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BUILDING A THOUGHTFULL LEARNING COMMUNITY WITH HABITS OF MIND

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ASSESSING AND REPORTING ON HABITS OF MIND ... SHARE AN EXPERIENCE. IN YOUR LIFE IN WHICH. PERSISTENCE. PAID OFF. 2. MANAGING IMPULSIVITY ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: BUILDING A THOUGHTFULL LEARNING COMMUNITY WITH HABITS OF MIND


1
BUILDING A THOUGHT-FULL LEARNING
COMMUNITYWITH HABITS OF MIND

2
AGENDADay I
  • EXPLORING HABITS OF MIND AND THEIR PLACE IN
    CURRICULUM
  • ACTIVATING AND ENGAGING HABITS OF MIND
  • Day II
  • ASSESSING AND REPORTING ON HABITS OF MIND

3
WHAT IS IT ABOUT YOUR STUDENTS THAT MAKES YOU
THINK THEY NEED TO LEARN HOW TO THINK?
  • What do you see them doing?
  • What do you hear them saying?
  • How are they feeling?
  • How would you like them to be?

4
HOW WE WOULD LIKE THEM TO BE
  • Confident
  • Take risk
  • Think before acting
  • Challenge assumptions
  • Questioning
  • Reflective
  • Proactive
  • Independent learners, thinkers, workers
  • Taking charge of themselves (having a plan of
    action, self directed)
  • Persisting (stick to it)
  • Venture forth with ideas
  • Make connections (interacting and learning with
    each other
  • Connecting - feel-think-act.
  • Complex thinkers
  • Creative
  • Inquisitive
  • Emotional strength (control)

5
SHARING THE VISION
6
Habits of mind attend to
  • Value - choosing to behave intelligently
  • Inclination- deciding to use a certain behavior
  • Sensitivity- knowing when to use them
  • Capability- having skills capacity to use them
  • Commitment- reflecting on improvement
  • Policy- promoting and incorporating their daily
    use

7
WHY HABITS OF MIND?
  • TRANSDISCIPLINARY
  • AS GOOD FOR ADULTS AS THEY ARE FOR STUDENTS
  • FOCUSED ON LONG RANGE, ENDURING, ESSENTIAL
    LEARNINGS

8
  • HABIT IS A CABLEWE WEAVE IT EACH DAY, AND AT
    LAST WE CANNOT BREAK IT.

9
CURRICULUM MIND SHIFTS
  • FROM
  • Not only knowing right answers.
  • TO
  • Also knowing how to behave when answers are not
    immediately apparent.

10
BREAK
Please return at 1045.
11
HABITS OF MINDDiscussion
  • READ AND DEFINE IT IN YOUR OWN WORDS
  • GIVE EXAMPLES WHAT DO YOU HEAR PEOPLE SAYING OR
    SEE THEM DOING AS THEY USE THE HABIT OF MIND
  • DESCRIBE SITUATIONS WHEN IT IS IMPORTANT TO USE
    THE HABIT OF MIND
  • POSE QUESTIONS INTENDED TO ELICIT THE HABIT OF
    MIND IN OTHERS

12
On a Chart
  • TITLE
  • CREATE A SIMILE . (name the habit of mind) IS
    LIKE A... BECAUSE.
  • CREATE A LOGO OR SYMBOL FOR THE HABIT OF MIND
  • COMPOSE A BRIEF STATEMENT OR SLOGAN THAT
    SUMMARIZES THE HABIT OF MIND

13
  • COMPARE YOUR LIST OF ATTRIBUTES
  • HOW WOULD YOU LIKE THEM TO BE?
  • WITH THE LIST OF HABITS OF MIND.
  • FIND SIMILARITIES

14
EFFECTIVE THINKING REQUIREMENTS
HABITS OF MIND
THINKING SKILLS
COGNITIVE TASKS THAT DEMAND SKILLFUL THINKING
THINKING SKILLS
CONTENT
15
ANALYSIS OF VIDEO TAPE
  • WHAT MATH CONCEPTS WERE BEING LEARNED IN THIS
    LESSON?
  • IN WHICH THINKING SKILLS WERE STUDENTS ENGAGING?
  • WHAT WAS THE NATURE OF THE TASK THE STUDENTS WERE
    PERFORMING?
  • WHICH HABITS OF MIND WERE STUDENTS DRAWING UPON?

16
THINK - PAIR - SHARE
  • ANTICIPATE A LESSON YOU ARE PLANNING TO TEACH.
  • WHAT CONCEPTS, THINKING SKILLS, TASKS AND HABITS
    OF MIND MIGHT BE INCLUDED?

17
LUNCH
Please return at 115.
18
BUILDING A THOUGHT-FULL LEARNING
COMMUNITYWITH HABITS OF MIND

19
  • ACTIVATING AND ENGAGING
  • HABITS OF MIND

20
  • Paired
  • Verbal
  • Fluency

21
.
1. PERSISTING Persevering on a task even
though the resolution is not immediately
apparent.
  • Stick to it!

22
  • SHARE AN EXPERIENCE
  • IN YOUR LIFE IN WHICH
  • PERSISTENCE
  • PAID OFF.

23
2. MANAGING IMPULSIVITY
Acting with forethought and deliberation.
  • Take your time!

24
Managing Impulsivity
  • WAIT TIME
  • After having asked a question, the average
    teacher waits 1 second before either calling on a
    student, asking another question or answering the
    question him/herself.
  • Rowe, M. B. "Wait Time and Rewards as
    Instructional Variables
  • Their Influence on Language, Logic and Fate
    Control. "Journal of Research, in Science
    Teaching 11, 2 81-84. (Spring 1974).

25
3. LISTENING WITH UNDERSTANDING

AND EMPATHY
Devoting mental energies to understanding others
thoughts and feelings.
  • Understand others!

26
LISTENING SEQUENCE
  • Pause
  • Paraphrase
  • Probe
  • Inquire
  • Clarify

27
Pausing
  • Using wait-time before responding
  • to or asking a question allows time
  • for more complex thinking, enhances dialogue and
    improves decision making.

28
Paraphrasing
  • Lets others know that you are
  • listening, that you understand
  • or are trying to understand
  • them and that you care.

29
Probing
  • Increases the clarity and precision of the
    group's thinking by refining understandings,
    terminology
  • and interpretations.

30
THINKING AND COMMUNICATING WITH CLARITY AND
PRECISION
  • GENERALIZATIONS
  • DELETIONS
  • DISTORTIONS

SURFACE LANGUAGE
DEEP STRUCTURE LANGUAGE
31
Paying attention to self and others
  • Awareness of what you are saying, how it is said
    and how others are responding attending to
    learning styles being sensitive to your own and
    others' emotions.

32
Listener Use the Pause, Paraphrase Probe
sequence
Speaker Finish this sentence AS I REFLECT
ON THIS PAST SCHOOL TERM, I AM MOST PROUD
OF
33
  • WHAT METACOGNITIVE STRATEGIES DID YOU EMPLOY TO
    MONITOR AND MANAGE YOUR LISTENING SKILLS?

34
Listener Use the Pause, Paraphrase Probe
sequence
Speaker Finish this sentence AS I
ANTICIPATE THE NEXT SCHOOL TERM, IM MOST EXCITED
ABOUT.
35
  • What values are you
  • expressing when you listen
  • to one another so intently?

36
PARAPHRASE WHAT YOUVE LEARNED ABOUT THE,
IMPORTANCE, EFFECTS AND MENTAL PROCESSES OF
LISTENING WITH UNDERSTANDING AND EMPATHY
37
4. THINKING FLEXIBLY4. THINKING
FLEXIBLY
Changing perspectives, generating alternatives,
considering options.
  • Look at it another way!

38
EFFECTIVE THINKING REQUIREMENTS
HABITS OF MIND
THINKING SKILLS
COGNITIVE TASKS THAT DEMAND SKILLFUL THINKING
THINKING SKILLS
CONTENT
39
ANALYSIS OF VIDEO TAPE
  • WHAT MATH CONCEPTS WERE BEING LEARNED IN THIS
    LESSON?
  • IN WHICH THINKING SKILLS WERE STUDENTS ENGAGING?
  • WHAT WAS THE NATURE OF THE TASK THE STUDENTS WERE
    PERFORMING?
  • WHICH HABITS OF MIND WERE STUDENTS DRAWING UPON?

40
THINK - PAIR - SHARE
  • ANTICIPATE A LESSON YOU ARE PLANNING TO TEACH.
  • WHAT CONCEPTS, THINKING SKILLS, TASKS AND HABITS
    OF MIND MIGHT BE INCLUDED?

41

5. METACOGNITION
Being aware of your own thoughts, feelings, and
actions and their effects of on others
  • Think about your thinking!

42
Metacognition
  • Think
  • Aloud
  • Problem
  • Solving

43
THINK ALOUDPROBLEM SOLVING
  • Pose challenging problems then
  • Invite students to describe their plans
  • and strategies for solving the problem.
  • Share their thinking as they are
  • implementing their plan.
  • Reflect on/evaluate the
  • effectiveness of their strategy.

44
  • A friend is one before whom I may think aloud.
  • --Ralph Waldo Emerson

45
POSE QUESTIONS THAT CAUSE THE STUDENT TO CHECK
FOR ACCURACYHow do you know you are
right?What other ways can you prove that you
are correct?
46
Pause and Clarify--(dont interrupt)
Explain what you mean when you said you just
figured it out. When you said you started at
the beginning, how did you know where to begin?
47
Provide data, not answers
  • I think you heard it wrong let me repeat the
    question.
  • You need to check your addition.

48
RESIST MAKING VALUE-JUDGMENTS
  • So, your answer is 48. Who came up with a
    different answer?

49
STAY FOCUSED ON THE THINKING PROCESS
  • Tell us what strategies you
  • used to solve the problem.

50
ENCOURAGE PERSISTENCE
  • Cmon, you can do it!

51
METACOGNITIVE PROBLEM
  • COMBINE THE FOLLOWING FOUR SENTENCES
  • The horse jumped over the fence.
  • The horse was gray.
  • The jump was done gracefully.
  • The fence was low and made of brick.

52
METACOGNITIVE PROBLEM
IF THE SECOND LETTER IN THE WORD WEST COMES
AFTER THE FOURTH LETTER IN THE ALPHABET, CIRCLE
THE LETTER A BELOW. IF IT DOES NOT, CIRCLE THE
LETTER B. A B
53
METACOGNITIVE PROBLEM
  • IF THE CIRCLE IS TALLER THAN THE SQUARE AND THE
    CROSS IS SHORTER THAN THE SQUARE, PUT A
  • K IN THE CIRCLE.HOWEVER, IF THIS IS NOT THE
    CASE,PUT A T IN THE SECOND TALLER FIGURE.

54
METACOGNITIVE PROBLEM
THERE ARE 3 SEPARATE, EQUAL-SIZE BOXES AND
INSIDE EACH BOX THERE ARE 2 SEPARATE SMALL
BOXES. INSIDE EACH OF THE SMALL BOXES, THERE
ARE 4 EVEN SMALLER BOXES. HOW MANY BOXES ARE
THERE ALL TOGETHER?
55
Sustaining and Engaging Metacognition
  • 1. Check for Accuracy
  • 2. Clarify
  • 3. Provide data not answers
  • 4. Resist making judgments
  • 5. Stay focused on thinking
  • 6. Encourage Persistence

56
7. QUESTIONING AND POSING
PROBLEMS
Having a questioning attitude. Developing
strategies to produce needed data. Finding
problems to solve.
How do you know?
57
Questioning And Problem Posing
58
7. QUESTIONING AND POSING
PROBLEMS
Having a questioning attitude. Developing
strategies to produce needed data. Finding
problems to solve.
How do you know?
59
Questioning with Intention
  • 1. Are invitational Approachable voice,
  • Plurals,
  • Tentativeness, Invitational stems
  • 2. Positive presuppositions
  • 3. Complex levels

60
PLURALS
"What are some of your goals?
"What ideas do you have?"
"What outcomes do you seek?"
"What alternatives are you considering?
61
TENTATIVENESS
What might be some factors that would cause?
In what other ways could you solve this
problem?
"What hunches do you have that may explain this
situation?
62
Invitational Stems
  • As you recall.
  • As you anticipate.
  • As you envision
  • Given what you know about.

63
PRESUPPOSITIONS Hidden meanings below the
surface of language.
  • For example
  • Even Mary could get passing grade in that
    class.

64
LIMITING PRESUPPOSITIONS
  • DO YOU HAVE AN OBJECTIVE?
  • WHY WERE YOU UNSUCCESSFUL?
  • IF ONLY YOU HAD LISTENED.

65
EMPOWERING PRESUPPOSITIONS
  • WHAT ARE SOME OF THE GOALS THAT YOU HAVE IN MIND
    FOR THIS MEETING?

66
EMPOWERING PRESUPPOSITIONS
  • AS YOU CONSIDER YOUR ALTERNATIVES WHAT
  • SEEMS MOST PROMISING?

67
EMPOWERING PRESUPPOSITIONS
  • WHAT PERSONAL LEARNINGS OR INSIGHTS WILL YOU
    CARRY FORWARD TO FUTURE SITUATIONS?

68
  • Compose a question intended to invite one or more
    of the
  • habits of mind.
  • Use the criteria
  • Invitational Stems
  • Plurals
  • Tentative Language
  • Positive Presuppositions

69
HOMEPLAY
  • 1. DESCRIBE TO OTHERS WHAT YOU ARE LEARNING
  • 2. ISOLATE AND PRACTICE PAUSE, PARAPHRASE PROBE
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