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The Nature of the Teaching Profession

The Nature of the Teaching Profession. Sri G Padmanabha Patra Lecturer in Education KHEMUNDI COLLEGE, DIGAPAHANDI. Devices.

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The Nature of the Teaching Profession

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  1. The Nature of the Teaching Profession Sri G Padmanabha Patra Lecturer in Education KHEMUNDI COLLEGE, DIGAPAHANDI

  2. Devices • Channel Setting Instructions for ResponseCard RF1. Press and release the "GO" button.2. While the light is flashing red and green, enter the 2 digit channel code (ie. channel 1 = 01, channel 21 = 21). Channel is 413. After the second digit is entered, Press and release the "GO" button.4. Press and release the "1/A" button. The light should flash yellow to confirm.

  3. Effective Teachers are… • Made • Born

  4. Beyond knowledge of self…knowledge of why you are teaching: • A well developed educational philosophy • Unpacking your deeply held assumptions about: what is education, the nature of the learner, what subjects are most important, the role of schools in society

  5. Pedagogical Content Knowledge • Knowledge of the organization and presentation of subject matter in a way that makes it understandable to and applicable by others • Teachers are able to “psychologize” the subject matter for students. (Dewey) • Scaffolding from the known to the unknown (Vygotsky)

  6. Knowledge about how Students Learn and Grow • Educational psychology studies how students develop physically, socially, and cognitively • Our conceptions of ourselves and of others develop in a unique way as we interact with our world…who we think we are, who we think others are, and what we think is the purpose of being here

  7. Good Teachers Through History • Greece: • Socrates • Plato • Aristotle • The Sophists

  8. Good Teachers Through History • Rome • Quintillian • Europe • Erasmus • Comenius • Montessori

  9. United States: A Diverse Universe of Examples • Elizabeth Palmer Peabody • Mary McCleod Bethune • Leonard Covello • Louise Hikel Butterfield • Jonathan Kozol • P’ikea Miyamoto • Donna Graham Harris • Parker Palmer

  10. Teaching Terminology • Methodology • Discipline • Pedagogy

  11. Knowledge of Curricular Content • No Child Left Behind Act defines a “highly qualified teacher” as: holds at least a bachelor’s degree, full state licensure, subject area competence, has passed rigorous state tests in the subject(s) s/he is teaching

  12. The Knowledge Base of Effective Teachers • Culturally responsive teachers: 1. believe all students can achieve and succeed, 2. build a community of learners, 3. build connections to families and the community, 4.are continual learners, 5. vary instructional methods, 6.know their students, 7. are introspective and reflective

  13. Good teachers have • Pedagogical skill to implement teaching strategies…and pedagogical content knowledge • Reflective skills to analyze and act of teacher-generated data • Communication and collaboration skills to build relationships • Management skills to arrange successful learning environments • Technological skills

  14. The attitudes and Dispositions of Effective Teachers • Star teachers tend to be nonjudgmental, are not moralistic, not easily shocked, truly listen, recognize their own weaknesses, don’t see themselves as “saviors”, network, see themselves as “winning”, enjoy their interactions with kids, see their primary impact as raising kids self esteem and helping them be more humane, derive satisfaction of lots of needs teaching kids…but not power needs

  15. Teaching as a Profession • Theoretical Framework • Methodology supported by research • Lifelong learners • Social Institutions • Certification and Accreditation

  16. It is most important that a teacher has high levels of • Knowledge that s/he is teaching the students • Skills in teaching the subject to the students • Positive dispositions, values, attitudes

  17. Effective Teachers Employ These Tools • Structure and Clarity • Motivation • High Expectations • Questioning

  18. Styles of Teaching on Ends of a Spectrum • Authoritarian – characterized by: • Teacher-Centered • Traditional Structures • Rules-Based • Transmission of Knowledge • Centrality of Teacher Knowledge

  19. Styles of Teaching on Ends of a Spectrum • Constructivist, characterized by: • Student-Centered • Democratic, egalitarian ideals • Student experience of learning • Teacher as Learner who Models

  20. Styles of Teaching and Management • Constructivism…Alfie Kohn • We punish and reward too much. Student learning should be motivation in its own right. • Behaviorism…Assertive Discipline….Lee and Marlene Canter. Use of rewards and punishments.

  21. My most effective teachers were…. • Authoritarian • Constructivist • Somewhere in the middle

  22. Academic Learning Time • This concept is dynamically intertwined with styles of teaching. It has to do with curriculum (more on that later), but also how a teacher thinks about using time available. • Allocated Time • Engaged Time • Academic Learning Time

  23. Classroom Management • A direct function of teaching style • Group alerting • “withitness” • Overlapping • Least intervention • fragmentation

  24. The Pedagogical Cycle • What is the set of actions, responses, communications that define activity in the classroom? • 1. Structure • 2. Question • 3. Response • 4. React

  25. Academic Structure as a Goal: • Objectives • Review • Motivation • Transition • Clarification • Scaffolding • Examples • Directions • Enthusiasm • Closure

  26. Questions and Effective Teaching • Learning to Question well is part art, and part skill: • Lower order questions – factual, naming, etc. • Higher-order questions – evaluate, analyze, compare, solve a problem….

  27. Bloom’s Taxonomy: • Knowledge • Comprehension • Application • Analysis • Synthesis • Evaluation

  28. NBTS Description of Effective Teachers • Committed to students and their learning • Know their subject matter and subject matter pedagogy • Responsible for managing and monitoring student learning • Teachers think systematically about their practice and learn from experience • Teachers are members of learning communities

  29. Stages of Teacher Development • 1. Survival • 2. Consolidation • 3. Renewal • 4. Maturity

  30. Knowledge about the Community • Connecting students to the outside world requires that teachers know their students’ community • Eating in the community, living in the community, reading local community papers, talking with community members, going to meetings of the community

  31. At present, my most developed teaching tools are: • Content knowledge • Pedagogical skills • Reflective skills • Communication skills • Management skills • Positive attitude and dispositions

  32. Reflective teachers • Open-minded • Wholehearted • Responsible • An ethic of caring relationships • Learning communities

  33. It’s most important for me to build • Pedagogical skill • An ethic of caring • An educational philosophy • Reflective practice • Pedagogical content knowledge

  34. THANK YOU

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