1 / 41

Effective Strategies for Instructional Planning

Learn how to determine goals, align with standards, write objectives, and develop lesson plans. Explore teacher-directed strategies and student engagement. Find out how to promote mastery through Direct Instruction.

askewa
Télécharger la présentation

Effective Strategies for Instructional Planning

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 12 Instructional Strategies

  2. General Principles That Can Guide Instruction

  3. General Principles • Determine what you ultimately want students to know and be able to do. • backward design • Use a variety of instructional strategies. • Promote productive cognitive processing of subject matter. • Focus on knowledge/skills most likely to enhance students’ long-term success. • Provide some structure and scaffolding for activities and assignments.

  4. General Principles • Capitalize on technological innovations to enhance students’ learning and performance. • Take student diversity into account when planning and carrying out instruction. • differentiated instruction • Regularly assess and provide feedback about students’ progress. • formative assessment

  5. Planning for Instruction

  6. Planning and carrying out instruction is part of an interdependent network.

  7. Identifying Goals of Instruction • Instructional goal = desired long-term outcome of instruction • Instructional objective = desired outcome of lesson or unit. • objectives help teachers and students reach the goal

  8. Aligning Goals with Standards • Content area standards • general statements regarding knowledge and skills that students should acquire at various grade levels • characteristics their accomplishments should reflect • National, international, state standards • Common Core standards • useful, but have limitations

  9. Writing Goals & Objectives • Consult standards, but don’t rely on them exclusively. • Identify short-term objectives, long-term goals. • Identify goals related to specific topics and content areas. • Identify goals related to long-term academic success.

  10. Writing Goals & Objectives • Include goals and objectives with varying levels of complexity and sophistication. • Consider physical, social, motivational, affective, and cognitive outcomes. • Describe what students should be able to do at the end of instruction.

  11. Writing Goals & Objectives • Identify behaviors that reflect accomplishment of objectives. • List abstract outcomes for long-term goals, & give examples of specific behaviors. • Provide opportunities for students to identify goals and objectives of their own.

  12. Writing Goals & Objectives • Bloom’s taxonomy (cognitive processes) • remember • understand • apply • analyze • evaluate • create

  13. Writing Goals & Objectives • Wiggins and McTighe—Understanding By Design • Explanation • Interpretation • Application • Perspective • Empathy • Self-knowledge

  14. Communicating Goals & Objectives • Traditional means—printed syllabus • Class website • Dependent on students’ access to and comfort with technology

  15. Examples of Useful Objectives • “The student will identify the main thesis or argument in a scholarly paper.” • “The students will demonstrate effective ways of kicking, dribbling, and passing the ball.” • "Given a sentence written in the future tense, the student will be able to rewrite the sentence in the past tense with no errors.”

  16. Task Analysis • Identifying specific knowledge and behaviors necessary to master subject matter • behavioral analysis • subject matter analysis • information processing analysis

  17. Developing a Lesson Plan • Lesson plans include • goal(s) or objective(s) • instructional materials, equipment • instructional strategies • assessment method(s) • Guide, not recipe

  18. Teacher- vs. Student-Directed • Teacher-directed instruction • teacher is in control of content and course of lesson • Learner-directed instruction • students have considerable control regarding the issues they address and the ways they address them

  19. Teacher-Directed Instructional Strategies

  20. Expository Instruction • Information is presented in the form in which students are expected to learn it • Lectures and textbooks • students must be cognitively active

  21. Teacher Questions • Lower-level questions • students retrieve information • focus attention, allow for comprehension monitoring • Higher-level questions • students go beyond information they have learned • encourage elaboration, transfer, problem solving, critical thinking • Give students feedback about their responses.

  22. In-Class Assignments • Can focus on “remember,”“understand” (Bloom) • Authentic activities address higher-level goals

  23. Homework • Use assignments for instructional or diagnostic purposes. • Provide information, structure for students to complete assignments with little or no assistance. • Mix required and voluntary assignments. • Discuss assignments in class as soon as possible. • If necessary, establish supervised after-school homework programs.

  24. Direct Instruction • Review • Statement of objectives • Presentation of new material • Guided student practice, assessment • Independent practice • Follow-up reviews

  25. Promoting Mastery • Small, discrete units. • A logical sequence. • Demonstration of mastery at the end of each unit. • Additional activities for students needing extra help or practice to attain mastery.

  26. Instructional Websites • Types of websites—search engines, Wikipedia, etc. • Considerations: • students’ self-regulation skills and technological literacy • little to no quality control of internet • unproductive searches • the need for scaffolding

  27. Computer Based Instruction • Benefits: • often effective in learning subject matter • can be highly motivating • includes multimedia • records and maintain data for every student • provides instruction when teachers aren’t available • Drawback • few opportunities for face-to-face social interaction

  28. Learner-Directed Instructional Strategies

  29. Class Discussions • Focus on topics that lend themselves to multiple perspectives. • Make sure students have prior knowledge about a topic. • Create a classroom atmosphere conducive to open debate. • Use small-group discussions to encourage all students to participate. • Provide a structure to guide the discussion. • Provide closure at the end.

  30. Reciprocal Teaching • Discussion format • Teacher and students model effective reading and learning strategies • Focused on metacognitive strategies • summarizing • questioning • clarifying • predicting

  31. Discovery & Inquiry Learning • Discovery • students interact with environment • derive information for themselves • useful for fostering transfer, problem solving, creativity, self-regulated learning • promotes positive attitude • Inquiry • promotes effective reasoning processes

  32. Computer Simulations & Applications • Simulations • game-like or authentic tasks • Applications • concept mapping, brainstorming software • word processing programs • database programs • spreadsheets • music editors • geographic mapping software

  33. Cooperative Learning • Small group with common goal • For effective groups: • form groups of students who are likely to work together productively • provide clear goals toward which groups should work • provide clear guidelines for behavior • structure tasks so that group members must depend on one another for success

  34. Peer Tutoring • Can lead to considerable gains in academic achievement • Benefits tutors as well as those being tutored

  35. Peer Tutoring • Make sure tutors have mastered the material and use sound instructional techniques. • Provide a structure for students’ interactions. • Do not rely on higher-achieving students to tutor lower-achieving students excessively. • Make sure that all students have opportunities to tutor.

  36. Technology-Based Collaborative Learning • Can enhance student interaction and knowledge construction • electronic mail (e-mail) • web-based chat rooms • discussion boards • electronic bulletin boards • web logs (blogs)

  37. Taking Student Diversity into Account

  38. Diversity • Attend to students’ ages, developmental level, prior knowledge and skills. • Attend to students’ cultural and ethnic backgrounds. • Accommodate students with special needs. • differentiated instruction

  39. The Big Picture

  40. The Big Picture • The choice of instructional strategies must depend to some degree on the goals of instruction. • The choice of instructional strategies must also depend on students’ characteristics and needs. • Effective teachers regularly use a variety of instructional strategies.

More Related