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Adolescent Growth and Development

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Title: Adolescent Growth and Development Author: Margo Coleman Last modified by: CAST Created Date: 1/29/2004 4:41:19 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Adolescent Growth and Development


1
Adolescent Growth and Development
  • KNR 242

2
Teaching All Kids Huh?
  • over 5.3 million students enrolled in K-12
    schools in the U.S.
  • about 35 of these students are from racial and
    ethnic minority groups
  • 82-84 of teachers and administrators are white
    (75 are women 56 of principals are men)
  • 69 of children attending high poverty urban
    schools are of color 33 are limited in English
    language proficiency

3
Teaching All Kids Huh?
  • over 5.3 million students enrolled in K-12
    schools in the U.S.
  • about 35 of these students are from racial and
    ethnic minority groups
  • 82-84 of teachers and administrators are white
    (75 are women 56 of principals are men)
  • 69 of children attending high poverty urban
    schools are of color 33 are limited in English
    language proficiency

4
Teaching All Kids Huh?
  • By 2020 about 2/3 of the school population will
    be African American, Asian American, Hispanic, or
    Native American
  • 32 of teachers feel they are prepared to address
    the needs of students from diverse backgrounds
  • Less than 15 of teachers are fluent in a second
    language

5
So what!
  • Student identities come in all shapes and sizes
    and impact how a child navigates through the
    educational process
  • Likewise, we all have a social identity and a set
    of biases that we filter our teaching through
    (conscious and unconscious)
  • In other words, student and teacher identities
    directly influence what is and isnt learned in
    the gymnasium

6
Socially Competent Teachers Who are they?
  • Socially conscious cultural content knowledge
  • Holds Affirming attitudes toward students from
    diverse backgrounds expect success and provide
    opportunities for all to succeed
  • Believes that knowledge is constructed by and
    embedded in each learner not something outside
    a learner
  • Learns about students and their communities
  • Is committed to and develops the skills for being
    an agent of change

7
What about you?
  • What effect do your biases have on the
    development of your philosophy and curriculum?
  • How have the biases of your teachers effected
    your education?
  • Discuss in groups of 3 or 4

8
Remember
  • Awareness and action are the keys to becoming
    culturally responsive teachers who teach all
    students so that they all experience success

9
Who is Todays Adolescent?
  • Parental Situation
  • 68 live with two parents
  • 23 - mothers only ? 4- fathers only
  • 4 neither father or mother
  • gt50 African American youth mother only
  • Health Issues
  • 81 are in good health
  • Community Service
  • 31 volunteer for community service

10
Who is Todays Adolescent?
  • Audio entertainment
  • Television habits
  • Cars
  • Fashion
  • Hair and Hats
  • Tattoos and Body Piercing
  • Music

11
Importance of Getting To Know Students
  • Teachers who are familiar with student
    characteristics have a considerable advantage in
    planning their teaching.
  • Educational programs must consider
  • Common characteristics of students
  • Significant differences among students
  • Social forces that affect students

12
Physical Growth and Development
  • Boys and girls are taller, heavier and mature
    earlier than ever before.
  • Adolescents differ widely in physical growth,
    body build and physical capacity.
  • Significant physiological differences exist
    between genders and within each gender.
  • Boys and girls of the same age differ in rates of
    maturation.

13
Intellectual Development
  • Today's youth are better informed.
  • The wealth of information and choices available
    to teens may cause confusion in processing
    information and making decisions.
  • The number of learning disabled students has
    increased dramatically.

14
Social Development
  • Adolescents change social interaction patterns
    and challenge parental and authority roles.
  • Peer approval is more important
  • Adolescents need to learn to accept
    responsibility for their actions.
  • During mid-adolescence, boys and girls mature at
    different rates.
  • During late-adolescence, teens become more
    accepting of others, despite differences.

15
Emotional Development
  • Students need to build and maintain feelings of
    personal worth and belonging.
  • They struggle with appearance, hormonal,
    personality, and mood changes.
  • They try to establish independence while
    maintaining adult approval and affection.
  • Youth try on different personalities to find one
    that suits them.
  • They are concerned about social injustices.

16
Implications of Student Differences for Teaching
  • Knowing individual differences helps teachers
    individualize instruction.
  • Students in one grade level may be as much as 11
    months different in age, not counting older
    students who have been held back.
  • The trend is toward inclusion and acceptance of
    all students.

17
Implications of Student Differences for Teaching
  • Motor ability factors predispose students to
    success in different activities (agility,
    balance, coordination, flexibility, strength,
    speed).
  • Programs should include a variety of activities
    so students will find something commensurate with
    their abilities and be challenged to extend their
    abilities.

18
Meeting Student Needs
  • Students learn best when
  • learning involves doing.
  • learning is reinforced by success or positive
    feedback.
  • a variety of meaningful experiences are provided
    at appropriate levels for students.
  • learning is connected with previous knowledge.
  • Students choose how to learn and demonstrate the
    products of learning

19
Individual differences are respected and valued.
  • Focus on what students can do.
  • Equal educational opportunities require different
    treatments to meet differing needs of students.

20
Eliminate embarrassment and failure.
  • Choosing teams
  • Elimination games
  • Grading policies

21
Build ego-strength(self-concept)
  • Listen to students.
  • Learn names and pronounce them correctly.
  • Learn about students--cultures, interests.
  • Give leadership opportunities.
  • Provide success in skill performance and fitness
    activities.
  • Compliment students when deserved and
    appropriate.

22
Ability group for mastery teaching and student
success.
  • Success builds self-esteem.
  • Success encourages attempting of new skills.
  • Success elicits greater effort.

23
Alter and adapt.
  • Modify activities.
  • Emphasize cooperation.
  • Capitalize on students' strengths.
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