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All learning begins with the learner.

All learning begins with the learner. John Dewey. Information Literacy/Technology Education Integration Plan Toolkit SC Department of Education 2003. What we ask students to do…. Write a report on “frogs.” Who was Franklin Roosevelt? Born? Died? Presidential Years One important fact

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All learning begins with the learner.

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  1. All learning begins with the learner. John Dewey Information Literacy/Technology Education Integration Plan Toolkit SC Department of Education 2003

  2. What we ask students to do… • Write a report on “frogs.” • Who was Franklin Roosevelt? • Born? Died? • Presidential Years • One important fact • Write a brief report on the Vietnam War. • When began? Ended? • Who was President? • What countries were involved?

  3. What we ask students to do… • Write a report on the Amazon Rain Forest. • Size? • Inhabitants? (animals, humans) • Write a description • One important fact • Read a book and write a report on your book: • Who were the main characters • Describe what happened • Could you recommend this book to a friend?

  4. What are the results? • Little transfer of learning • Activity to activity • Subject to subject • “Doing school” BORING! • Students are not engaged • Teachers are not engaged

  5. What can we do to change the way we “do school”? • Involve teachers • Involve students • Cooperative learning • Interdisciplinary units/lessons • Move up Bloom’s Taxonomy Information Literacy – engages students and teachers; matches the curriculum, the standards, technology, and makes learning relevant! (http://www.fno.org/sum00/winning.html)

  6. Inquiry-Based Learning

  7. Five Hallmarks of Inquiry-based Learning

  8. 1. Inquiry-based Learning asks questions that come from the higher levels of Bloom’s Taxonomy.

  9. 2. Inquiry-based Learning involves questions that are interesting and motivating to students.

  10. 3. Inquiry-based Learning utilizes a wide variety of resources so students can gather information and form opinions.

  11. 4. Teachers play a new role as guide or facilitator.

  12. 5. Meaningful products come out of inquiry-based learning.

  13. What does it mean to students? • “When you do stuff that is real.” • “It is like projects and things that take a long time.” • “When kids work in groups or with partners and make big things.” • “It’s fun!” • “I think about things.”

  14. Inquiry-based learning implies involvement that leads to understanding "Tell me and I forget, show me and I remember, involve me and I understand."

  15. What are the benefits of inquiry-based learning? Students often have difficulty understanding how various activities within a particular subject relate to each other. Much more confusion results when the learner tries to interrelate the various subjects taught at school.

  16. USE a spiral path of inquiry Asking questions Reflecting on new-found knowledge Investigating Solutions Discussing discoveries and experiences Creating new knowledge http://inquiry.uiuc.edu/ (The Inquiry Page)

  17. Asking questions,investigatingsolutions, creatingreflecting on our new-found knowledge • What needs to be done? • What can I use to find what I need? • Where can I find what I need? • What information can I use? • How can I put my information together? • How will I know if I did my job well? The Big6 !

  18. How Does Inquiry-based Learning Sound? • Close the door! • Students with students • Teacher as guide

  19. What Does Inquiry-based Learning Look Like? http:www/uis.edu/`trammell/cap.htm

  20. How Does it Feel? http://museum.gov.ns.ca/roadshow/day7/image/05steamr.jpg http://www.wrldcon.com/maestro/smiling-student.gif http://www.gatewayconsortium.org/library2.jpg

  21. Think about how good it feels to accomplish something that was a challenge. http://www.chester.ac.uk/~gpollard/handstand.jpg http://www.arndell.nsw.edu.au/00comp3.jpg http://www.zcs.k12.in.us/images/mainpage3/reading.JPG

  22. Elements of Inquiry-based Learning • Cooperative Learning • Teamwork • Excitement • Presenting • Movement

  23. Problem-based learning Placing students in the active role of problem-solvers confronted with an ill-structured problem which mirrors real-world problems.

  24. Active Learning - Students • Ends the listen-to-learn paradigm of the classroom • Gives students real and authentic challenges to overcome. http://www.ncsa.uiuc.edu/Cyberia/DVE/FusionDVE/html/inquiry_based_education.html

  25. Active Learning - Teachers • Ends teachers’ paradigm of talking to teach • Puts teachers in the role of a colleague and mentor • Engaged teachers in the same knowledge quest as their students. http://www.ncsa.uiuc.edu/Cyberia/DVE/FusionDVE/html/inquiry_based_education.html

  26. Teacher as Guide • What does facilitating really mean?

  27. Five Kind of Questions • Inference Questions • Interpretation Questions • Transfer Questions • Questions about Hypotheses • Reflective Questions The Art of Questioning by Denise Wolf Research project for the Rockefeller Foundation.

  28. Inference Questions… • Ask students to go beyond the immediately available information. • Ask students to look for clues, examine them and decide if they have a role in the question.

  29. Examples … • “What conclusions can you draw by looking at this photograph?” • “How did the author feel about the character in the story?”

  30. Interpretation Questions… • Ask students to predict what consequences may occur as a result of a given scenario. • Ask students to combine past knowledge of situations and new factual information.

  31. Examples… • “You found that Sports Illustrated actually had more tobacco ads than any other magazine we looked at. What does that say about Sports Illustrated?” • “We read and loved two books by AVI. What patterns did you see that you think might be present in the third book?”

  32. Transfer Questions… • Ask students to take their knowledge and apply it to new situations. • Ask students to expand their thinking.

  33. Examples… • “We found many patterns in math today. Now let’s look at our Language Arts lesson on adverbs. Let’s see what patterns you find there?” • “We learned how to make Inspiration webs from paragraphs in our textbook. Now let’s try going the other way and making a web and then writing a paragraph from it.”

  34. Questions about Hypotheses • Ask students to predict outcomes and carry out tests to discover new knowledge. • Use in all disciplines, not just science.

  35. Example… • “How can we find out if Energizer batteries really last the longest?”

  36. Reflective Questions… • Ask students to look again at the beliefs they have and the evidence that supports them. • Lead students back into investigation.

  37. Examples… • “How do I really know that there are no aliens out there?” • “How do I know that the show on TV was telling the truth?”

  38. Where do You Begin? • Examine the lessons • Listen to the questions you ask. • Start with small projects – don’t get overwhelmed • Remember, children who are not used to thinking may not know how to approach problems. • Be the guide. Don’t supply the answers

  39. Implementing • Collaborating - working together • Conversing - developing ideas and making connections • Continuing - knowing that learning is a process • Choosing - sense of control over the learning process by making choices on what to pursue, choose, leave out • Charting - depicts ideas for visualizations • Composing - formulating thoughts as a tool for thinking

  40. Caution… • Avoid activities that don’t promote deep processing • Avoid too much structure, too little guidance, too few strategies • Distinction between project centered approach and inquiry-based approach lies in underlying motivation and objective

  41. Inquiry is an important part of • multiple-intelligence work -- and • cooperative and collaborative learning is inherently inquiry-based. • a key tool for learning in constructivism • Standards can be met • incorporated early in planning • guiding students toward questions that will help them learn the required material

  42. Lesson Plans • Inquiry-based lesson plans are usually referred to as "facilitation plans," to help teachers remember their role as facilitator of learning, rather than fount of all wisdom. The notion also helps teachers structure lessons more loosely to allow student questions to drive the learning process without derailing it.

  43. What is your perception of learning? What do you emphasize? What do you reward? What do you expect?

  44. How is inquiry teaching/learning defined? How do we overcome barriers to make inquiry teaching inclusive to all learners? How does information technology contribute to inquiry teaching and learning? Focus Questions

  45. Focus Questions What meaningful learning experiences do you recall as a result of student media center experiences? How do you know that a learning experience resulted in new learning?

  46. What do we want to see happen? • Increased student achievement • School to work connection • Lifelong learning skills and a desire to learn • Productive citizens

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