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Teaching & Learning Goals

Teaching & Learning Goals. Dr. Mok, Y.F . Instrumental Knowledge is external Teachers own learning tasks Instruct, transfer knowledge Achievements as products. Developmental Knowledge is subjective construction Students own learning Direct interaction w/ knowledge Learning as a process.

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Teaching & Learning Goals

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  1. Teaching & Learning Goals Dr. Mok, Y.F.

  2. Instrumental Knowledge is external Teachers own learning tasks Instruct, transfer knowledge Achievements as products Developmental Knowledge is subjective construction Students own learning Direct interaction w/ knowledge Learning as a process Conceptions of Teaching from Keiny, 1994

  3. Engineering Conception of Teaching Content Students Teacher • Teachers possess the knowledge & design what to learn, how to learn, how to measure (precise & certain). • There should be efficient coverage of content & productive time management. • Content is reduced, broken down, & organized for efficient delivery & testing. Pratt, 1992

  4. Developmental Conception Teacher Students Content • Teachers cultivate the intellect of the students. • Activate students’ inquiry & thought about the content. • Knowledge is not an external entity. It can be interrogated. Pratt, 1992

  5. Nurturing Conception Personal development Teacher Students Content Potentials, interests • Teachers tap on students’ potentials and personal interests to • develop learning tasks aiming for the utilization of students’ potentials. • Students’ personal development is not the application of content • knowledge but the realization of the personal being of the students, • reflected in the subjective choice of knowledge formulated • and acquired by the students.

  6. Social Reform Conception Students Content Content • Teachers have strong beliefs & ideas of what is important in the subject domain. • Teachers attempt to add and change the subject content. • Teachers attempt to teach students think and act according to the their perspectives. • Perspectives are related to the improving and even reforming of the society. Teacher

  7. Do teachers really differ because of their teaching conceptions? Often teachers do not appear to hold one single teaching conception. Teachers’ conceptions may be affected by the subject discipline they are in, the students they are teaching, and the work environment they have to handle. Nevertheless, teachers do differ, if you carefully examine how they approach their teaching and students. The difference is mostly because of the difference in what they believe about teaching.

  8. What is Your Teaching Conception? You can check your teaching conception by thinking about the following components: • What is the nature of my subject discipline? • What is knowledge? How does it come from? • What is my role as a teacher? • What do I think of my students as learners? • What are the teaching goals I really want to accomplish? • What teaching approaches do I usually use?

  9. The following two blue slides show • the perception of the nature science, and • the corresponding teaching and learning approaches for the science domain. The other gray-brown slides show • some teaching behaviors of teachers who employ an experimental (or developmental) teaching approach. • See if these slides can help you analyze your teaching conception.

  10. Science Indeterminate View of Science Epistemological Orientation scientific enquiry observing & inferring theorizing under-determination of theories rival hypotheses a human endeavor core themes ideas about science epistemic, cognitive, or social goals epistemic dialogue

  11. Osborne, Duschl, & Fairbrother (2002 ) Teachers of science need to: • to organize and establish an environment that support dialogic discussion • to define cognitive, epistemic & social learning goals • authentic activities which enable student engagement and ownership

  12. Experimental Teaching Approach • Teacher organizes learning around students’problems or questions. • Teacher involves students in uncertain or incomplete situation. • Teacher asks students to judge comparative value of answers or suggestions.

  13. Teacher encourages students to guess or hypothesize about the uncertain or untested. • Teacher has students make their own collection and analysis of subject matter. • Teacher encourages students to put their ideas to a test. (Brown, 1968)

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