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Evaluating Discipline-based Goals and Educational Outcomes in Developmental Psychology

Evaluating Discipline-based Goals and Educational Outcomes in Developmental Psychology. Anne L. Law Department of Psychology Rider University. Developmental Psychology. Sophomore level course Required for all Education & Special Education majors

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Evaluating Discipline-based Goals and Educational Outcomes in Developmental Psychology

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  1. Evaluating Discipline-based Goals and Educational Outcomes in Developmental Psychology Anne L. Law Department of Psychology Rider University

  2. Developmental Psychology • Sophomore level course • Required for all Education & Special Education majors • Chosen as a major requirement by most psychology majors • Class size 35-40

  3. Chronic Dilemmas • Student performance and morale • Student effort not matched by performance • High level of student disengagement • Amount of material to cover during one semester • Seeming incoherence across topics • Creating coherence between students’ future goals and course content

  4. Challenge of translating knowledge as acquired by disciplinary practices into knowledge to be used by “consumers”

  5. Experience with Assignment Design Based on Disciplinary Practice • Examples of Earlier Efforts: • Observational exercises or other types of data collection • Reading and analyzing research articles • Reading and critiquing popular articles • Problems with these sorts of assignments: • Frequent substitution of personal experience as evidence • Narrow exposure to developmental phenomena • Difficulty connecting observation (or other data) to existing research

  6. Goals of Course Revision • Introduce students to discipline-based methods of inquiry relevant to their future • Introduce students to the range of research conducted by developmental psychologists • Include specific mechanisms to improve critical thinking • Include opportunities to “practice” informed decision making

  7. Inquiry-based Pedagogy • A pedagogical strategy that uses significant, real-world problems as devices for students to encounter and use foundational, disciplinary knowledge • Typically involves: access to a broad range of resources, collaborative research teams, instruction through facilitation of problem solving

  8. Inquiry-based Activities • Students are randomly assigned to teams of 3-4 • Each team is assigned to a problem • Teams use web and print resources to assemble a source base • Students create answers for their problems using relevant sources • Problem solutions are organized into a powerpoint presentation • Each group posts their presentation to Blackboard • All students view all presentations and participate in a virtual discussion

  9. Students working in project teams

  10. Student Assessment & Course Goals • Daily Log – each team evaluates their progress and identifies any needs Helps me monitor progress and act as facilitator • Project Reviews – teams are partnered and conduct an evaluation of one other project Use growing understanding of content area to critically evaluate • Blackboard Dialog – all students review and comment on every project Creates exposure to entire area of content

  11. Creation of Problems • Coherent division of content – several weeks of course coverage • Identification of significant subtopics within one unit • Creation of problems that could be solved using relevant content • Entire set of problems accesses total content to be covered • Specify meaningful audience for each problem

  12. Cognitive Development Set of problems would include: Theories of Cognition Developmental change Integration with social and emotional development Individual Differences Cultural Practices Problem #10: By the end of elementary school children have developed distinct meta-memory skills. Their understanding of their own attention, memory, and problem-solving provides the necessary preparation for advancing to more complex and independent learning. You have been hired as a consultant to an after-school program for 5th and 6th graders. What advice would you give the staff to evaluate the meta-memory skills of these children? What activities would you propose that would strengthen both information processing and children’s understanding of their own cognition?

  13. Sample of student presentation Illustrating key features of assignment • Problem redefinition • Organization of key concepts • Use of information to solve problem • Types of resources chosen

  14. Student presentation illustrating: • Creative problem definition & solution • Breadth of problem areas and potential solutions • Goal-directed nature of problem solving

  15. Review of Course Goals • Introduce students to discipline-based methods of inquiry relevant to their future Solutions reflect use of discipline-based discourse and value of empirically-derived conclusions • Introduce students to the range of research conducted by developmental psychologists Use of internet resources makes available wide array of resources

  16. Include specific mechanisms to improve critical thinking • Peer evaluation, comparison of textbook account with problem solution, reduces reliance on personal experience • Include opportunities to “practice” informed decision making • Specification of audience, applied or practical nature of problem

  17. Outcomes • Risks inconsistent coverage of content • Introduces new student dissatisfactions Increased student engagement with course content • Increased student interaction with each other and with instructor • Illustrates the value of scientific inquiry into human development • Emphasizes future value of research on human development

  18. For the Future • Evaluate critical thinking outcomes • Review and revise problems • Create improved assessment that reflects learning of all content • Improve balance of group and individual work

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