Title: Authentic Instruction for Creating a Community of Learners
1Authentic Instruction for Creating a Community of
Learners
2Classroom Climate
- Is defined as the atmosphere or quality of life
in a classroom, determined by how individuals
interact with each other - The climate will be determined by how you
interact with your students and by the way you
exercise authority, show warmth and support,
encourage competitiveness or cooperation, and
allow for independent judgment.
3Activity
- Write a brief description of the ideal classroom
climate. Share this with the person sitting next
to you when you have finished writing.
4Overview of the chapter
- Careful attention must be paid to the emotional
elements of a positive learning environment. How
the class is structured contributes to creating
an environment in which all children feel that
their needs can be met. - The first two-thirds of the chapter focus on
creating a community of learners and the last
third on developing the curriculum
5High performing teachers confirm that they take
steps to create classroom climates with the
following Characteristics
- A productive, task oriented focus
- Group cohesiveness
- Open, warm relationships between teacher and
students - Cooperative, respectful interactions among
students - Low levels of tension, anxiety and conflict
- Humor
- High expectations
- Frequent opportunities for student input
regarding classroom activities
6Four necessary conditions to increase learning
through positive interactions
- Organized classroom free from constant
interruptions and disruptions - Teacher patient, supportive, doesnt embarrass
students for mistakes - Work challenging but reasonable
- Learning tasks must be authentic
7How Can you create a positive learning
environment?
- Caring classroom
- The physical classroom environment
- Classroom organization
8Caring
- Effort to help all students learn to their
fullest potential - Gets to know all students well
- Students learn to care for others in class
- Students have a voice in decision making
9Physical Environment
- Fresh air, plants, displays of students work,
comfortable reading area - Seating arrangement-make sure the seating
arrangement does not does not reduce the
opportunity for some students to learn - Action zone
10Classroom Organization-Take the following quiz on
the back of the study guide . Match the following
- ___1. Between class ability grouping
- ___2. Cooperative learning groups
- ___3. Within-class ability grouping
- A. Students are assigned to classes based on
ability, achievement of standardized test scores
or in high school, goals after graduation - B. Students are instructed in homogenous small
groups - C. Students are grouped with the purpose of
helping each other complete assignments
11Answers
12Delivering Instruction
- Delivery of instruction is a key element in
creating positive learning environments - Common tasks elementary-seatwork, listening to
the teacher, reading groups, games, discussions,
take tests, view films, give reports, go on field
trips. Teacher asks- What activity will enable
me to accomplish my instructional goals.
13Terms
- Authentic learning tasks- enables students to see
the connections between classroom learning and
the world beyond the classroom - Allocated time- time teachers allocate for
instruction in various areas of the curriculum - Time on task- the amount of time the students are
actively engaged in learning activities - Academic learning time- the amount of time a
student spends working on academic tasks with a
high level of success (80 or higher). One
thousand hours most states require, only about
300 hours students are truly engaged in
meaningful appropriate tasks - Block scheduling- a high school scheduling
arrangement that provides longer blocks of time
each class period with fewer periods each day
14Keys to Successful Classroom Management
- How teachers structure their learning
environments to minimize behavioral problems - Use of techniques that elicit student
cooperation and involvement in activities and
thus prevent problems from happening in the first
place - Good planning- teachers are prepared
- Establish rules and procedures
15Establishing Rules and Procedures
- Teach early in the year using clear
explanations, examples and practice - Rules should be clear, concise and few in number
- Enforce classroom rules consistently and fairly
- Procedures- Establishing routines your students
will follow as they participate in learning
activities. How will homework be collected?
16Activity
- Complete the Classroom Management Profile on the
back of the study guide - Read each statement carefully
- Write your response next to each statement
- Respond to each statement based upon either an
actual or imagined classroom experience - 1 Strongly Disagree
- 2 Disagree
- 3 Neutral
- 4 Agree
- 5 Strongly Agree
17To Score your quiz
- Add your responses for statements 1,3 and 9. This
is your score for authoritarian style - Add statements 4,8,and 11 for authoritative style
- Add statements 6,10, and12 for laissez-faire
style - Add statements 2, 5, and 7 for the indifferent
style
18Constructive Assertiveness
- Assertiveness skills allow you to communicate to
students that you are serious about teaching and
about maintaining a classroom in which everyones
rights are respected - Communication is clear, firm and concise
- Three basic elements
- Clear statement of the problem
- Eye contact with the student
- Firm unwavering insistence on appropriate behavior
19Lee Cantors approach to Discipline- Assertive
Discipline
- Make clear that you will not tolerate anything
preventing you from teaching, stopping learning,
or doing anything else that is not in the best
interest of the class - Instruct students clearly about what behaviors
are desired and what behaviors are not tolerated - Plan positive and negative consequences for
predetermined positive and negative behavior - Plan positive reinforcement for compliance
- Plan a sequence of steps to punish noncompliance.
These range from putting a childs name on the
board to sending the student to the principals
office
20Teacher Problem Solving (using Glassers Theory)
- When a teachers efforts to get a student to stop
misbehaving are unsuccessful, a problem solving
conference with the student is warranted - Steps
- Have the misbehaving student evaluate and take
responsibility for his or her behavior. What are
you doing? Is it helping you? - Have the student make a plan for a more
acceptable way of behaving - Require the student to make a commitment to the
plan - Dont accept excuses for failure to follow the
plan - Dont use punishment or react to a misbehaving
student in a punitive manner. Instead, point out
that there are logical consequences for failure
to follow the plan - Dont give up on the student. If necessary,
remind the student of his or her commitment to
the desirable behavior.
21Models of Teaching
- A description of a learning environment
- Effective teachers use a repertoire of teaching
models - Four Instructional Models
- Cooperative Learning
- Theory into practice
- Behavior modification
- Nondirective teaching
22Direct Instruction (Theory into Practice)
- Orient students to the lesson by telling them
what they will learn - Review previously learned material
- Present new material using examples
- Assess students understanding by asking
questions - Allow students to practice and apply new
information - Provide feedback and corrections as students
practice - Include newly learned material in homework
- Review material periodically
23Modeling by thinking out loud
- Show students the reasoning involved
- Making students conscious of the reasoning
involved - Focusing students on applying the reason
- In this way, teachers can help students become
aware of their learning process and enhance their
ability to learn
24Constructivist Teaching
- How learners construct understanding of new
material based on what they already know.
Teachers help students arrive at a deeper
understanding of the material - The teacher elicits students prior knowledge of
the material and uses this as the starting point
for instruction - The teacher not only presents material to the
students, but he also responds to the students
efforts to learn about the material - Students actively use the information to
construct meaning - Teacher creates a community of learners that
allows students to talk with one another as they
construct meaning and solve problems.
25KWL Chart
26Scaffolding
- An approach to teaching based on the students
current level of understanding and ability the
teacher varies the amount of help given to
students based on their moment to-moment
understanding of the material being learned
27Scaffolding
- Overall, the teacher provides just enough
scaffolding ( clues and other assistance to guide
the students learning efforts) to enable
students to discover the material on his own - Concept based on Vygotskys work
- Zone of Proximal Development-refers to the point
at which students need assistance in order to
continue learning
28Methods based on the Thinking Process
- Inquiry learning and discovery learning
- Students are given opportunities to discover
information for themselves - Best suited for teaching concepts, relationships,
and theoretical abstractions
29Curriculum
- Curriculum refers to the experiences, both
planned and unplanned, that enhance the education
and growth of students - Four curricula that students experience
- Explicit
- Hidden
- Null
- Extracurricular
30Explicit Curriculum
- What a school intends to teach students
- Made up of several components
- The goals, aims, and learning objectives the
school has for all students - The actual courses that make up each students
course of studies - The specific knowledge, skills and attitudes the
teachers want students to acquire
31Hidden Curriculum
- The behaviors, attitudes and knowledge the school
unintentionally teaches students - Can be positive or negative, depending on their
day-to-day experiences at school - Teachers set the stage to determine whether the
hidden curriculum will be positive or negative
32Null Curriculum
- Intellectual processes and content the schools do
not teach - The options the student is not afforded, the
perspectives they may never know, the concepts
and skills that are not a part of their
repertoire - We teach largely out of habit and neglect areas
that could be extremely useful to the child such
as astronomy
33Extracurricular/Cocurricular
- School sponsored activities music, drama,
sports, special interest clubs - Students may pursue in addition to the academic
curriculum - Provide an opportunity to use social and
academic skills in many different contexts - Students who might benefit the most (those below
the norm in academic achievement) tend not to
participate
34How is School Curriculum developed- Tyler
Rationale
- Four fundamental questions that must be answered
- What educational purposes should the school seek
to attain? - What educational experiences can be provided that
are likely to attain these purposes - How can these educational experiences be
effectively organized - How can we determine whether these purposes are
being attained
35Student-centered versus Subject-Centered
Curriculum
- Key concern in curriculum development is whether
greater emphasis should be given to requirements
of the subject area or to the needs of the
student - Subject centered is more typical of high school
- Student-centered (emphasizes the growth and
development of the student )is more typical of
elementary school
36The Integrated Curriculum
- Used most frequently in elementary grades
- Integrated curriculum draws from several
different subject areas and focuses on a theme or
concept rather that a single subject. - Helps put the lesson in perspective instead of
learning isolated facts - Sample themes
- The life cycle
- The use of symbols
- A sense of time and space
37Who plans the curriculum
- Textbook publishers influence what is taught (CA
and TX) - Federal government see national educational goals
- State departments of education develop broad
aims for school curricula and specific minimum
requirements for students to learn - Classroom teacher plan the curriculum that
students actually experience
38Critique of textbooks
- Artificially lowered reading levels (dumbing
down) - Questionable gimmicks to hold students attention
- Poor writing