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Culture, Curriculum & Pedagogy SCSU EDU200 Professor M. Bless Spring 2014.

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Presentation on theme: "Culture, Curriculum & Pedagogy SCSU EDU200 Professor M. Bless Spring 2014."— Presentation transcript:

1 Culture, Curriculum & Pedagogy SCSU EDU200 Professor M. Bless Spring 2014

2 A Nation at Risk & NCLB 1983 Government report: A Nation at Risk : 13 percent of all US 17-year-olds in the considered functionally illiterate Steady decline in science achievement scores of U.S. 17-year- olds from 1969-1977 Remedial math courses in public 4-year colleges increased by 72% between 1975-1980 Suggested solution: reform our Nation’s schools 2001: No Child Left Behind Act Emphasis on testing & accountability Tied to funding

3 Think and Write: What is school culture and how is it created?

4 4-4 TEACHER-STUDENT RELATIONSHIPS Positive teacher-student relationships are associated with: Increasing student understanding and meaningfulness of what is being taught Feeling a sense of personal empowerment Decreasing incidences of depression Improving self-confidence Reducing student stress Developing resiliency Improving creativity Other??? 4.3

5 4-5 THE AMERICAN FAMILY Figure 4.2 SOURCE: Federal Interagency Forum on Child and Family Statistics, America’s Children: Key National Indicators of Well-Being, 2011. 4.4

6 4-6 CHILDREN LIVING IN POVERTY SOURCE: Federal Interagency Forum on Child and Family Statistics, America’s Children: Key National Indicators of Well-Being, 2011. 4.5 22% of American children live in poverty.

7 4-7 BOOKS AND SOCIOECONOMIC CLASS Figure 4.3 SOURCE: Adapted from Royal Van Horn, Bridging the Chasm between Research and Practice: A Guide to Major Educational Research. (Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield Education, 2008), p. 32. 4.6

8 4-8 KINDERGARTNERS READ TO DAILY SOURCE: Adapted from Royal Van Horn. Bridging the Chasm between Research and Practice: A Guide to Major Educational Research. (Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield Education, 2008), p. 33. 4.7 Income Percent of Children

9 4-9 WORDS IN THE HOME SOURCE: Adapted from Royal Van Horn. Bridging the Chasm between Research and Practice: A Guide to Major Educational Research. (Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield Education, 2008), p. 39. 4.8 Family Income Number of Words

10 4-10 NATIONAL HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATION RATES Figure 4.4 SOURCE: Education Week, Diplomas Count 2012. 4.9

11 What Teachers Teach Lesson Design Learning Objectives Curriculum CCS Standards

12 6-12 SHAPING THE CURRICULUM Figure 6.1 6.5

13 Curriculum Formal/explicit curriculum The formal written set of courses and content Hidden/implicit curriculum Competition, rule following, embarrassment, rejection, reward & punishment, American values & culture Null curriculum What gets left out—controversial texts, history, sex education, etc. Extra-curriculum Sports, drama, clubs, etc.

14 6-14 FORMS OF BIAS BIAS Invisibility Stereotyping Imbalance/selectivity Unreality Fragmentation/isolation Linguistic bias Cosmetic bias EXAMPLES Student-Generated Responses 6.8

15 Grouping & Tracking Ability grouping (AKA homogeneous grouping) = the practice of grouping students by “ability” or performance level Tracking = students rigidly tracked into levels with no opportunity to improve or take more challenging courses Heterogeneous grouping = grouping students all together regardless of “ability”

16 What is Worth Knowing? 2 Ways of Conceptualizing Knowledge

17 Bloom’s Revised Taxonomy Anderson & Krathwohl, 2001

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20 DOK is about depth and complexity—not difficulty The intended student learning outcome determines the DOK level—What mental processing must occur? It is what comes after the verb that is the best indicator of the rigor/DOK level: Describe the process of photosynthesis Describe how the two political parties are alike or different Describe the most significant effect of WWII on the nations of Europe

21 Hess’s Cognitive Rigor Matrix What type of thinking (verbs) are needed to complete a task? How deeply do you have to understand the content to successfully interact with it? How complex or abstract is the content? Bloom: Webb

22 What is Pedagogy? “..effective teaching is not some complex combination of talent, technique or long experience” (Schmoker, 2011) “…for outstanding teachers, the root cause of success is not some gift but work ethic, diligence, and high personal standards” (Lemov, 2010) Pedagogy = the “science” of teaching

23 Teaching Job #1: Classroom Management Creating a climate for learning by: Establishing routines & procedures Planning for instruction Physical space Affective environment Developing presence

24 4-24 SCHOOL TIME SOURCE: From Jon Goodlad, A Place Called School (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1984/2004). 4.1

25 Direct Teaching Based on an apprenticeship model Teacher-centered—teacher as expert Highly structured Teacher presents new material Students practice the material Teacher assesses student performance Teacher gives feedback

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27 Teaching Strategies: Wait Time Average teacher wait time is 1 second, but... When wait time increases to 3 seconds: The length of student responses increases More frequent, unsolicited contributions (relevant to the discussion) are made An increase in the logical consistency of students' explanations occurs Students voluntarily increase the use of evidence to support inferences The incidence of speculative response increases The number of questions asked by students increases Greater participation by all learners occurs

28 Beginning-End-Middle Principle (AKA the primacy-regency principle) Students learn most from the beginning and end of an activity Chunking lessons into 3-5 learning activities minimizes “middles” Teaching Strategies: Brain- Based Learning

29 Cooperative Learning Small group learning Student-centered Differentiated Students learn from each other Teacher acts as a facilitator

30 Mastery Learning Teaching philosophy in which students must demonstrate “mastery” before moving on to the next level Student-centered

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32 Differentiated InstructionDifferentiated Instruction: Definition 1 “In the context of education, we define differentiation as a teacher’s reacting responsively to a learner’s needs…The goal of a differentiated classroom is maximum student growth and individual success.” Tomlinson & Allan, 2002 SERC 2009 32

33 Differentiated Instruction: Definition 2 Curriculum differentiation is a process teachers use to enhance student learning by matching various curriculum components to characteristics shared by subgroups of learners in the classroom (e.g., learning style preferences, interests, prior knowledge, learning rate). Purcell & Burns 2002 SERC 2009 33

34 Differentiated Instruction: Definition 3 Differentiating instruction is doing what’s fair for students. It’s a collection of best practices strategically employed to maximize students’ learning at every turn, including giving them the tools to handle anything that is undifferentiated. It requires us to do different things for different students some, or a lot, of the time. It’s whatever works to advance the student if the regular classroom approach doesn’t meet students’ needs. It’s highly effective teaching. (Wormeli, 2007) SERC 2009 34

35 Teachers Can Differentiate... What... Content- deciding which content is essential and making strategic decisions about what to focus on Process- engaging students in inquiry-based learning tasks with real world application Products- developing performance tasks in which the student rehearses, applies or extends what he or she has learned Learning Environment- creating a welcoming, safe, and academic learning environment According to... Readiness - offering a range of learning tasks (concrete or abstract; simple or complex; more structured or more open, etc.) Interests- allowing students to have a say in how they will apply the key skills being studied Learning Profile- taking into account the students’ learning styles & ways of knowing

36 Differentiated Instruction Is... A student-centered philosophy of teaching that directly opposes tracking/ability grouping Predicated upon a growth mindset Requires 75% planning time /20% teaching time Multifaceted Intended to be doable for targeted lessons or learning tasks

37 Student Differences for Teachers to Consider Prior knowledge, readiness Cognitive processes/thinking skills Reading level Interests, strengths Motivation, attitude Technology skills Communication preferences Learning style Native Language


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