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Published byMeghan Fisher Modified over 8 years ago
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Mental Modeling and Problem Solving Ashley, Kirsten and Kirk
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Mental Modeling and Problem Solving Description Helping learners visualize to the thinking process Examples Self talk – teacher models what the thought process is before you allow students to try Having students verbalize their thinking during activities Making the “invisible” – visible! Visual simulations to help mental modeling Barriers: If no visuals are provided, and only auditory input – may not be good; use of multiple representations Teacher could assume that students already know how to do this. If students cannot demonstrate method, could be a barrier in assessing their ability to form mental models Teachers might “skip” steps resulting in fragmented mental models
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ENGAGEMENT Allow students to share their mental models with peers in small groups Use exit tickets to monitor “accuracy” of their visualizations ACTION & EXPRESSION Modeling can provide scaffolds and prompts (executive functions) Helps with guiding thinking (executive functions) Allow multiple-tools for students to show and create their mental models REPRESENTATION Builds background knowledge (comprehension) Modeling could provide information in smaller “chunks” (comprehension) Use multi-media to support kids in crafting their visualizations
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