1 / 8

Reviewing Week 2&3

Reviewing Week 2&3. Principles of Learning and Teaching – Math/Science EDU312. Like whoa!. Alright, week three is almost done. Does it feels like we are on a loaded freight train careening down a hill? Yes time is flying by, but we have done a LOT already.

yonah
Download Presentation

Reviewing Week 2&3

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Reviewing Week 2&3 Principles of Learning and Teaching – Math/Science EDU312

  2. Like whoa! • Alright, week three is almost done. Does it feels like we are on a loaded freight train careening down a hill? • Yes time is flying by, but we have done a LOT already. • Now we have to start shifting gears to think more about application of these ideas.

  3. Some reminders • Where do you start your thinking about planning for mathematics? • CCSS • The district planning documents • What you know about children’s learning • What things should you keep in mind? • We all have prior knowledge and experiences. • There are skills, facts, and concepts to learn. • Metacognition is important. • Teachers have different roles in classrooms. • Classrooms have different styles.

  4. Big Ideas from the past two weeks… • Cognitive Demand looks at the complexity of a task. It is not an instructional approach; but a way to think about learning potential of a task or problem. • Memorization • Procedures without connections • Procedures with connections • Doing math • How can we increase cognitive demand? • How does cognitive demand relate to Big Ideas? • How does cognitive demand relate to instrucitonal models?

  5. Big Ideas – continued • We looked at complex instruction as one instructional model • Social constructivism (Vygotsky especially) • Communities of Practice (Lave & Wenger) • Why are these theories important? • What are some goals of complex instruction in mathematics? • What does it look like?

  6. Big Ideas - continued • We also looked at Cognitively Guided Instruction. • This highlights individual constructivism • Focuses on children’s thinking and reasoning about problem types. • More rooted in Piaget, but there is Vygotskian ideas in this. How? • Beyond the learning theories, how is this different and similar to Complex Instruction?

  7. Pedagogical issues • VanDeWalle et.al. give us a procedure or approach to taking what we know and transforming this into a planning for teaching cycle. • Content and Task Decisions • Planning actions: Before, During, After • Actually planning • How does this compare or relate to your ideas about what it means to plan for mathematics instruction?

  8. Practical issues for us • Placements – Wahoo! We are off • Get in the classroom • Start engaging in mathematics instruction ASAP • REFLECT – write down your experiences • Talk with your teachers about teaching Mar 11-14. The good news is that the delay will make this easier to specify. The goal is not that you create NEW things. The goal is that you engage in a planning process • NO Curriculum and Teaching paper • Website issues – I tried didn’t have a problem. Let me think on this .

More Related