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Believing is Seeing: Exploring the Role of Student Beliefs in ‘Real’ Learning

Believing is Seeing: Exploring the Role of Student Beliefs in ‘Real’ Learning. Washington Assessment, Teaching & Learning Conference May 2006 William S. Moore, Ph.D. State Board for Community & Technical Colleges bmoore@sbctc.ctc.edu. “Do you mean ‘really learning’ or ‘just learning’?”.

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Believing is Seeing: Exploring the Role of Student Beliefs in ‘Real’ Learning

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  1. Believing is Seeing: Exploring the Role of Student Beliefs in ‘Real’ Learning Washington Assessment, Teaching & Learning Conference May 2006 William S. Moore, Ph.D. State Board for Community & Technical Colleges bmoore@sbctc.ctc.edu

  2. “Do you mean ‘really learning’ or ‘just learning’?” Student quoted in Bill Perry’s “Sharing in the cost of growth,” from C.A. Parker, 1978

  3. Questions to Consider • How would you define knowledge? • How do you see your view of knowledge influencing the way you think about learning and your teaching?

  4. Whose Meaning Matters? Look! Do I sound crazy in saying that the students are the source of the meanings they will make of you? All right, so you feel you are making meaning for them; you know your subject matter, they do not. But it is the meaning they make of your meaning that matters! Obviously. Why am I shouting? After all, it is the meanings you make of my meanings that matter, and shouting will not help… William Perry, from The Modern American College, A. Chickering & Associates, 1981

  5. Why Does it Matter? Diversity, social problems, environmental issues, and the changing geopolitical situation all require minds that can grapple successfully with uncertainty, complexity and conflicting perspectives and still take stands that are both based on evidence, analysis and compassion and deeply centered in values. Craig Nelson, 1994

  6. “Perry-ism” #1 When bright people persist in doing stupid things, we know that powerful forces are at work.

  7. Intelligence/ aptitude Skills/expertise Learning styles Motivation Culture Dispositions Socialization process Cognitive strategies DEVELOPMENT Explanations for IndividualDifferences in Learners

  8. Key Aspects of the Perry Scheme • Describes nine sequential “positions” from which students view knowledge and learning • Represents a series of encounters with diversity of: • Perspectives (positions 1-3) • Contexts (positions 4-6) • Commitments (positions 7-9) • Reflects students’ evolving conceptions of • Knowledge • Role of teacher (Authority) • Role of learner (and peers)

  9. CONTEXTUAL RELATIVISM DUALISM • Supportive evidence • Socially-constructed understandings • Continua of certainty • Isolated, verifiable facts • Discrete blocks of content • Clear rights and wrongs VIEW OF KNOWLEDGE • Gathering & retaining information • Getting facts from teacher, not peers • Gaining expertise • Seeking most adequate solution/ interpretation ROLE OF LEARNER • Source of right answers • Offers clear guidance--no tricks • Resource for context-specific expertise • Facilitator, guide ROLE OF “AUTHORITY”

  10. From Dualism to Contextual Relativism: A Real Paradigm Shift (groan) • Moving beyond received belief to “creative faith” • Understanding the role and limits of reason, evidence and “data-driven” answers • Coping with paradox: greater confidence in one’s own stands AND greater empathy for those who hold different viewpoints

  11. Learning as Transforming Understanding …Being able to repeat facts and plug numbers into formulae to get the right answers is handy, even essential. But it is not what education is fundamentally about… Learning should be about changing the ways in which learners understand, or experience, or conceptualize the world around them… Paul Ramsden

  12. Contributions of Perry Scheme to Understanding Role of Beliefs in ‘Real’ Learning • Reflects critical underlying assumptions about knowledge (epistemology) • Involves intellect and identity • Represents qualitative changes in how people construct meaning and interpret subject matter • Describes increasingly inclusive and complex forms of thinking

  13. “Perry-ism” #2 If the power [of the scheme] is to label students the better to develop them, we shall dehumanize them and ourselves. What’s more, as we do not possess such powers, we shall be defeated…

  14. Instructional Implications of “Believing is Seeing” Design learning environments, don’t “develop” students” Help make learning accessible—”building a bridge” for students Balance challenge and support in the learning process

  15. “In Over Our Heads”

  16. Educational Practice? • Basically, you learn two kinds of things in college: • Things you will need to know in later life (2 hours)… • Things you will NOT need to know in later life (1198 hours). • These are the things you learn in classes whose names end in ‘-ology’, ‘-osophy’, ‘-istry’, ‘-ics’, and so on. The idea is, you memorize these things, then write them down in little exam books, then forget them. If you fail to forget them you become a professor and have to stay in college the rest of your life. Dave Barry, 1981

  17. NATURE OF KNOWLEDGE • Re-think content coverage • Explore uncertainty in field • Address reasoning in context of specific content ROLE OF LEARNER ROLE OF “AUTHORITY” • Help students make connections to prior learning • Encourage students to take responsibility • Insist students take stands, offer evidence • Consider teaching as functions, not role • Think out loud w/ students • Emphasize what students can do, not what you can do FACILITATING ‘REAL’ LEARNING

  18. Re-Visioning Assessment from Perry Scheme Perspective • Assessment as Learning • Assessment as Meaning-making • Assessment as Dialogue

  19. Ways of reasoning within disciplinary contexts Understandings of core concepts/themes Assessing Real Learning Self-assessment of learning

  20. Role of Self-Assessments in ‘Real’ Learning • Fostering meta-thinking • Promoting active inquiry • Developing self-evaluation skills • Integrating learning/ making connections

  21. When All is Said and Done, It’s Easier Said than Done

  22. Hope & Loss: Real Learning Takes Courage …It may be a great joy to discover a new and more complex way of thinking and seeing, but what do we do about the old simple world? What do we do about the hopes that we had invested and experienced in those simpler terms? When we leave those terms behind, are we to leave hope, too? Bill Perry, 1978 “Sharing in the cost of growth”

  23. “Perry-ism” #3 This is our creative obligation as educators: to find ways to encourage.

  24. Summary of Key Messages about “Believing is Seeing” • Students have differing personal epistemologies, and these conceptions matter in terms of learning • ‘Real’ learning is more about transformation than transmission • ‘Real’ learning thus involves risk-taking and courage on the part of students • Both assessment and teaching approaches reflect and reinforce epistemologies

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