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Principles of the Learning College

Principles of the Learning College. The Learning College creates substantive change in individual learners. The Learning College engages learners as full partners in the learning process, assuming primary responsibility for their own choices. Principles of the Learning College, continued.

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Principles of the Learning College

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  1. Principles of the Learning College • The Learning College creates substantive change in individual learners. • The Learning College engages learners as full partners in the learning process, assuming primary responsibility for their own choices.

  2. Principles of the Learning College, continued • The Learning College creates and offers as many options for learning as possible. • The Learning College assists learners to form and participate in collaborative learning activities.

  3. Principles of the Learning College, continued • The Learning College defines the roles of learning facilitators by the needs of the learners. • The Learning College and its learning facilitators succeed only when improved and expanded learning can be documented for learners.

  4. Technology for teaching Use all sorts of combinations of: • e-mail • online syllabi • text searching • Hypertext • CD-ROM materials • writing software

  5. Technology for teaching relate teaching to multimedia and dynamic syllabi from the World Wide Web, Web-based and CD-Rom based electronic archives, a collaborative writing and groupware program, and the use of online communication programs.

  6. Learning Activities • Conceptual LearningIdeas, theories, principles of information systems, bodies of knowledge • Problem SolvingDeductive powers, inferential reasoning, testing assumptions, decision making • Object and Document AnalysisContextualization and interpretation using texts, documents, pictures, objects • Data Gathering and SynthesisResearch skills, methodology, evaluation and reporting, quantification • Case StudiesEvaluation of systems by observing and analyzing simulated situations or processes

  7. Learning Activities • Virtual Labs and Field TripsTesting and evaluating information through experiments and in situ examination • Presentations by TeachersDemonstrations, overviews, framing, setting forth of key information or salient points • Presentations by StudentsProduction or performance of representative knowledge by students • Collaborative LearningSharing knowledge, collective decision making, forming learning communities • Authentic InquiryLearner as practitioner, connecting theory to practice, taking responsibility for knowledge

  8. Active Learning • It’s means any of a variety of strategies or pedagogical projects designed to place the primary responsibility for creating and/or applying knowledge on the shoulders of students. • It’s means transforming traditional classroom practices through problem-based learning or collaborative projects; others move learning beyond the walls of the classroom through community service-learning activities. • These teaching strategies usually require a lot of up-front work from teachers (creating effective problem sets or contacting community service groups, for example), and likewise, require careful attention from teachers during the process. • These strategies greatly increase students' retention of both knowledge and skills.

  9. Assessment, Evaluation, & Testing • Classroom Assessment • Assessing Writing • Testing • Evaluating Group Work

  10. Review of Last Week’s Activities • What questions to you have about the following learning activities? • Data Gathering • Pair Work • Interviewing • Group Work • Role Playing

  11. Cooperative Learning • Cooperative learning is a teaching strategy in which small teams use a variety of learning activities to improve their understanding of a subject. • Each member of a team is responsible not only for learning what is taught, but also for helping teammates learn.

  12. Why Use It? • Cooperative learning promotes: • the development of higher-order levels of thinking • essential communication skills • improved motivation • positive self-esteem • social awareness • tolerance for individual differences.

  13. What Research Shows • Hundreds of studies show the following gains: • improved academic achievement, • improved behavior and attendance, • increased self-confidence and motivation, • increased liking of school and classmates, • Improved critical and creative thinking, • Improved group interaction and social skills, • Improved self-esteem and respect for others.

  14. Implementing Cooperative Learning Group Size • It is best to keep groups small. While the number of group members may increase with a more complex task, keep in mind the fewer the members the more each student needs to communicate. • Teachers can let students choose their own groups or assign students to groups based on students’ strengths and weaknesses and their personalities.

  15. Implementing Cooperative Learning Group Functions • Students can work in groups for any assignment they would normally do alone. For instance, the may: • collaborate on solving a problem, • discuss an issue without the teacher leading them, • brainstorm ideas, • summarize ideas they have learned, • share parts of a complex project, • jointly produce an assignment project, • prepare a presentation to the whole class. • Of course in the language classroom, the group may communicate in English, thus practicing speaking and listening skills.

  16. Implementing Cooperative Learning Group Rules • Teachers may allow students to develop rules to help control the behavior in the groups. Things to consider: • Keeping the noise level down • Preventing insults or teasing • Promoting equal participation • Encouraging students to help each other • Developing signals for the teacher to use to re-gain the attention of the students (raised hands, finger on noses, etc.) • It is important that students learn to help each other. Brighter students' learning is enhanced by teaching others; less-capable students benefit from increased one-to-one attention.

  17. Implementing Cooperative Learning Group Skills • Teachers need to teach students (and then be patient as they practice) how to rearrange into groups, work quietly within groups, and respond to signals from the teacher. • Important skills that students will learn by working in groups include: • Teamwork • Support, and acceptance of differences • Active/reflective listening • Positive feedback • Reaching consensus • Coaching and tutoring others

  18. Implementing Cooperative Learning Group Goals and Roles • Clear instructions, goals, and time lines are essential to successful cooperative learning. • It is also important that each member have a specific function: recorder, reporter, monitor, observer, facilitator, etc. • Roles should be changed frequently, so members have opportunity to practice new roles.

  19. Pair and Small Group Benefits • Allows students a greater opportunity to speak in English • Allows shy or nervous students to practice English skills without the pressure of speaking in front of a large group • Allows students to be more engaged in the learning activity—they can’t just let more aggressive students do the work for them • Allows students to enjoy learning. Even a difficult task is more enjoyable when shared with a teammate.

  20. Assessing Group Work • Simple Task • Teacher may walk around and monitor groups, asking questions and noting students’ work. • Teacher may ask teams to volunteer to share the product with the entire class. • Teacher may ask teams to come back to the large group and then lead a class discussion on team findings.

  21. Assessing Group Work • Complex Task or Project • Teacher may assign one grade for the entire project. Each team member receives the same grade. (Sink or Swim Method) • Teacher may monitor in-class group work and make notes of students’ participation and effort. This can be factored in with the project grade so each child receives an individual grade. • Teacher may ask teams to evaluate individual members and use this information to assign individual grades.

  22. Portfolios • What Is a Portfolio? • A portfolio is a collection of student work that exhibits the student's efforts, progress, and achievements. • It should represent a collection of students' best work or best efforts, not all pieces will necessarily be “excellent”. The emphasis is on the process and the product.

  23. Why Use a Portfolio? • Instructors can use them for a variety of specific purposes, including: • Encouraging self-directed learning. • Fostering learning about learning. • Demonstrating progress toward identified outcomes. • Creating an intersection for instruction and assessment. • Providing a way for students to value themselves as learners. • Offering opportunities for peer-supported growth.

  24. What Makes a Good Portfolio? • They clearly reflect the curriculum that students are expected to study. • They focus upon students' active learning experiences as well as their acquisition of key knowledge. • They contain samples of work that stretch over an entire marking period, rather than single points in time. • They contain works that represent a variety of different assessment tools. • They contain a variety of work samples and evaluations of that work by the student, peers, and teachers, possibly even the parents' reactions.

  25. Types of Portfolios • Documentation Portfolio: • This approach involves a collection of work over time ,showing growth and improvement. • May include everything from brainstorming activities to drafts to finished products. • The collection becomes meaningful when specific items are selected out to focus on particular educational experiences or goals. • It can include the best and weakest of student work.

  26. Types of Portfolios • Process Portfolio: • This approach documents all phases of the learning process. • They are particularly useful in documenting students' overall learning process. • It can show how students use specific knowledge or skills and progress towards both basic and advanced mastery. • The process portfolio emphasizes students' reflection upon their learning process.

  27. Types of Portfolios • Showcase Portfolio: • Best used for summative evaluation of students' mastery of key curriculum. • It should include students' very best work, determined through a combination of student and teacher selection. • This type of portfolio allows students to include audio/visual materials, including photographs, videotapes, and electronic records of students' completed work. • It also includes written reflections by the student about how and why the materials were selected.

  28. Implementing the Portfolio Phase One: Organization and Planning – • This initial phase of portfolio development requires decision-making on the part of students and teachers. Key questions for the teacher and the student include: • How do I select times, materials, etc. to reflect what I am learning in this class? • How do I organize and present the items, materials, etc. that I have collected? • How will portfolios be maintained and stored?

  29. Implementing the Portfolio Phase Two: Collection • This process involves the collection of meaningful artifacts and products reflecting students' educational experiences and goals. • The selection and collection of artifacts and products should be based upon a variety of factors that can include: • Particular subject matter; • A learning process; or • Special projects, themes, and/or units. • All selections included in the collection should clearly reflect the criteria and standards identified for evaluation.

  30. Implementing the Portfolio Phase Three: Reflection • Wherever possible, there should be evidence of students' reflections upon the learning process and their evolving comprehension of key knowledge and skills. • These reflections can focus on the thinking processes they have used, and the habits of mind they employed at given points in time and across time periods. • In addition, teacher and/or parent reflections upon the products, processes, and thinking articulated in the portfolio may also be included wherever appropriate.

  31. Sample Portfolios • Many examples of electronic student portfolios may be found online: • http://www.mehs.educ.state.ak.us/portfolios/portfolio.html • http://www.ebps.net/verizon/electronic_portfolio_samples.shtml • http://www.oswego.org/staff/jdecosa/portfolio/

  32. Workshops • Workshops allow students to apply skills to achieve their own purposes, rather than analyzing or memorizing information a teacher chooses. • Workshops allows students freedom • to choose their own topics • set their own purposes • identify their own goals

  33. Workshops in an EFL Class • Teachers assume that students learn a second language the same way they learn a first. • Teachers emphasize tasks that encourage students to express themselves and make meaning, rather than learning the language by memorizing the grammar. • Teachers emphasize taking risks in using language by downplaying direct grammar instruction and correction of grammar errors. • Teachers use authentic language models-what "real" speakers say and what "real" writers write, rather than formal textbook dialogues.

  34. Workshop Benefits • Learner is more likely to be involved and motivated • Work can be individualized, lending itself to multiple learning styles • Workshop is "active" learning rather than "passive,” so larger numbers of learners are motivated to participate and learn • Teachers can be the "guide on the side," rather than the "sage on the stage" • Those using the workshop method do not focus on telling students information.  Instead, they create learning experiences that guide, direct, and help the student gain new knowledge.

  35. Workshop Results • The workshop provides students the opportunity to discover on their own, but with guidance. • The most successful workshops allow students to share and receive feedback. This allows students to retain the concepts better.

  36. Preview for Tomorrow • Tomorrow we will discuss and practice using a specific type of workshop activity—the Task-Centered Discussion.

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