Title: EvaluationRevision Learning Theories Cognitive Style
1Evaluation/RevisionLearning TheoriesCognitive
Style
- Heidi Julien
- LIS 526
- Winter 2010
2Why evaluate and assess?
- Monitor effectiveness for accountability
- Evaluate attainment of instructional goals
- Identify effective instructional practices
- Evaluate effectiveness of instructional practices
- Measure instructional outcomes
- student achievement
- attitudes
- skills
- Assessment drives student learning
3Student assessment
- Focuses on learning
- Learning is dependent on many factors
- Teaching style and methods
- Student motivation, background knowledge
- Faculty investment
- Physical constraintstime, classroom, lab
resources
4Learning is enhanced when
- Assessment strategies match intended learner
outcomes - Assessment is integrated with instruction
- Students get immediate, meaningful feedback
5Types of assessment
- Diagnostic
- What do students know, areas of weakness, or
difficulty - Formative
- Ongoing, to monitor learning progress
- Helps instructors to modify, adapt, support
- Summative
- Occurs at the end of the learning cycle
- Focuses on achievement, content, process
6Forms of evaluation
- Feedback
- Focuses on presentation
- speech, mannerisms, terminology, content
- Self-evaluation
- Self-reflection
- What were my goals?
- How was I trying to achieve them?
- What instructional strategies did I use?
- What did I see the students doing during
classwere they attentive, talking, surfing? - What were the observations of others in the
classroom (TAs, instructors)? - What key areas should I target for improvement?
- What can I do to improve the teaching of this
content or class?
7Forms of evaluation (cont.)
- Peer evaluation (constructive, respectful, use
humor) - What went well
- What did not go so well
- What topics were covered
- What was clear (or not)
- Video-taping or audio-taping
- Faculty observation and feedback
- Student feedback
8Forms of evaluation (cont.)
- Program Evaluation
- Systematic ongoing process of obtaining
meaningful information in order to judge the
merits of a program. - Purpose
- To improve the program
- To see how well goals and objectives are being
met - To get/keep/give administrative support
- For political decision-making, public relations
- Reporting
- As part of library use studies
- Staffing decisions
9Issues in evaluation
- Validity
- Participants are qualified to answer questions
- Questions refer to session evaluated
- Reliability
- Questions will produce same results on different
occasions - Questions mean same things to all participants
- Should be targeted and tied to objectives
- Can borrow or copy from others
- Can be done in many ways (observation, interview,
survey, etc.) - Can be done at different times (immediately
following instruction, before instruction, during
instruction, long after instruction)
10Steps in evaluation
- Decide why you want to evaluate.
- Determine what you need to know.
- Determine your target audience.
- Determine best method to achieve your aims.
- Develop the questions.
- Pretest and revise the questions.
- Decide how to tally and organize your results.
- Decide who will tally and organize the results.
- Organize your evaluation.
- Do it!
- Report your results.
11Examples of assessment and evaluation
- Research done by Denise Koufogiannakis et al. and
Nancy Goebel at U of A - Project SAILS - Kent State University
(sails.lms.kent.edu/index.php) - ALA Assessment Issues
- ACRL Assessment Issues (www.ala.org/ala/mgrps/di
vs/acrl/issues/infolit/resources/assess/issues.cfm
12Assessing learning the quick and dirty way
- Identify three things you learned
- What was the muddiest point?
- Use a 3-item pre- and post-test
- e.g., identifying parts of a periodical or book
citation - Boolean logic
- Identifying appropriate information sources for
particular information needs
13Quick questions for students
- Was todays class worth your time?
- Which parts were the most helpful?
- Which parts did you already know?
- Name 3 things you learned today.
- Do you have any other questions about research or
the University of Alberta Libraries?
14Quick questions for faculty
- What worked/did not work?
- Did we cover the topics you wanted covered? Did
we include anything unnecessary, or was anything
left out? - Did your students have any feedback about the
session? - Did you notice a difference in the quality of
their research?
15Exercise
- In small groups, articulate 3 objectives or
outcomes for IL - Brainstorm about possible ways to evaluate
whether those objectives or outcomes have been
achieved - Identify challenges associated with those
evaluation methods ways to overcome them
16Meaningful learning
- Meaningful learning of complex material is a
process that is - Active
- Learner carries out various cognitive operations
on information learned for it to be meaningful - Constructive
- Knowledge is not passed on as an intact brick
- Perception and interpretation of knowledge is
individual and unique - Knowledge is related to existing knowledge
17Meaningful learning (continued)
- Cumulative
- New learning builds on prior learning mental
models - Prior knowledge can inhibit or facilitate new
learning - Self-regulated
- Learners decide what to do as learning progresses
- Involves meta-cognition, self-efficacy, study
- Goal-oriented
- Meaningful learning is more successful if it
relates to students learning goals
18Learning theories
- Shift from view of
- Learning ? Change in behaviour
- To
- Learning ? Change in understanding
19Learning theories (continued)
- Prevailing metaphor for learning is
- Problem-Solving, NOT Memorization
- Shift in goals of client instruction
- From how to use specific tools
- To
- Use of conceptual frameworks in instructional
design - Use of models of how people learn
20Learning theories (continued)
- So that clients learn
- There are a variety of sources to address
different information needs - Information needs sources need to be analyzed
and evaluated - To develop flexible problem-solving abilities
- See Also
- Kuhlthaus Information Search Process
- Eisenberg Berkowitz Big Six Skills?
21Learning theories ask
- What are the necessary conditions under which
learning occurs? - How do motives influence learning?
- What are the roles of practice, reward,
punishment, and stimuli in learning?
22Learning theories tell us
- Learners assimilate and consolidate new
information in terms of prior learning
cognitive structures - New knowledge must be presented to facilitate
integration into existing mental structures - Learners develop along a continuum of stages of
reasoning - Learners have input preferences
- Visual
- Auditory
- Kinetic
23Learners cognitive styles
- Cognitive style (learning style) refers to
information processing habits - perceiving
- thinking
- remembering
- problem-solving
24Considerations Beyond Cognition
- the social/cultural nature of learning
(influenced by Vygotsky) - authentic (real world) tasks rather than
artificial - the role of motivation, interest affect
- the domain-specific nature of learning
- skills without context learning without the
ability to generalize or remember (Jerome Bruner)
25How can we address context?
- To what extent has your own learning taken
context into account (e.g., taken your own
information needs into account)? - Tie instruction to course content
- Conduct reference interview to identify
information needs BEFORE instruction on a
particular database
26An example of a learning theory
- Kolbs learning theory suggests learners need
- concrete experience
- being involved in a new experience (labs, field
work, observations) - reflective observation
- watching others or developing observations about
own experience (logs, journals, brainstorming) - abstract conceptualization
- creating theories to explain observations
(lectures, papers, analogies) - active experimentation
- using theories to solve problems, make decisions
(simulations, case studies)
27Exercise
- Think of an instructional session that would
take 1 hour or less, in which you can apply
Kolbs experiential learning cycle - some kind of learning experience
- reflection
- development of a theory
- relating that theory to practice
28Implications of learning theories for instruction
- Provide a continuum of learning experiences
- structured to non-structured
- simple to complex guidelines, handouts
- individual to group activities
- concrete to abstract
- instructor focused to client focussed (e.g.,
topic selection, encouraging independent thinking)
29Two Theories of Cognitive Development
- PERRY STUDY Perry, William J. 1968. Forms of
intellectual and ethical development in the
college years a scheme. New York Holt,
Rinehart, and Winston. - Positions in the developmental process
- Beginning simple, dualistic, right-or-wrong
- Middle all points of view have equal validity
- Last one takes responsibility for ones own
choices, opinions, and values - Difficult transitions
- recognizing that different opinions exist and may
all have some validity - recognizing that criteria can be developed for
evaluating diverse perceptions
30Two Theories of Cognitive Development
- WELLESLEY STUDY Belecky, M.F., B.M. Clinchy,
N.R. Goldberger, and J.M. Tarule. 1986. Womens
ways of knowing the development of self, voice,
and mind. New York Basic Books. - 5 different ways of knowing or epistemological
categories - silence
- received knowledge ( Perrys dualistic stage)
- subjective knowledge
- procedural knowledge ( Perrys discovery of
critical reasoning stage) - constructed knowledge ( Perrys last stage)
31How to apply this?
- Level One want one right answer, provide guide
to single source - Level Two can handle challenge of more complex
search strategies and tools - Level Three more relativistic, can transfer
knowledge between contexts, provide detailed
guides to subject literatures, librarian as
resource
32Example
- Teaching dualists (received/subjective knowers)
- Goal to help learners develop into procedural
knowers - Course content challenge them with moderate
diversity experiential learning to get them to
explore ideas in a supportive environment
33Example contd
- Teaching relativists/procedural knowers
- Goal to help learners develop into mature
thinkers (constructed knowers) - Course Content present meaningful material in
diverse ways encourage students to think for
themselves - Focus on abstract ideas
- Less course structure, and more freedom
- Diversity let learners choose their own topic
or project give challenges that foster growth
34Example contd
- Teaching mature thinkers (constructed knowers)
- Goal to maintain/encourage this level
- These learners
- Are self-motivated
- Are evaluators
- Can describe searches and formulate strategies
- Librarian a resource rather than a teacher
35Experience Learning
- We remember Activity Involvement
- 10 - what we read reading auditory
- 20 - what we hear lecture auditory
- 30 - what we see movie visual
- 50 - what we hear/see demo visual/auditory
- 70 - what we say discussion kinesthetic
- 90 - what we say/do simulation kinesthetic
36Applications Academic Setting
- Faculty may
- Know little about cognitive development
- Think students already know about libraries
- Think everything can be taught in one hour
- Ask them
- How does the assignment fit course objectives?
- What are students supposed to learn from it?
- How do they get along?
- How do they frustrate the faculty member?
- Are they traditional or older, returning
students? - Are grads and undergrads together in the same
class?
37Implications of theory-based instruction
- Initial design for specific course methodology
requires a great deal of time thought - Cannot cover as much material in single
presentation because of time-consuming format - Demands high level of teaching ability and
comfort with open-ended classroom situation and
lessened control over what happens - Allows real self-sufficiency in all aspects of
effective information use - Places librarians focus on client rather than on
tools or library