1 / 11

Student-Directed Investigation

Student-Directed Investigation. Lindita Ivezaj, Melanie Borson, Brian Ault and Cameron Alvarez. Defining Student Directed- Investigation. “No teaching approach has greater potential for student involvement and engagement than student- directed investigation (Larson & Keiper , 236)

steve
Download Presentation

Student-Directed Investigation

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. Student-Directed Investigation Lindita Ivezaj, Melanie Borson, Brian Ault and Cameron Alvarez

  2. Defining Student Directed- Investigation • “No teaching approach has greater potential for student involvement and engagement than student- directed investigation (Larson & Keiper, 236) • Uses real world challenges • Requires active learning/ student involvement • Gives students opportunity to become “experts”

  3. Defining Student Directed- Investigation Cont… • Types of Student Directed- Investigation: • Project Based Learning • Experimental Learning • Service Learning • Problem Based Learning

  4. Problem Based Learning • Closely aligned with controversial issues. • Used to examine issues from multiple perspectives • Topics can either be: • Open • Closed • Tipping

  5. Subcategories of Problem Based Learning • Discovery vs. Inquiry • Teachers will use discovery when they want students to discover a correct answer. • Or teachers will use inquiry to have students create their own conclusion about questions or problems.

  6. Discovery • Discovery is used to examine topics which are ‘closed’ meaning they are no longer controversial. • For example, women's suffrage. • Teacher presents students with an issue or question, student then problem solve through informational resources.

  7. Discovery Cont… • Teacher presents students with the issue • Students collect data • Students then analyze data • Students generate a solution • Students present or publish their findings • Teacher assess students learning and evaluate the process

  8. Inquiry • Inquiry learning is used to examine ‘open topics’, meaning topics which are not settled by contemporary society. • Students are presented with complex problem which can have several solutions • For example, healthcare • 3 teacher approaches: • Structured, guided and open

  9. Inquiry Cont… • 5 Stages • Asking • Investigating • Interpreting • Reporting • Metacognitive Moments- In any stage, students might reflect, adjust or assess issues which come up during the process of inquiry.

  10. Logistics/ Making it work • Time constraint is the biggest obstacle • Student lack of engagement, failure to consider competing perspectives and lack of content knowledge. • Requires masterful behind the scenes planning.

  11. THE END • =)

More Related