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The Design of Learning Environments

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Title: The Design of Learning Environments


1
The Design of Learning Environments
  • Chapter 6
  • How People Learn, National Research Council,
    Washington, D.C.. 2000

2
Changes in Educational Goals
  • 21st Century goals of education are very
    different from earlier times.
  • Consider the goals of schooling in the early
    1800s.
  • Writing instruction was largely aimed at giving
    children the capacity to closely imitate very
    simple text forms. Overall, the definition of
    functional literacy changed from being able to
    sign ones name to word decoding to reading for
    new information.

3
Changes in Educational Goals
  • In the early 1900s, the challenge of providing
    mass education was seen by many as analogous to
    mass production in factories. Children were
    regarded as raw materials to efficiently
    processed by technical workers to reach the end
    product so that they could be treated somewhat as
    an assembly line.
  • Teachers were viewed as workers whose job was to
    carry out directives from their superiors--the
    efficiency experts of schooling.

4
Changes in Educational Goals
  • Today, students need to understand the current
    state of their knowledge and to build on it,
    improve it, and make decisions in the face of
    uncertainty. These two notions of knowledge were
    identified by John Dewey (1916) as records of
    previous cultural accomplishments and engagement
    in active processes as represented by the phrase
    to do.

5
Literacy Then and Now
  • Recitation Literacy Ability to hold a book and
    reel off memorized portions of basic American
    texts such as opening paragraph of Dec. of Ind.
    (colonists)
  • Extraction Literacy Making sense of never seen
    before text.
  • Higher LiteracyAll read and write and analyze
    text to highest level.

6
4 Perspectives on Learning Environments
  • Learner-Centered Environments
  • Knowledge-Centered Environments
  • Assessment-Centered Environments
  • Community-Centered Environments

7
Learner-Centered Environments
Community
Knowledge Centered
Learner Centered
Assessment Centered
Figure 6.1
8
Learner-Centered Environments
  • Environments that pay careful attention to the
    knowledge, skills attitudes and beliefs that
    learners bring to the educational setting.
  • Includes teaching practices that have been called
    culturally responsive, culturally
    appropriate, culturally compatible, and
    culturally relevant. (Ladson-Billings, 1995)
  • To promote learning, it is important to focus on
    controlled changes of structure in a fixed
    content or on deliberate transfer of a structure
    from one context to another.

9
Learner-Centered Environments
  • Learner-centered instruction also includes a
    sensitivity to the cultural practices of students
    and the effect of those practices on classroom
    learning.
  • Learner-centered teachers also respect the
    language practices of their students because they
    provide a basis for future learning.
  • Overall, learner-centered environments include
    teachers who are aware that learners construct
    their own meanings, beginning with the beliefs,
    understandings, and cultural practices they bring
    to the classroom.

10
Knowledge Centered Environments
  • Environments thats are solely learner centered
    would not necessarily help students acquire the
    knowledge and skills necessary to function
    effectively in society.
  • Environmentalists also focus on the kinds of
    information and activities that help students
    develop an understanding of disciplines.
    (requires a critical examination of existing
    curricula)
  • Environments also include an emphasis on
    sense-making--on helping students become
    metacognitive by expecting new information to
    make sense.

11
Knowledge Centered Environments
  • Attempts to create environments that are
    knowledge centered also raise important questions
    about how to foster an integrated understanding
    of a discipline.

12
Assessment-Centered Environments
  • They should provide opportunities for feedback
    and revision and that what is assessed must be
    congruent with ones learning goals.
  • Formative assessment involves the use of
    assessment as sources of feedback to improve
    teaching and learning.
  • Summative assessment measures what students have
    learned at the end of some set of learning
    activities.

13
Formative Assessment
  • Students thinking must be made visible.
  • Opportunities for feedback should occur
    continuously.
  • Effective teachers also teach students how to
    self-assess.
  • Self-assessment is an important part of the
    metacognitive approach to instruction.

14
Community-Centered Environments
  • Classroom, school connected with homes , states
    and the nation.
  • At the level of classrooms and schools, learning
    seems to be enhanced by social norms that value
    the search for understanding and allow students
    the freedom to make mistakes in order to learn.
  • Classroom norms can also encourage modes of
    participation that may be unfamiliar to some
    students.

15
Community-Centered Environments
  • The sense of community in classrooms is also
    affected by grading practices, and these can have
    positive or negative effects depending on the
    students.
  • Competition among students for teacher attention,
    approval, and grades is a commonly used motivator
    in U.S. schools.
  • The sense of community in a school also appears
    to be strongly affected by the adults who work in
    the environment.

16
Television
  • Many students spend more time watching tv than
    attending school.
  • Parents want their children to learn from
    television, at the same time they are concerned
    about what they are learning from the programs.
  • The same program can have different effects
    depending on the environment in which a person is
    watching television.

17
The Importance of Alignment
  • Alignment is as important for schools as for
    organizations in general.
  • Task Analysis is key when aligning goals for
    learning with what is taught, how it is taught,
    and how it is assessed.
  • Without alignment, it is difficult to know what
    is being learned.
  • Activities within schools must also be aligned
    with the goals and assessment practices of the
    community.
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