Tuesday Brief Recap of Monday Road check

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
A Focus on Higher-Order Thinking Skills
Advertisements

? freely adapted from Tulsa Community College- Engaged Student Programming.
Course Design: The Basics Monica A. Devanas, Ph.D. Director, Faculty Development and Assessment Programs Center for Teaching Advancement and Assessment.
DEVELOPING QUESTIONS FOR SCRIPTURE STUDY THAT SUPPORT MAXIMUM LEARNING J AN P ARON, P H D A LL N ATIONS L EADERSHIP I NSTITUTE Bloom’s Taxonomy: Six Levels.
Objectives WRITING WORTHWHILE OBJECTIVES FOR YOUR CLASS.
How to Integrate Students with Diverse Learning Needs in a General Education Classroom By: Tammie McElaney.
Intellectual Challenge of Teaching
Module Two: Learning Strategies Learning strategies are methods used by individuals in their interactions with learning tasks. Source:
Biogeochemistry Workshop Teaching for Student Learning Alexandra Moore Teaching for Student Learning Alexandra Moore
Bloom's Taxonomy of Learning (Cognitive domain)
Learning Goals and Alignment: What, Why, How Joshua Caulkins Department of Geosciences University of Rhode Island.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES The Foundation of Good Lesson Plans Presented By: Frank Woodall Texas Commission on Law Enforcement Education,Training, and Special.
Learning Outcomes at the University of North Alabama Dr. Andrew L. Luna Institutional Research, Planning, and Assessment.
Lesson Planning. Teachers Need Lesson Plans So that they know that they are teaching the curriculum standards required by the county and state So that.
Writing Is a Great Tool for Learning!
Effective Lesson Planning EnhanceEdu. Agenda  Objectives  Lesson Plan  Purpose  Elements of a good lesson plan  Bloom’s Taxonomy – it’s relevance.
1 Assessment Gary Beasley Stephen L. Athans Central Carolina Community College Spring 2008.
Student Learning Outcomes
Writing Student-Centered Learning Objectives Please see Reference Document for references used in this presentation.
Presented by Denise Tarlinton Pupil Free Day Monday 14 July, 2003.
Bloom’s Taxonomy Questioning Strategies Overview.
How to Ask Reading Questions 北一女中 寧曉君老師
Bloom’s Taxonomy.
Blooms Taxonomy Margaret Gessler Werts Department of Language, Reading, and Exceptionalities.
Designing A Course Course Design, Learning Styles, Teaching Styles Heather Macdonald Rachel Beane.
A Decision-Making Tool.  Goal  Educational Objectives  Student Learning Outcomes  Performance Indicators or Criteria  Learning Activities or Strategies.
Does this learning goal focus on what the student will do? Objective: Conservation of energy A.Yes B.No C.Depends on context.
CREDIT REQUESTS.  Credit Requests  Learning Statement Recap  Importance of Verbs  Creating Credit Requests in PDAS  Technical Support  Questions.
Assessment. Levels of Learning Bloom Argue Anderson and Krathwohl (2001)
Bloom’s Taxonomy A Focus on Higher-Order Thinking Skills.
Higher Order Thinking Skills
Teaching and Thinking According to Blooms Taxonomy human thinking can be broken down into six categories.
Understanding Assessment The Basics Office for Institutional Effectiveness and Assessment.
Bloom’s Taxonomy Dr. Middlebrooks. Bloom’s Taxonomy.
Classroom Strategies That Work. Questions, Cues, and Advance Organizers Helping Students Activate Prior Knowledge.
Bloom’s Taxonomy The Concept of “Levels of Thinking”
Presented by Ms. Vayas At Bancroft MS March 25, 2008.
A blueprint for learning derived from desired results A course to be run given the end point Planned activities, experiences, assignments for a specific.
TTE 350 Lecture Notes for 1/29/01. Nuts and Bolts Assignments AIM ( Questions…
Bloom’s Taxonomy How to Create REALLY good questions!!
Presented By: Lindsay Cooney Kannapolis Intermediate.
©2007 RUSH University Medical Center Writing Effective Learning Objectives Chris Zakrzewski, MS Ningchun Han, EdD.
Facilitating Higher Order Thinking in Classroom and Clinical Settings Vanneise Collins, PhD Director, Center for Learning and Development Cassandra Molavrh,
Using Blooms to Write Student Learning Outcomes (SLO’s) 1 Health Sciences - ICRDCE Conference 2016.
BLOOM'S TAXONOMY OF EDUCATIONAL OBJECTIVES From: Benjamin S. Bloom, Taxonomy of Educational Objectives: The Classification of Educational Goals.
Writing Great Learning Outcomes
Assessment.
Assessment.
Questions and Questioning Strategies
Objectives Course Goal
Learning Outcomes Carolynn Rankin YULIS Friday 5th May 2006
Bloom’s Taxonomy (1956) Evaluation Making critical judgments
The Holy Family Lesson Plan Format
A Focus on Higher-Order Thinking Skills
85. BLOOM’S TAXONOMY “Bloom’s Taxonomy is a guide to educational learning objectives. It is the primary focus of most traditional education.”
8:00- 8:30: Monday Road Check 1. Talk + Fieldtrip + Jigsaw of MMM seemed appreciated & appealed to different learning styles & helped folks construct knowledge.
A guide to reading, writing, thinking and understanding
Depth of Knowledge (DOK) Levels
Bloom’s Taxonomy: Six Levels for Understanding
Learning Outcomes: Design Aspects
Bloom’s Taxonomy (1956) Evaluation Making critical judgments
Assessments for “Remembering” Outcomes
What you assess makes a statement about what you value
Higher Order Thinking Skills
Bloom’s Taxonomy.
A Focus on Higher-Order Thinking Skills
Bloom’s Taxonomy.
Bloom’s Taxonomy.
Classifying Questions
Presentation transcript:

Tuesday Brief Recap of Monday Road check Stuff posted on Monday program: http://serc.carleton.edu/126719 Tuesday Overview: Review specific active learning strategies Share Work on active learning strategy(s) for lesson(s) in your fall course!

Tuesday: Review active learning strategies 8:45-9:15 Review the active learning strategies assigned to your group using the links listed here (in workshop program: http://serc.carleton.edu/126719 ) In teams: Review the activity and discuss the merits and challenges of using this in the classes you teach. Be prepared to "sell" this type of activity to the rest of the group, with information such as: brief description of how the activity works, how much class time it might take, how much student interaction is involved, how easy it would be to use in class the types/extent of materials that are required to use this type of activity 3. Individually: Think of the class you're intending to revise and decide how likely is it that you would use this active learning strategies in your class (e.g. never, many times per semester, weekly). 4. If you have time, go to the next activity on the list and repeat steps 1-3.

Tuesday: Review active learning strategies Reporting out 9:15- 9:45 Presenting teams: In 1 minute, convince (or “sell”) other people in the room to use the teaching strategy you’ve reviewed, including testimonials of your own experiences. Non-presenters: Rank each activity as: High, Medium or Low in terms of the ease of: Students’ ability to participate successfully (e.g. simple tasks (= “high”) or very complex (= “low”)) Instructor preparation required Instructor assessment (easy to understand student learning = high or lots of effort to understand learning = low)

Tuesday: Review active learning strategies Reporting out 9:15- 9:45 Presenting teams: In 1 minute, convince (or “sell”) other people in the room to use the teaching strategy you’ve reviewed, including testimonials of your own experiences. Non-presenters: Rank each activity as: High, Medium or Low in terms of the ease of: Students’ ability to participate successfully (e.g. simple tasks (= “high”) or very complex (= “low”)) Instructor preparation required Instructor assessment (easy to understand student learning = high or lots of effort to understand learning = low) Graph your responses to see how activities rank for you

Tuesday: Review active learning strategies 9:45-10:15 Discuss and Decide In groups: Discuss the activities in the sales pitches and consider which activities will work for your courses Individually: Based on conversations & presentations, select 3-5 activities you are likely to use in your fall 2016 course   10:15-10:30 BREAK Contract signing after the break!

Tuesday: Learning Objectives and Active Learning 10:30-11:00 Please sit with people who teach similar courses (size, topic, etc) Learning Objectives and Active Learning Strategies:   1. Student centered learning objectives Provide students with an introduction to the geology of environmental issues and geologic hazards (Teacher-focused) Students will summarize volcano monitoring data to evaluate the associated risk to nearby communities (Student focused) 2. Concrete Objectives that are Measurable Students will understand the importance of the hydrologic cycle (Avoid verbs such as understand, appreciate, value) http://serc.carleton.edu/NAGTWorkshops/coursedesign/tutorial/goals.html#goals

Tuesday: Learning Objectives and Active Learning 10:30-11:00 Learning Objectives and Active Learning Strategies Good Learning Objectives: http://serc.carleton.edu/NAGTWorkshops/coursedesign/tutorial/goals.html   3. Range of level of thinking skills (e.g. Blooms) Students will identify the thickness of the outer core Knowledge Comprehension Application Analysis Synthesis Evaluation List, Name, Identify, Show, Define, Recognize, Recall, State, Visualize Summarize, Explain, Interpret, Describe, Compare, Paraphrase, Differentiate, Demonstrate, Classify Solve, Illustrate, Calculate, Use, Interpret, Relate, Manipulate, Apply, Modify Analyze, Organize, Deduce, Contrast, Compare, Distinguish, Discuss, Plan, Devise Design, Hypothesize, Support, Schematize, Write, Report, Justify Evaluate, Choose, Estimate, Judge, Defend, Criticize http://teaching.uncc.edu/learning-resources/articles-books/best-practice/goals-objectives/writing-objectives

Tuesday: Learning Objectives and Active Learning 11:00-11:20 Learning Objectives and Active Learning Strategies Good Learning Objectives: http://serc.carleton.edu/NAGTWorkshops/coursedesign/tutorial/goals.html   Check your learning objectives: Is the objective student-focused, rather than teacher-focused? Is the objective concrete with "measurable outcomes“ (can the activity test whether students have met the objective or not)? Does your learning objective achieve the desired level of Blooms thinking skills (higher order thinking skills) Peer review your groups’ learning objectives

Tuesday: Learning Objectives and Active Learning 11:00-11:20 Learning Objectives and Active Learning Strategies Good Learning Objectives: http://serc.carleton.edu/NAGTWorkshops/coursedesign/tutorial/goals.html   11:20-11:30 Daily Road check Day 3 will include logistics/management of active learning in large intro courses. Please respond in the “comments” section of the Road Check any questions that will help us make Day 3 most useful for you – what have we not covered yet? What other things would be useful in day 3?