learntolearn

Learn: what…why…how…you and…

CAST and Individual Learners

CAST Posting to WtoL

Some Excerpts: http://udlguidelines.cast.org/?utm_medium=web&utm_campagin=none&utm_source=cast-home

“Welcome to the new home for the UDL Guidelines! In this first release of our new site, we’ve updated the look, but the Guidelines themselves, their descriptions, and the research behind the Checkpoints haven’t changed. We’re looking forward to constantly improving this site with more resources, updated research, and to continue evolving the UDL Guidelines as a living, breathing tool for implementing the UDL framework.

The UDL Guidelines are a tool used in the implementation of Universal Design for Learning, a framework to improve and optimize teaching and learning for all people based on scientific insights into how humans learn. Learn more about the Universal Design for Learning framework from CAST. The UDL Guidelines can be used by educators, curriculum developers, researchers, parents, and anyone else who wants to implement the UDL framework in a learning environment. These guidelines offer a set of concrete suggestions that can be applied to any discipline or domain to ensure that all learners can access and participate in meaningful, challenging learning opportunities.”

CAST Posting to WtoL-29yncjz

 

 

 

So well designed!

 

 

 

 

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A Plan for Understanding How Children Learn to be Learners

A sequence of posts.

Exploring Learning Models of that are related to Executive Function,

*SocioCultural/Vygotsky (August 30, 2018)

*Behavioral (September 5, 2018)

*Concept-Based Learning (September 19, 2018)

*More than Content: Concepts Plus Process (October 3, 2018)

*Information Processing from a Developmental Point of View/Sternberg and Flavell (October 31 2018)

* * * * *

*Begin with a Plan to Understand and Collaborate with Individual Children About Their Learning (This is our next series of posts.)

                                                            * * * * *

Translating the most promising model for your situation into Context-Based Instruction

 

*Choose Instructional Principles

*Sequence Goals and Objectives

*Engage in Diagnostic Teaching

*Monitor Progress and Make Necessary Changes

*Work toward Generalization

*Apply to A Domain and then Across Domains

*Continue to Grow By Following the Literature

 

 

 

 

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Conceptual Learning by David Perkins

From Future Wise: Educating Our Children for a Changing World 2014

From the jacket….

“In Future Wise….David Perkins…offer “a toolkit for thinking through “what’s worth learning?”.  …

Through this vital resource, Perkins explores the key concepts, curriculum criteria, and techniques for prioritizing content so teachers can guide students toward the big understanding that matter”…

My takeaways:

From page 52: Big Understanding

“Big Understandings tend to be big in four ways:

Big in insight: The understandings help to reveal how our physical, social, artistic, and other worlds work.

Big in action:  The understanding empowers us to take effective action professionally, socially, politically, or in other ways.

Big in ethics: The understanding urges us toward more ethical, humane, caring mind-sets and conduct.

Big in opportunity: The understanding is likely to come up in significant ways in varied circumstances…

From page 74:

“Big questions address particular themes about humanity, our world, and our universe.  There are also very general questions that find significance in almost any context…..Later well see how such questions fall nicely into bundles that support inquiry and problem solving….”

“So what makes big questions big?  Like big understandings, big questions are big in offering

insight, action, ethics, and opportunity….

“…Questions are content too, with their own life-worthy flavor.  To know a big question, keep it alive in your mind, and develop skill in asking it is to have a certain kind of passion and power toward navigating the world….”

From page 97-

Lifeready Learning: Making what’s Worth Learning Ready for Life

Questions A:  What does a big understanding (or big questioning) need to be like to be lifeready?

Question B: What kinds of teaching and learning make it lifeready?

Building Understanding through Thinking, Applying, Noticing, and Caring

Details to follow with examples in the next posting.

Bolding of print mine

 

 

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More than Content: Concepts Plus Process

From an earlier post about Erickson’s Concept-Based Curriculum by By Anna Murphy, Rubicon International

https://www.rubicon.com/concept-based-learning-curriculum/

Concept-based curriculum (CBC) is an approach to curriculum design that moves away from subject-specific content and instead emphasizes “big ideas” that span multiple subject areas or disciplines. For example, in a CBC classroom, students may study the big idea of “change” in a variety of areas, from patterns in mathematics, to civilizations in social studies, to life cycles in science.”…

” “Conceptual thinking requires the ability to critically examine factual information; relate to prior knowledge; see patterns and connections; draw out significant understandings at the conceptual level; evaluate the truth of the understandings across time or situations; and, often, use the conceptual understanding to creatively solve a problem or create a new product, process, or idea.”…….  , CBC is a 3-dimensional approach that melds what students will KNOW, DO, and UNDERSTAND.”…

********

In a more recent text in 2014, H. Lynn Erickson collaborated with Lois A. Lanning:  Transitioning to Concept-Based Curriculum and Instruction:  How to Bring Content and Process Together.

In the Foreword by Malcolm Nicolson, Head of Diploma Programme Development International Baccalaurate, He says:

…..”They have helped me to see how we can help students to “get it” to be engaged in their learning and to understand how to transfer and apply their knowledge, understanding and skills in meeting complex global challenges.”…

 

“Erickson and Lanning write: “The purpose of this book is to present the case for needed changes in the traditional model of curriculum and instruction—a content coverage model that has critical flaws:….”

“The Introduction: Chapter Overview. Chapter 2 contrasts the traditional two-dimensional curriculum mode….with the three dimensional, concept-based model, which focuses on deeper-conceptual understanding supported by related facts and skills.  This chapter also brings together Erickson’s Structure of Knowledge  with Lois Lanning’s Structure of Process, so that educators now have the complementary models for both content-driven and process-driven subjects.” (Bold print mine)

 

Chapter 2, pages 24-27 describes the Structure of Process in more detail.  The authors describe the interplay of process and knowledge, saying:

“Knowledge by itself is quite inert and of little use until it is put into action through a process that includes strategies and skills.  And processes like reading, writing, thinking, analyzing, producing or creating cannot operate meaningfully without content.”

 Here are 2 examples:         

1…”if I am working on the topic of “Climate Change,” I may choose to apply any of the following processes, strategies or skills when learning about the topic.”

^Analyze scientific data using multiple sources of text including verbal, visual, and electronic.

^Create mathematical models to represent statistical data.

^Develop economic predictions based on the analysis of statistical data.

^Write a position paper for a specific audience that addresses a problem and supports a position with personal argument.” (page 26)

2…”Traditionally mathematics has been viewed as a distinct set of procedures to be memorized and carried out.  However, most ideas in mathematics that can be solved procedurally, also lend themselves to exploration, reasoning and pattern seeking.  In fact, the US. Common Core Sate Standards for Mathematics highlight the importance of connecting content standard with the Standards for Mathematically Practice (CCSS Initiative, 2010b, which includes:

1 Make sense of problems and persevere in solving them.

2 Reason abstractly and quantitatively.

3 Construct viable arguments and critique the reasoning of others.

….

7 Look for and make use of structure.

8 Look for and express regularity in repeated reasoning. (page 27)

 

 

 

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Do Parents Know What Their Child’s Teachers Believe About Learning? Does It Matter?

Knowledge Matters by Ruth Wattenberg  Sept 2016

“Knowledge Matters” is a Model related to  Content/Concept/Knowledge learning that is somewhat different from the other two related models I have/will address:  Erickson’s Concept-Based Curriculum (and Instruction), 2014 and Perkins’ Future Wise: Educating Our Children for a Changing World, 2014.

http://knowledgematterscampaign.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/09/Wattenberg.pdf

Inside the Common Core Reading Tests: Why the Best Prep Is a Knowledge-Rich Curriculum By Ruth Wattenberg    Short excerpts:

“Who hasn’t experienced something like this? I just received in the mail yet another “explanation” from my health insurance company, which had denied several claims. I called to find out why, since the form in the mail was—to me at least—incomprehensible”…

“There was vocabulary that I didn’t understand, reasoning that made no sense, details I couldn’t absorb, unstated premises I couldn’t intuit. My frustration was total. And I realized:

This is exactly the frustration, the total mental confusion and, ultimately, paralysis and lost motivation that is experienced by students who can “read” but don’t have the content, the knowledge, the background, to make sense of what they’re reading. In general, I can follow logic and grasp details. But I knew too little about health care and insurance rules to make sense of either the written or verbal responses to my inquiries. This is the opposite of the joy of learning, yet it’s what too many students face in school day after day. “….

“Skills-based competencies are those that allow students to master the mechanics of reading. They are highly susceptible to instruction, are learned in the primary grades by the average student, and for the great majority of students are not a lasting source of difficulty…. These skills relate mostly to the “mechanics” of reading—the ability to map the letters onto their respective sounds in combinations, and thus read words”….

“Knowledge-based competencies, by contrast, must be developed over many years and are key sources of lasting individual differences in reading ability…. At a minimum, to make meaning from text, the reader needs relevant background knowledge related to the text’s vocabulary, topic, and structure”…

“Researchers have identified many ways in which background knowledge aids comprehension. Here are four important ones: First, vocabulary tends to grow along with knowledge, but when just 2% of the words in a passage are not known, comprehension begins to drop.4 Second, the ability to process multiple details in a reading passage is severely restricted when readers aren’t familiar with the topic(s) in the passage; cognitive scientist Daniel Willingham says that without adequate background knowledge, “chains of logic more than two or three steps long” can’t be well comprehended.5 Third, when we know a little about a topic (e.g., that Alaska is freezing cold), we use that bit to generate a picture in our mind that helps us make sense of a related passage (e.g. that animals without heavy coats or other means of staying warm will struggle to survive in Alaska). Fourth, when we already know much of what’s in a passage, we don’t have to focus on its basics, and we can think critically: Does this passage make sense? Do I agree with its argument? How do the different items and ideas in this or several passages relate to each other?” ….

“But to understand the reading passage sufficiently to answer the questions, students at every grade need command of substantial subject-matter knowledge. Specifically, to do well on the third-grade items that I reviewed, students need familiarity with a wide range of content, including:…….

 

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Continuing with Models of Learning: Concept-Based Learning

I am working on the two remaining Models of Learning that have significantly influenced my thinking on learning in general and Executive Function in particular.

Concept-Based Learning:

Concept-Based Learning is one of those models and is reflected in the work of H. Lynn Erickson’s book Concept-Based Curriculum and Instruction for the Thinking Classroom.  Below is an excerpt from By Anna Murphy, Rubicon International

https://www.rubicon.com/concept-based-learning-curriculum/

Here are a few short excerpts from Murphy’s article:

Concept-based curriculum (CBC) is an approach to curriculum design that moves away from subject-specific content and instead emphasizes “big ideas” that span multiple subject areas or disciplines. For example, in a CBC classroom, students may study the big idea of “change” in a variety of areas, from patterns in mathematics, to civilizations in social studies, to life cycles in science.”…

” “Conceptual thinking requires the ability to critically examine factual information; relate to prior knowledge; see patterns and connections; draw out significant understandings at the conceptual level; evaluate the truth of the understandings across time or situations; and, often, use the conceptual understanding to creatively solve a problem or create a new product, process, or idea.”…

“CBC contrasts more traditional approaches to teaching and learning, which can be more surface level, with stronger emphasis on rote memorization of facts and concepts rather than their application. In a more traditional classroom, a teacher may teach a specific war by focusing on key facts and individuals, and require students to write a paper and take a test to demonstrate understanding. Conversely, CBC is a 3-dimensional approach that melds what students will KNOW, DO, and UNDERSTAND.”…

“Erickson offers an example of how the CBC structure of knowledge works in tandem with Bloom’s Taxonomy:”

 

 

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Learning Together

On this day of remembrance, I hope that we will all learn together to work together in our nation’s best interests.

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Models of Learning from Textbooks and Online Searches

“Models” of learning are part of almost every undergrad/grad course on learning.  See for example: J.P. Byrnes (Cognitive Development and Learning, 2nd Edition), R. Siegler, J DeLoache and N. Eisenberg (How Children Learn), and D. J. Bjorklund (Children’s Thinking: Cognitive Development and Individual Differences).

Each offers chapters on several “Models” of learning: Social Construction of Mind, Piaget and Neo-Piagetians, Information-Processing (Bjorklund); Thorndike, Piaget, Schema, Information Processing, Vygotsky, Connectionist); Piaget, Information-Processing, Sociocultural, Core-Knowledge and Dynamic Systems).

My focus will be on those models that explain Information-Processing, Connectivism , and Socio (Cultural) Construction.

*****

https://courses.lumenlearning.com/suny-educationalpsychology/chapter/major-theories-and-models-of-learning/    This is a 22 page article.  Here are a few excerpts:

3 Models with detailed definitions of each: Behaviorist, Constructivism, Social Constructivism

CC LICENSED CONTENT, SHARED PREVIOUSLY

 

Major theories and models of learning

“Several ideas and priorities, then, affect how we teachers think about learning, including the curriculum, the difference between teaching and learning, sequencing, readiness, and transfer. The ideas form a “screen” through which to understand and evaluate whatever psychology has to offer education. As it turns out, many theories, concepts, and ideas from educational psychology do make it through the “screen” of education, meaning that they are consistent with the professional priorities of teachers and helpful in solving important problems of classroom teaching. In the case of issues about classroom learning, for example, educational psychologists have developed a number of theories and concepts that are relevant to classrooms, in that they describe at least some of what usually happens there and offer guidance for assisting learning. It is helpful to group the theories according to whether they focus on changes in behavior or in thinking. ….The rest of this chapter describes key ideas from each of these viewpoints….each describes some aspects of learning not just in general, but as it happens in classrooms in particular. So each perspective suggests things that you might do in your classroom to make students’ learning more productive.”

Behaviorism: changes in what students do

“Behaviorism is a perspective on learning that focuses on changes in individuals’ observable behaviors— changes in what people say or do. At some point we all use this perspective, whether we call it “behaviorism” or something else. The first time that I drove a car, for example, I was concerned primarily with whether I could actually do the driving, not with whether I could describe or explain how to drive. For another example: when I reached the point in life where I began cooking meals for myself, I was more focused on whether I could actually produce edible food in a kitchen than with whether I could explain my recipes and cooking procedures to others. And still another example—one often relevant to new teachers: when I began my first year of teaching, I was more focused on doing the job of teaching—on day-to-day survival—than on pausing to reflect on what I was doing.”….

Constructivism: changes in how students think

“Behaviorist models of learning may be helpful in understanding and influencing what students do, but teachers usually also want to know what students are thinking, and how to enrich what students are thinking. For this goal of teaching, some of the best help comes from constructivism, which is a perspective on learning focused on how students actively create (or “construct”) knowledge out of experiences. Constructivist models of learning differ about how much a learner constructs knowledge independently, compared to how much he or she takes cues from people who may be more of an expert and who help the learner’s efforts (Fosnot, 2005; Rockmore, 2005). For convenience these are called psychological constructivism and social constructivism (or sometimes sociocultural theory). As explained in the next section, both focus on individuals’ thinking rather than their behavior, but they have distinctly different implications for teaching.”….

Social Constructivism: assisted performance

“Unlike Piaget’s orientation to individuals’ thinking in his version of constructivism, some psychologists and educators have explicitly focused on the relationships and interactions between a learner and other individuals who are more knowledgeable or experienced. This framework often is called social constructivism or sociocultural theory. An early expression of this viewpoint came from the American psychologist Jerome Bruner (1960, 1966, 1996), who became convinced that students could usually learn more than had been traditionally expected as long as they were given appropriate guidance and resources. He called such support instructional scaffolding—literally meaning a temporary framework like the ones used to construct buildings and that allow a much stronger structure to be built within it. In a comment that has been quoted widely (and sometimes disputed), Bruner wrote: “We [constructivist educators] begin with the hypothesis that any subject can be taught effectively in some intellectually honest form to any child at any stage of development.” (1960, p. 33). The reason for such a bold assertion was Bruner’s belief in scaffolding—his belief in the importance of providing guidance in the right way and at the right time. When scaffolding is provided, students seem more competent and “intelligent,” and they learn more…..

                                   

 

 

 

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Beliefs about Learning: Vygotsky’s Sociocultural Theory

Vygotsky’s theory of cognitive development was an early influence in my study of Models of Learning.   His work gained wide attention in the 1970’s.

https://www.psychologynoteshq.com/vygotsky-theory/   BY PSYCHOLOGY NOTES HQ · MAY 2  2018

Lev Semenovich Vygotsky, a Russian psychologist who lived during the Russian Revolution, developed a theory of development known as the Sociocultural Theory of Cognitive Development in the early twentieth century.    As a proponent of the sociocultural perspective to development, Vygotsky’s sociocultural theory gained worldwide recognition. It began to exert influence when his work was finally translated into English in 1962 and the importance of both sociocultural perspective of development and cross-cultural research was recognized.

Vygotsky’s main assertion was that children are entrenched in different sociocultural contexts and their cognitive development is advanced through social interaction with more skilled individuals. The Vygotsky theory of cognitive development is mainly concerned with the more complex cognitive activities of children that are governed and influenced by several principles. Believing that children construct knowledge actively, Vygotsky’s sociocultural theory is also one of those responsible for laying the groundwork for constructivism.’ Highlight or Color in red for distinguishing factors

ZONE OF PROXIMAL DEVELOPMENT

‘Vygotsky is most recognized for his concept of Zone of Proximal Development or ZPD pertaining to the learning of children. Children who are in the zone of proximal development for a specific task can almost perform the task independently, but not quite there yet. However, with an appropriate amount of assistance, these children can accomplish the task successfully….’

‘The lower limit of a child’s zone of proximal development is the level of analysis and problem-solving reached by a child without any help. The upper limit, on the other hand, is the level of additional responsibility that a child can receive with the support of a skilled instructor…’

‘As children are verbally given instructions or shown how to perform certain tasks, they organize the new information received in their existing mental schemas in order to assist them in the ultimate goal of performing the task independently…  ..his conviction that social influences, particularly instruction, are of immense importance on the cognitive development of children.’

MORE KNOWLEDGEABLE OTHER

‘….These adults (parents and teachers) need to direct and organize the learning experiences to ensure that the children can master and internalize the learning.

….any person who possesses a higher skill level than the learner with regard to a particular task or concept is called a More Knowledgeable’…

SCAFFOLDING

‘….Scaffolding refers to the temporary support given to a child by More Knowledgeable Others, until such time that the child can already perform the task independently.’

‘Scaffolding entails changing the quality and quantity of support provided..in the course of a teaching session. The more-skilled instructor adjusts the level of guidance needed in order to fit the student’s current level of performance. For novel tasks, the instructor may utilize direct instruction. As the child gains more familiarity with the task and becomes more skilled at it, the instructor may then provide less guidance’.

….’ When the child has learned to complete the task independently, the scaffolds are removed by the adult, as they are no longer needed ‘.

….research attention has been shifted from the individual onto larger interactional units such as parent and child, teacher and child, or brother and sister.

‘Vygotsky’s theory likewise called attention to the variability of cultural realities,….. ….It would not be fitting, therefore, to utilize the developmental experiences of children from one culture as a norm for children from other cultures.’

‘Vygotsky’s sociocultural theory of cognitive development has significant ramifications in education and cognitive testing. Vygotsky was a strong advocate of non-standard assessment procedures for the assessment of what and how much a child has learned and in the formulation of approaches that could enhance the child’s learning. His ideas have effected changes in educational systems through the increased importance given to the active role of students in their own learning process and the encouragement of teacher-student collaboration in a reciprocal learning experience.’

 

 

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What is the Basis for a Teacher’s Beliefs About Learning

I’m starting my answer to this question with a “model” of learning that has had a significant influence on my learning and teaching since the 1980’s:  Authentic Learning.

Authentic Learning: An instructional design framework for authentic learning environments J. Herrington University of Wollongong, janherrington@gmail.com R. Oliver Edith Cowan University, r.oliver@ecu.edu.au

https://ro.uow.edu.au/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?referer=https://www.google.com/&httpsredir=1&article=1031&context=edupapers  Excerpts

Abstract: The instructional technology community is in the midst of a philosophical shift from a behaviorist to a constructivist framework, a move that may begin to address the growing rift between formal school learning and real-life learning. One theory of learning that has the capacity to promote authentic learning is that of situated learning…..”

“There have been several attempts to use the findings of the research into contextualised learning to design a model of instruction….. However, it was Brown, Collins and Duguid (1989b) who developed a focus for the theory of situated cognition or situated learning and produced a proposal for a model of instruction that has implications for classroom practice. Collins (1988) defines situated learning as: ‘the notion of learning knowledge and skills in contexts that reflect the way the knowledge will be useful in real life’ (p. 2)….”

research aims The purpose of this research was to determine the possibility of applying a model of instructional design based on the theory of situated learning to the design of a multimedia learning environment for The university students, and to investigate students’ responses to that learning environment.”  Their original intent for this article, but my focus in on the background of the Authentic Learning Model.“…

…”usable knowledge is best gained in learning  environments which feature the following characteristics. Situated learning environments:“ How can these situated theories be operationalised?’ (Brown & Duguid, 1993, p. 10)… Brown, Collins and Duguid (1989b), in their original article presented a nascent theory of situated learning which has the potential to provide a theoretical basis for a new framework for multimedia design and development. From the start they suggested that their model was the beginning of the process of developing a theoretical perspective for successful learning that cognitive science had, to date, not been able to explain. The challenge put to researchers was to identify the critical aspects of situated learning to enable it to translate into teaching methods which could be applied in the classroom. In response to this challenge, a practical framework for the design of learning environments was produced. Essentially, current literature suggests that usable knowledge is best gained in learning environments which feature the following characteristics.  Situated Learning:

• Provide authentic context that reflect the way the knowledge will be used in real life   (e.g., Brown, Collins, & Duguid, 1989; Collins, 1988; Gulikers, Bastiaens, &  Martens, 2005)

• Provide authentic activities (e.g., Brown, Collins, & Duguid, 1989; Cognition and Technology Group at Vanderbilt, 1990; Jonassen, 1991; Young, 1993)

• Provide access to expert performances and the modelling of processes (e.g.,Collins, Brown, & Newman, 1989; Lave & Wenger, 1991)

• Provide multiple roles and perspectives (e.g., Bransford, Sherwood, Hasselbring,Kinzer, & Williams, 1990; Honebein, Duffy, & Fishman, 1993; Lave & Wenger, 1991; Spiro, Feltovich, Jacobson, & Coulson, 1991)

• Support collaborative construction of knowledge (e.g., Bransford, Sherwood,Hasselbring, Kinzer, & Williams, 1990; Brown, Collins, & Duguid, 1989)

• Promote reflection to enable abstractions to be formed (e.g., Boud, Keogh, &Walker, 1985; Norman, 1993)

• Promote articulation to enable tacit knowledge to be made explicit (e.g., Lave &Wenger, 1991; Pea, 1991; Vygotsky, 1978)

• Provide coaching by the teacher at critical times, and scaffolding and fading of teacher support (e.g., Collins, 1988; Collins, Brown, & Newman, 1989; Greenfield,1984; Harley, 1993)

• Provide for authentic, integrated assessment of learning within the tasks (e.g.,Gulikers, Bastiaens, & Kirschner, 2004; Herrington & Herrington, 1998; McLellan,1993; Reeves & Okey, 1996; Young, 1993, 1995).

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