
- During the 1990s
33What Rigor Is?
- Rigor means challenging.
- From a flow perspective, rigor must mean an
achievable challenge. - The proper amount of academic rigor for any given
student depends on the gap between the academic
demands placed on the student and the ability of
the student to meet those demands.
34Visually ---
- STUDENTS
- Lowest Achievement
Highest Achievement - __________________________________________________
- !
! - Phil
Jill - gap
gap - Demands on Phil
Demands on Jill - ___________________!______________________!_______
_ - Least Rigorous
Most Rigorous - CURRICULUM
35Relevant
- Simply defining relevance is problematic.
First, who gets to define what is relevant? The
notion of relevance puts too much power into
the hands of too few. Second, definitions of
relevance are irrevocably tied to the social
and technological present in which we find
ourselves. Surely the purpose of education is to
help prepare individuals for their future, not
our present. - If there is a consensus it revolves around
learning that has real-life applications. This
begs the question Whose life?
36Relevant (continued)
- From a flow perspective, relevance, like beauty,
is in the eye of the beholder. Students must see
the relevancy. - This is not to suggest that relevancy must be
present-oriented. However, we must acknowledge
that we as educators cannot prepare students for
the future. We dont know what the future holds.
But we can prepare them to meet the demands of
the future.
37Vertically Articulated
- In designing the sequencing of the courses, the
connectedness of the curriculum as a whole is
to be taken into account. Courses that focus on
tools, such as mathematics, computer, and
statistics, should be taken before the other
courses so that the later courses can rely on and
use the earlier courses. Conversely, tools and
skills that are developed in an earlier course
should either be used in a following course or
identified as a desired student outcome (Bilkent
University, Turkey)
38The Job of the Classroom Teacher in a Nutshell
- Promote high levels of student engagement in
learning - Promote low levels of misbehavior and disruptive
behavior
39Engagement and Misbehavior are Related
- The more students are engaged in learning, the
less likely they will misbehave. - Stated somewhat differently, if students arent
engaged in learning, they will be engaged in
something else usually something that, as
teachers, we dont like.
40Changing Teaching
- The power to impose your will by threat or shame
is, in the end, not useful for educating
responsible citizens. We are obliged to find and
act out new ways of teaching students that will
lead to self-control and not simply obedience.
Instead of using the influence of power, we need
to use the power of influence. - Maite Galan and Tom Maguire, 2002
41Changing Teaching (continued)
- With-it-ness (having eyes the back of your
head letting students know that you know) - Overlapping (doing more than one thing at once)
- Smoothness and Momentum (keeping things moving,
with appropriate pace and smooth transitions) - Group alerting (keeping all student attentive in
a whole-group focus) - These tools help teachers to maintain the flow of
instruction
42Changing the Classroom
In many classrooms and schools, a regimented day
of short periods and a constant clamor of bells
and buzzers shuffles kids through the building
and across their day. But working in a studio is
different. Studio work involves lengthy periods
of time where the kids are concentrated on one
project or one issue. As the kids can be busy and
absorbed in something for several hours at a
time, this gives them time to involve themselves
deeply into the work they are doing.
43Changing the Classroom (continued)
We may start off together in a group discussing
hot issues from the previous day or with me
teaching a new skill or concept, but we move as
quickly as possible towards the kids being active
as creators, designers, and researchers, this
being our focus. Most of my time is spent helping
small groups of kids solve problems, asking
questions about what they are doing, directing
them to others who can help them solve a problem,
or others who may have work I want them to see.
As we slowly descend into involvement, I can hear
the hum of the classroom change and even out as
students find themselves immersed in what they
are doing.
44Changing the Structure of Lessons
- Structure A
- Teacher instructs students in a concept or skill.
- Teacher solves sample problems with whole class.
- Students practice on their own while teacher
monitor and assists individual students. - Structure B
- Teacher poses complex thought-provoking problem.
- Students struggle with the problem.
- Various students present ideas or solutions to
the class. - Class discusses the various ideas or solutions.
- Teacher summarizes
- Students practice similar problems.
45Activity 3 Stringing Me Along
- 1. Use a pen, pencil, or magic marker to prepare
your string for use as a measuring device. - 2. Walk around the building (inside and outside,
if you want) and locate two circular objects of
different sizes. - 3. Perform two measurements on each object - the
distance around the object and the distance from
"side" to "side" through the center of the
object. - 4. Record your measurements in the chart on the
next slide and perform the requested calculations.
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47The Importance of Planning
- Create interesting and engaging lessons that
capture students interest. - Have all materials readily available to avoid
delays. - Accommodate individual learning rhythms by having
additional activities available for students who
finish assignments early. - Carefully plan for transition times within
lessons as well as between them. A significant
stumbling block to the flow of instruction is in
attention to transitions between activities,
lessons, subjects, or class periods. It is here
that teachers are likely to feel that they are
less effective in maintaining the flow of
instruction.
48The Importance of Variety
49Do examples of incorporating flow into students
educational experiences really exist?
- Yes. But they are most likely to be found in
computer software and gaming.
50- From a software design perspective, flow is the
principle of fitting software around the users
total experience, integrating separate features
into an application so that the application
closely models real-word usage patterns. Flow
takes into consideration the users relationship
with their environment as a whole and not just
the single application in isolation. - Pathfinder Associates
51Our goal should be to produce great teachers.
52Great teachers give us a sense not only of who
they are, but more important, of who we are, and
who we might become. They unlock our energies,
our imaginations, and our minds. Effective
teachers pose compelling questions, explain
options, teach us to reason, suggest possible
directions, and urge us on. The best teachers,
like the best leaders, have an uncanny ability to
step outside themselves and become liberating
forces in our lives.
53Successful teachers are vital and full of
passion. They love to teach as a painter loves to
paint, as a writer loves to write, as a singer
loves to sing. They have a serious purpose and
yet enjoy enormously what they do. They teach
their subject -- politics, physics, psychology,
or whatever -- as if it really mattered. They can
get excited about their subject no matter how
many times they have held forth on it. They
vivify their subject and rise well above the
mechanical, dry, or routine. They push themselves
just as they push their students, and their
courses become memorable learning
experiences. Thomas E. Cronin