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Scaffolding Instruction A systematic approach

Scaffolding Instruction A systematic approach. David Kaus, Instructional Designer Instructional Media. You will need a piece of paper and a pen for this activity. Do not write until instructed to do so. Focus your attention on the middle of the screen .

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Scaffolding Instruction A systematic approach

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  1. Scaffolding InstructionA systematic approach David Kaus, Instructional Designer Instructional Media

  2. You will need a piece of paper and a pen for this activity. Do not write until instructed to do so. Focus your attention on the middle of the screen. For the following words, count how many syllables are in each word.

  3. Onyx

  4. Millennium

  5. Husband

  6. Light-year

  7. Bronze

  8. Essay

  9. Admiral

  10. Mule

  11. Denim

  12. Toaster

  13. Ankle

  14. Raspberry

  15. Write the words now!

  16. What font was mule? • What font was ankle? • What font was husband? • What word was bolded? • What word was in italics? Was this difficult to recall without knowing what to look for?

  17. Objectives • Learn about/reinforce theoretical learning principles • Forgetting curve • Anchoring ideas • Chunking • Assessment/reflection • *Learn how to apply these principles into instruction

  18. Think back… • Have you ever been told directions that contain too many details? • Have you ever studied for a test and forgotten the content days later?

  19. Forgetting curve • German psychologist named Herman Ebbinghaus • Studied memory and forgetting • Created and memorized 2300 “nonsense words” http://helpingpsychology.hubpages.com/hub/Ebbinghaus-Forgetting-Curve-The-Theory-of-Memory Retrieved from: http://www.gov.mb.ca/tce/es/archive/oct05/spaced_review.htm

  20. Forgetting curve: How can we improve this? • Repetition – the more you repeat something, the more likely it will be remembered • Practical application • Review previously covered material with students at the beginning of class • Revisit challenging concepts with your students throughout your lecture • Create assignments that require students to reexamine earlier material

  21. Forgetting curve: How can we improve this? • Quality of memory representation – create relevant, meaningful connections with new information • Learning is more effective when it is important to you • Practical application • When introducing a new concept, explain a situation where it is used, or has been relevant in the real world • Allow students to research articles and newspapers that relate to the topic (e.g. NCLB in newspapers) • Show a news clip dealing with the topic • Administer an interest survey at the beginning of the semester

  22. Discussion What materials could you provide to your students that allow them to see the importance of what they are about to learn?

  23. Keepers (what to take away from this) Keepers is a strategy of that focuses on reinforcing the crucial parts of an idea or topic. • Repetition assists in memory retention. Frequently revisit earlier, important material with your students. • Find examples of how your topic is applicable to real life.

  24. Anchoring ideas • American psychologist David Ausubel • Anchoring ideas are content specific ideas already embedded in one’s cognitive structure (e.g. what a student understands about cell division) • Need to link new material with students prior knowledge • Learning is much more effective when you weave the knowledge you are learning into something you already know • Learning is much more difficult when you have to create an entirely new anchoring idea

  25. Anchoring ideas • Practical application • Administer a pre-assessment the first week of class or at the beginning of each lesson (Clickers or Poll Everywhere) • Make a list of what everyone knows • Create a concept map with students while they are learning the new material • Create an outline for students to follow during the lecture • Review information from a previous lesson and explain how it relates to the lesson you are about to teach

  26. Discussion Think about ways you could introduce a topic to your students that connects to their prior knowledge.

  27. Keepers • Learning is much more effective when one can build upon or modify their prior knowledge (anchoring ideas) • Before you introduce your topic, find a way to tap into something the students already know and teach from there

  28. Quick review • Repetition - frequently revisit earlier, important material with your students. • Quality of memory representation - create relevant, meaningful connections with new information (learning is more effective when it is important to you.) • Link new material with students’ prior knowledge (anchoring ideas).

  29. Chunking • Breaking down large pieces of information into smaller sections • Much easier for the brain to digest the information • Divide your content into related sections • For online modules, break down larger modules into sections (e.g. Immunizations Part I and Immunizations Part II) • For face-to-face courses, take small breaks after about 45 minutes of lecture Retrieved from: http://theelearningcoach.com/elearning_design/chunking-information/

  30. Keepers • Students will have a difficult time retaining information if they are presented with too much material. • Chunk your content into manageable sections.

  31. Assessment and reflection • Formative vs. summative assessment • Ability to monitor student progress • Students actively engaged in acquiring knowledge, instead of passively receiving it • Reflection provides students with an opportunity to expand on what they have just learned • Allows students to focus on what they already understand, and what they need to study

  32. Assessment and reflection • Practical application • Include questions on your topic throughout your presentation/lecture (can use Clickers or Poll Everywhere) • Provide students with opportunities to reflect on what they have learned (e.g. learning logs). Ask students questions such as: • In what ways do you think you need to improve? • What barriers did you encounter during this module? • What do you think you need to work on? • What part of the lesson are you most comfortable with? How would you explain this to someone who knows nothing about the topic? • Include Articulate elements in your presentations

  33. discussion Can you think of some content-specific assessment or reflection questions you can ask your students during lectures?

  34. keepers • Include assessment questions throughout your lectures • Provide students opportunities to reflect on their learning

  35. Overall Review • Repetition - frequently revisit earlier, important material with your students. • Create relevant, meaningful connections with new information (learning is more effective when it is important to you.) • Link new material with students’ prior knowledge (anchoring ideas). • “Chunk” your presentations into manageable sections. • Include questions throughout your presentations. • Provide students with opportunities to reflect on their learning.

  36. Workshop time! Open your course presentation and try to incorporate some of the learning strategies we just discussed. Feel free to share ideas with others!

  37. In closing • What did you like about this workshop? • Is there anything you will now try differently in your courses? • Is there anything you would like to learn about that we did not cover today? • Contact David Kaus dkaus@howardcc.edu or Instructional Media IMfacultylab@howardcc.edufor more information

  38. Sources/Additional resources • http://helpingpsychology.hubpages.com/hub/Ebbinghaus-Forgetting-Curve-The-Theory-of-Memory • http://www.gov.mb.ca/tce/es/archive/oct05/spaced_review.htm • http://theelearningcoach.com/elearning_design/chunking-information • http://www.simplypsychology.org/Zone-of-Proximal-Development.html • http://helpingpsychology.hubpages.com/hub/Ebbinghaus-Forgetting-Curve-The-Theory-of-Memory • http://sidsavara.com/personal-productivity/the-ebbinghaus-curve-of-forgetting • http://www.edutopia.org/assessment-guide-importance • http://www.cmu.edu/teaching/assessment/basics/formative-summative.html

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