Facilitated through

EDU 5015

Week 1: Early August

Four Common Places of Education

1. Teacher

2. Topic

3. Setting

4. Student

Central Topics of Educational Psychology

Learning and Cognition

Development

Social and Cultural Influences

Motivation

Behaviour/Classroom Management

Individual Differences

Assessment and Evaluation

Teaching and Instruction

Psychological Foundations of Curricula

Steps of the Research Process

1. Observation of Phenomena

2. Formation of Questions

3. Application of Research Methods

5. Development of Guiding Principles

4. Development of Theories

Instructional Strategies

Teacher Centered Approach

Teacher determines content, provides direction, and sets academic and social tone

Student Centered Approach

Teacher adopts constructivist perspective and acknowledges that students actively construct their own understandings

Results of Effective Planning

Excellent Instruction

Enhanced Student Learning

Exemplary Environments

Curricular Planning: Top Down Approach

Determine curricula for the year

Determine the curricula for each term

Break the curricula down into units

Determine what will be taught

Week 2: Beginning with the End in Mind

Growth Mindset

Leads to a desire to learn and therefore a tendency to...

Embrace challenges

Persist in the face of setbacks

See effort as the path to mastery

Learn from criticism

Find lessons and inspiration in the success of others

As a result, they reach ever-higher levels of achievement

All this gives them a greater sense of free will

Constructivist Views of Learning

Learners are active in constructing their own personal knowledge –they actively seek meaning

Social negotiating is important to knowledge construction /learning

Learning includes developing skills to solve problems, think critically, answer questions, accept multiple views

Self-determination is needed to further knowledge development

What is Development?

Physical, cognitive and social changes

Learning becomes more organized

Behaviours become more adaptive

Principles of Development

Orderly progression/gradual process

Periods of rapid and slow growth

Quantitative and qualitative changes

Individuals develop at different rates

Genetics set developmental potential

Environment determines potential realized

Berliner's 9 Foundational Topics

Learning And Cohesion

Development

Social and Childhood Influences

Motivation

Behaviour and Classroom Management

Individual Differences

Acheivement and Evaluation

Teaching Method in Classroom

Vygotsky

Zone of Proximal Development

The distance between the actual developmental level as determined by independent problem solving and the level of potential development as determined through problem-solving under adult guidance, or in collaboration with more capable peers

Scafolding

Assess the learner’s current knowledge and experience for the academic content

Relate content to what students already know or can do

Break a task into small, more manageable tasks with opportunities for intermittent feedback

Use verbal cues and prompts to assist students

Week 3: Theories of Learning

Theories of Learning and Teaching

Cognitive

Mental processes exist and they are important to learning.

Sources of plans, intentions, goals, ideas, memories, and emotions actively used to attend to, select, and construct meaning from stimuli and knowledge from experience

Learners bring knowledge to each new learning situation, and that affects what they learn from that situation (more related knowledge = better learning).

Behavioural

Social Cognitive and Constructivist Views

See Week 2 for....

Zone of Proximal Development

Social Interaction

Scaffolding

Principles of Development

Four Common Places of Education

Instructional Approaches

Results of Effective Planning

Creating Constructivist-Based Classrooms

Complex, challenging learning environments

Real world situations

Social negotiation – collaborative work

Multiple representations of content

Making students aware of the knowledge construction process –becoming self-regulated learners

Student-centered instruction; student ownership of learning

Week 4

Our Belief Systems

School systems are not responsible for meeting every need of their students. But when the need directly affects learning, the school must meet the challenge

Research Shows

There is a wide variation in teacher effectiveness

Effective teachers...

Appear to be effective with students of all achievement levels regardless of the heterogeneity in their classes

If the teacher is ineffective, students will achieve inadequate progress regardless of how similar or different they are regarding their academic achievement

How does the teacher affect student achievement?

1. Designs classroom curriculum to facilitate student learning.

2. Makes wise choices about the most effective instructional strategies to employ

3. Makes effective use of classroom management techniques

Features of Communities of Learners

Job-embeded

Collaborative

Collegial

Ongoing

Emphasize reflective dialogue

Develop pedagogical content

Engage in socially constructist learning process

Exemplary Learning Envirnonments

academic success is dependent on the learning environment

creating exemplary learning environments requires good planning and good classroom management

goal of classroom management is to provide all students with optimum opportunities for learning

exemplary learning environments especially important for students with exceptionalities

Developing a Student Profile

Gather information through...

observation

assesment of products

journals/ learning logs

Previous report cards

OSR

Review creative work

As the information is collected, a 'picture' of the student’s learning profile begins to emerge. Recognizing the signs of a learning difference is key to finding solutions.

What do you consider when you gather all this information?

academic strengths

learning styles

interests

special abilities

child's vision and goal for the future

Student Self Regulated Learning

Tasks

Should be complex in nature

Control

Students make decisions, have choices, and take responsibility for planning, setting goals, judging progress

Self-Evaluation

Students monitor their own process and outcomes and learn to adjust their efforts in order to attain goals

Collaboration

Students and teachers engage in shared problem-solving.

Controlling Instructional Variables

Difficulty level

Space

Time

Language

Interpersonal relaitons

Release of Responsibility

Subtopic

Subtopic

TRIBES

Mutual Respect

No Put Downs

Appreciations

Attentive Listening

Participation/The Right to Pass

Week 5

What Motivates a Student to Learn

Challenging and Meaningful tasks

Being able to effectively use learning strategies

Having teacher's support

Being required to demonstrate knowledge

Feeling that the teacher cares for them

Diagnostic Assesment

Determining the starting point for instruction based on initial assessment strategies

Examples:

Pretests

Backward Design

Developing curricular units and lessons from the same instructional goals/objectives that are used to develop the assessment tools for that curriculum

Blooms Taxonomy

Hierarchical classification of cognitive learning objectives

Six Levels:

Knowledge

Comprehension

Application

Analysis

Synthesis

Evaluation

Cognitive Verbs

Indicate the thinking required for particular learning objectives

Classified according to six cognitive processes

Remembering

Understanding

Applying

Analyzing

Creating

Evaluating

Applications of Constructivist-Based Classrooms

Dialogu & Instructional Conversations

Inquiry Learning

Problem-based learning

Teacher and peer learning

Cognitive Apprenticeships

Cognitive apprenticeship is a theory of the process where a master of a skill teaches that skill to an apprentice. Constructivist approaches to human learning have led to the development of a theory of cognitive apprenticeship.

Collaborative learning

Universal Instructonal Design

Instructional system designed and delivered with the needs of the least independently able students in mind

Results in instruction that is accessible and effective for all students

Made up of 3 principles:

Principle l: Provide Multiple Means of Representation


Ensure all information is accessible to all learners through different learning styles (auditory, visually, kinesthetic)
Provide information through words and symbols
Teach students information in a way that they can transfer it to different situations

Principle ll: Provide Multiple Means of Action and Expression

Provide students the opportunity to learn from different forms of media (print, computer, and online resources)
Provide students with multiple way s to communicate and express themselves and what they have learned
Give students the opportunity to set goals and provide them with the support necessary for them to achieve their goals

Principle lll: Provide Multiple Means of Engagement

Connect students interest with the curriculum in order for students to remain interested and engaged
Support students in all aspects of their learning process
Inspire students to learn for intrinsic purposes not always for extrinsic rewards
Instructional Methods

The Importance of Play

- Play and learning are NOT incompatible
- Play is not wasted free time!
- If used properly, play can be a powerful tool!
- To INCREASE children’s learning in literacy, math and even science….

Developmentally Appropriate schools offer advantages in

Social / Emotional Development

Increased Emotional regulation

Decreased behaviour problems

Increased motivation for school

Academically

Increased reading and math scores

Direct instruction looks like...

Clear learning objectives

Well-planned lessons

Explicit Teaching

Lots of practice

What happens in Direct Instruction Classrooms Compared to Age Mates in DA settings?

Increased inattention, restlessness, stress behaviours

Decreased confidence in one's abilities

Does not enjoy challening tasks

Less end of year progress in motor, language and social skills

Inquiry Based Learning

Problem Based Learning

Strategy Use

People who are skilled in a particular domain (e.g., writing) use effective strategies, and have many of them from which to choose

Evidence of greater strategy use, across domains, with increasing age/grade level

Students in middle and late elementary school tend to mix effective and ineffective strategies

Week 6

Wanting to move the culture from teacher as a judge to teacher as a coach

Agricultural model of assesment

If we plant lettuce and the
Lettuce does not grow, we don’t
blame the lettuce.
We look for reasons why
It isn’t doing well

The Basis of Curriculum Planning

Expectations

Assesment and Evaluation

Teaching Strategies

Topics, themes, resources

Purposes of assesment

It may be used to find out what students already know and can do;

it may be used to help students improve their learning;

or may be used to let students and their parents know how much they have learned within a prescribed amount of time

Must be planned and purposeful

See Backwards Design for facilitation strategies

Three stages of Backwards Design

1. Identify desired results (learning outcomes)

2. Determine Acceptable Evidence (means to assess if learners have learned)

3. Plan learning experiences and instruction.

Enduring Understanding

Not just material worth covering

Enduring value beyond the classroom

Resides at the heart of the discipline

Required un-coverage of abstract or often misunderstood ideas

Offer potential for engaging students

Not broader(more) deeper ( less)

Allow for strong culture of instructional practice

Endurance

Leverage

Prepare for the next level

Week 7

What is Intelligence?

Ability to learn from experience

Ability to adapt to one’s environment

The ability (or abilities) to acquire and use knowledge for solving problems and adapting to the world

Source?

Nature and Nurture

How is Intelligence measured?

Aptitude Tests

measure what the student has learned or the skills they have mastered

Achievement Tests

predict ability to learn a skill or accomplish something with further education

P4C Model

aims to to build the Capacity of educators and families to support children with special needs in all spaces and places.

Made up of 4 C's + 1P

Capacity

Collaborating

Coaching

Contexts

Partnering

What is Special Education?

Accommodating the special learning needs of students with exceptionalities

Specialized instruction based on the assessment of students’ abilities

Labelling Exceptionalities

Disability

Inability to do something

Handicap

A disadvantage in certain situations

High Incidence Expceptionalities

Mild disabilities

Typically include learning disabilities, behavioural disorders, giftedness, and intellectual disabilities

Low-Incidence Exceptionalities

Moderate and severe diabilities

Typically include autism, hearing and visual impairments, serious health impairments, and multiple disabilities

Physical Vs. Cognitive access to Curriculum

Physical

Includes sensory and motor access to learning and/or curriculum

Cognitive

Includes the (in)ability to understand assignments, plan and execute approaches to tasks

School Process for Identification and Support

Best interest of the student

Collaborative

Communicate

School/ Board procedures

Circumstantial

Goals, Beliefs and Values

Forget thinking outside the box

Throw away the box

And create a new one, does it have to be a box?

Building an Inclusive Practive

Those who teach students with exceptional needs develop deeper diagnostic skills and a wider repertoire of teaching strategies.

UNESCO sees inclusion as....

process of addressing and responding to diversity of needs of all learners through increasing participation in learning, cultures and communities, and reducing exclusion within and from education.

TED Talk

Sir Ken Robinson: Does school kill creativity?

Do the academic, psychological and social confines of academia preach conformity of learning?

Or do they made to be successful for a certain learning type?

Week 8

Increasing Diversity in Schools

Language spoken

Aboriginal Students

One-parent families

Same-sex couples

Newcomers to Canada

Religions practiced

Student Dilemma

Individualism Vs. Collectivism

Individualsim

Act within a unique identity and exclusive purpose

Collectivism

Act within a shared identity and common purpose

TED Talk

The Chalenges of A Single Narrative

Exploring the need for multiple positionalities on a given topic

Do not just rely on the loudest or most priveledged voice

Building a Culturally Responsive Practice

Teachers must know

Their own cultural assumptions

How to inquire about students’ backgrounds

How to develop teaching approaches and curriculum to meet needs of culturally diverse learners

How to establish links across cultures

A culturally responsive practice has a broad cultural knowledge and instructional base that grows and changes.

Stereotype Threat

Fear that one’s behaviour will confirm a negative stereotype about one’s identity group

Those with strong ties to their identity group are most vulnerable

Can be brought on by seemingly innocuous comments

Socioeconomic status

Has the greatest impact on scholastic achievement

Kids from Low Ses

Developmental risks

Economic hardship

Lack of Resources

Views of Multicultural Education

Diversity Valued

No culture considered dominant

Dominant culture stressed

Recognizing the power differentials between majority and minority groups

Diversity and Dominant culture

Valued striking a balance between the other two outlooks

Dimensions of Multicultural Education

Content integration

Equity pedagogy

Empowering school culture

Prejudice reduction

Aboriginal Education Risk Factors

Early school failures

Moving from school to school

lack of parent support

Lack of teachers with knowledge of Aboriginal Studies

Remote geographic location

Lack of resources

Instrumental Value of Education

Degree to which students believe that doing well in school produces benefits

Culturally Responsive Teaching

Week 9

Standarized Testing in Canada

Federal

Achievement levels of 13 year olds

Math

Reading

Science

Provincial/Territorial

Different uses including math and literacy testing at certain grade levels and Grade 12 exit exams

Standardized Test

Contain the same questions for all test-takers

Are administered to all test-takers in same fashion

Are scored in systematic and uniform manner

Are different from teacher-made tests and aptitude tests

Test Types

Criterion-Referenced

Student's score determined by comparing performance to established criteria

Norm-Referenced

Student's score determined by comparing performance to that of other students

Original Purpose:

To asses effective instruction

Criticisms

Biased tests

Results in teaching to the test

Takes up too much time

Does not enhance student learning

Content of tests does not reflect instruction

Stressful for students and teachers

Performance Level Scores

Classifications of student performance that describe and clarify standardized assessment results

Justification and explanation of standardized tests