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Teaching and l earning in a c ommunity of t hinking – challenges and dilemmas

Explore the theory and practice of teaching and learning within a community of thinking, including the "atomic pictures" of traditional education and the benefits of effective learning conditions.

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Teaching and l earning in a c ommunity of t hinking – challenges and dilemmas

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  1. Teaching and learning in a community of thinking– challenges and dilemmas Yoram Harpaz and Adam Lefstein August 2004

  2. overview Theory: pictures of teaching, learning, knowledge and educational aims (Yoram) Practice: exemplification of the community of thinking framework (Adam)

  3. The “atomic pictures” of traditional education learning is listening teaching is telling knowledge is an object to be educated is to know valuable content

  4. The “Grand Picture” -- a mimetic chain Scientific knowledge World Facts Mathematical Physical Historical curriculum designers Disciplines Mathematics Physics History scientists Educational knowledge Lesson plans Student’s mind Subjects Mathematics Science History old knowledge new knowledge teachers gluing

  5. Effective learning Involvement + Understanding Involvement: task involvement vs. ego involvement Understanding: to locate (in context); to perform (thinking operations with knowledge)

  6. basic conditions for effective learning • intrinsic motivation • authentic problems • undermining • contents and process matchstudent profiles and styles • appropriate challenge

  7. basic conditions for effective learning • dialogic environment • informative ongoing feedback • supportive climate • constructive attribution: ability and will vs. other people or luck • incremental learners vs. entity learners

  8. alternative “atomic pictures” learning is being involved and understanding teaching is providing the conditions for effective learning knowledge is a structure or a “story” that works being educated is knowing how to relate to knowledge

  9. questions and problems

  10. Community of Thinking An educational practice based on the alternative “atomic pictures” Its primary components include Fertile question Inquiry / research Concluding performance

  11. Research Question Research Question Research Question Research Question Research Question Research Question Inquiry Inquiry Inquiry Concluding performance Concluding performance Concluding performance Communal concluding performance Fertile Question Initiation Feedback

  12. A Fertile Question is... open • Which is preferable, to be a house-pet or a wild animal? (non-disciplinary) • Why do people marry? (sociology) • Does competition make us better? (interdisciplinary) undermining connected rich charged practical

  13. A Fertile Question is... open • Why did the peasants accept a class system that exploited and oppressed them? (history) • Can betrayal be forgiven? (literature) • What should we wear? (chemistry) undermining connected rich charged practical

  14. Research Question Research Question Research Question Research Question Research Question Research Question Inquiry Inquiry Inquiry Concluding performance Concluding performance Concluding performance Communal concluding performance Fertile Question Initiation Feedback

  15. A good research question is... • Open – requires that the researcher take a position • Rich – requires deep and extensive research • Connected – to the communal fertile questionand to the disciplinary domain • Interesting – to students, and possibly also "objectively" • Practical – can be coped with in the context of time, material and other constraints

  16. fertile question: Does competition make us better? Does testing improve achievement? Can there be a game without competition? ? ? Has business destroyed competitive sports? Does too much competition lead to cheating? ? ? What does competition do to friendship? ?

  17. Research Question Research Question Research Question Research Question Research Question Research Question Inquiry Inquiry Inquiry Concluding performance Concluding performance Concluding performance Communal concluding performance Fertile Question Initiation Feedback

  18. Inquiry: from School subjects to Pedagogical Discipline

  19. Inquiry: from School subjects to Pedagogical Discipline (continued)

  20. research question: Has business destroyed sports? examples of lines of inquiry: • case study based on news reports • interviews with athletes and/or fans • analysis of a team’s financial report • comparison of athletes’ biographies – “then” and “now” • critical review of sports films How would you recommend conducting inquiry?

  21. Research Question Research Question Research Question Research Question Research Question Research Question Inquiry Inquiry Inquiry Concluding performance Concluding performance Concluding performance Communal concluding performance Fertile Question Initiation Feedback

  22. Understanding performances • To explain knowledge in your own words • To bring examples of knowledge • To generalize from an item of knowledge • To identify knowledge in different contexts • To explain phenomena by the use of knowledge • To give arguments to justify knowledge • To predict on the basis of knowledge

  23. More understanding performances • To break knowledge into its components (analysis) • To take a stance with regard to knowledge • To criticize knowledge on the basis of knowledge • To create knowledge on the basis of knowledge • To create a simulation, model or metaphor • To ask a question on the basis of knowledge ....

  24. Concluding performance A comprehensive understanding performance which builds and exhibits understandings for an audience Research paper Dramatic performance Lecture Policy position paper Documentary film Designing a tool Museum Mock trial

  25. examples of communal concluding performances What should we wear? Fashion show and information display at shopping mall Why do people marry? “Thinking about marriage?” Instructions manual

  26. more examples of communal performances Why did the peasants accept a class system that exploited and oppressed them? Interactive museum Does competition make us better? Mock trial with evidence and witnesses

  27. Research Question Research Question Research Question Research Question Research Question Research Question Inquiry Inquiry Inquiry Concluding performance Concluding performance Concluding performance Communal concluding performance Fertile Question Initiation Feedback

  28. Initiation Developing the common knowledge basis necessary for understanding the fertile question, for creating questions and for conducting research, via... • Clarifying central concepts and ideas • “Creating” the fertile question • Guiding “mini-inquiries” • Connecting concepts to the questions that gave rise to them (archeology of knowledge) • Creating a “questions bank” • ...

  29. Research Question Research Question Research Question Research Question Research Question Research Question Inquiry Inquiry Inquiry Concluding performance Concluding performance Concluding performance Communal concluding performance Fertile Question Initiation Feedback

  30. Feedback Providing the learner with information and stimulus to further and deepen his or her learning; providing the teacher with information to improve his or her teaching • Listen and converse • Pose questions • Probe student understanding • Don’t solve students’ problems for them • Orient to what can be realistically improved • Provide examples, but aim for general issues • Minimize judgment • ...

  31. questions and problems

  32. for more information Yoram Harpaz: yoramha@mandelinstitute.org.il Adam Lefstein: adaml@netvision.net.il

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