Title: Teaching Children Science
1(No Transcript)
2Marzanos ListResearch Based Strategies that
Dramatically increase student learning
- By
- Jack Conklin, Ph.D.
- March 29, 2006
3The Strategies
- ID similarities and differences
- Summarizing and note taking
- Reinforcing effort providing recognition
- Homework and practice
- Nonlinguistic representations
- Learning in groups
- Using goals and objectives
- Generating and testing hypotheses
- Using cues, questions advance organizers
4 - Initially each strategy needs to be explicitly
taught to the learners - Graphic/ symbolic representations enhance
learning in deep ways - Social and individual experiences work
5Identifying Similarities and Differences
- Comparing
- Contrasting
- Classifying
- Creating analogies
- Using metaphors
- Integrate linguistic and non-linguistic parts
- (use Venn diagrams/ matrix)
6Using the Paideia tocompare Nazi Germany tothe
United States (Matrix start)
- NAZI GERMANY
- Totalitarian Dictatorship
- Nazi party
- Racial Purity
- Loyalty/ Service to the Volk
- UNITED STATES
- Federal Republic
- Citizenship
- Bill of Rights
- Liberty, industry, duty and patriotism
- From American Institute for History Education
7Reinforcing Effort
- Time on Task research
- Expert Studies -Time on Task
- Asian American vs. typical American attitudes
toward Academic Achievement - Attribution theory and reinforcing effort
8Reinforcing Effort (continued)
- Research on effort
- Most students do not see the importance of effort
- Students see ability, luck and other people as
the nexus of achievement - Students can learn the power of effort on
achievement - Effort ? achievement
9Reinforcing Effort (continued)
- Explicitly teach the connection between
achievement and effort - Share your own metacognitive experiences with
achievement and effort - Using Charts track the effects of their own
efforts and achievement
10Reinforcing Effort (continued)
- More motivation yields more time-on-task and more
time-on-task yields more achievement - Reward effort and you will automatically see more
achievement
The harder I work the luckier I get.
Thomas Jefferson
11Giving Recognition
- Do not praise or reward
- Praising easy tasks
- Students see it as undeserving
- It lowers students perception of their own
ability - Teachers praise unevenly
12Giving Recognition(continued)
- Motivation (Intrinsic and Extrinsic)
- Payments effect on intrinsic motivation
- Rewarding for task-completion de-motivates
- Praise undermines intrinsic motivation
13Giving Recognition(continued)
- Do not praise or reward
- B-Mod works best for
- Low ability
- Very young (age 9 rank in class)
- Once middle schoolers figure out theyve been had
14Giving Recognition Not Praise or rewards
- Set up performance goals and recognize
achievement - Recognize the attainment of a standard
- Personalize the recognition
- Have student set own achievement goals
15Giving Recognition Not Praise or rewards
- Abstract or symbolic recognition is more powerful
than tangible rewards - Verbal recognition You did it, etc.
- Stickers, wall charts, meaningless prizes
16Giving Recognition Not Praise or rewards
- Create a Personal Best Honor Roll
- Like Golf Recognizing achievement beyond the
handicap is motivating
17Giving Recognition Not Praise or rewards
- Being recognized is motivating
- Motivation yields more time-on-task
- More time-on-task yields more achievement
18References
Marzano, R. J. (2004) Building Background
Knowledge for Academic Success. ASCD,
Alexandria, VA. Marzano, R. J. (2003) What
works in schools Translating research into
action. ASCD, Alexandria, VA.