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Meeting The Challenge Learning’s Not Memorizing?? . Helping Our Students Discover What Learning Is Carolyn Hopper. Our concept of LEARNING is not the same concept most of our students have . . A Student Success Course is an ideal place to help students discover what learning really is.
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Meeting The ChallengeLearning’s Not Memorizing?? Helping Our Students Discover What Learning Is Carolyn Hopper
Our concept of LEARNING is not the same concept most of our students have.
A Student Success Course is an ideal place to help students discover what learning really is
Goals for Session • Participates should be able to explain the learning process to their students. • Participants will analyze how the learning process is modeled in student success courses. • Participants will create models for processing learning for topics they teach and a sample model for a topic in a content area.
Modeling the Learning Process James Zull.The Art of Changing the Brain (Sterling, VA: Stylus Publishing,2002)
4 Basic Functions of Brain • Getting Information • Making Meaning of Information • Creating New Ideas • Acting on Those Ideas
Learner Begins as Receiver of Knowledge
GatheringInformation Enters through Senses • Four things that influence this gathering? • Interest • Intent • Basic Background (prior knowledge) • Understanding
This is where most of our students stop. They think their job is done And they are really proud.
Learning originates in concrete experience. • Learning dependson experience, but alsorequiresreflection, developing abstractions,andactively testing abstractions. James Zull. The Art of Changing the Brain
Most of our students think of learning as synonymous with memorizing. • We need to make our expectations clear and model in the classroom how to achieve the kind of learning we expect.
Learning is a Biological Change in the Brain • Learning is not easy. • Building new brain connections requires effort.
Brain-based or brain compatible learning is based on how research in neuroscience suggests our brain naturally learns best.
4 Basic Functions of Brain • Getting Information • Making Meaning of Information • Creating New Ideas • Acting on Those Ideas
Reassemble • Integrate • Examine • Look for Relevance and Meaning • Search for Connections • Make New Ones
Analyzing to Make MeaningREFLECTION • Try to make personal • Try to determine connection to past experiences • Try to discover relevance and usefulness • Try to discover what it's like that we already know.
So what do we do to help students analyze? Bloom Football example
Football • Knowledge • Comprehension • Application • Analysis • Synthesis • Evaluation
4 Basic Functions of Brain • Getting Information • Making Meaning of Information • Creating New Ideas • Acting on Those Ideas
CreatingConvert comprehension to • Ideas • Hypothesis • Plans
Data is just data until the learner begins to work with it • Understanding is not ownership. • When learners convert comprehension to ideas, hypotheses, plans, actions, Control shifts to learner. .
4 Basic Functions of Brain • Getting Information • Making Meaning of Information • Creating New Ideas • Acting on Those Ideas
Acting Test Ideas • Writing • Speaking • Drawing • Can you think of other ways?
Action completes the learning cycle • Ideas need to be tested by writing, speaking or other means. • Learner shifts from receiver to producer of knowledge.
Learner becomes Producer of Knowledge
As Student Success instructors we have a unique opportunity. Most of the topics we teach already follow this model
We need to make students aware of the model So that they can transfer it to content areas • Gathering Information • Analyzing Information • Creating New information • Acting on New information
Time Management Critical Thinking Goal Setting Memory Principles Taking Notes Textbook Reading Managing Stress Learning Styles Taking Tests Using Resources Campus Safety Balancing Budget GatheringAnalyzingCreatingActing
Time Management • Gather Benefits and principles of scheduling, how much time to allow for each class, ways to save time • Analyze • Analyze use of time with log • Create • Create a Master Schedule • Act • Follow Master Schedule Cycle begins again by making adjustment to Master Schedule
Critical Thinking • Gather • Information about Blooms Taxonomy • Information about decision making • Analyze • Examples of each level of Bloom’s taxonomy • Decisions you need to make • Create • Test questions at each level • Plan for making decision • Act • Study using questions from higher order skills,find actual questions on tests you have taken • Follow plan for decision
Goal Setting • Gather • Why set goals,elements of useful goals, guidelines to follow in setting goals • Analyze • Areas of your life themes that goals might take • Where do you really want to be • Create • You tried to determine what you must do in order to reach your destination • Act • Write useful goals for different areas of your life • Break goals into smaller shorter term goal Take first step Gather information necessary to reach goal.
We want to be sure that students can also apply the process to content areas
Memory Principles • Gather • Analyze • Create • Act
Taking Notes • Gather • Analyze • Create • Act
Reading Textbooks • Gather • Analyze • Create • Act
Managing Stress • Gather • Analyze • Create • Act
Learning Styles • Gather • Analyze • Create • Act
Taking Tests • Gather • Analyze • Create • Act
Using Resources • Gather • Analyze • Create • Act
Campus Safety • Gather • Analyze • Create • Act
Balancing Budget • Gather • Analyze • Create • Act
Lesson in Content Area • Gather • Analyze • Create • Act
Contact information • Dr. Carolyn Hopper • Middle Tennessee State University • chopper@mtsu.edu • http://www.mtsu.edu/~studskl/ Practicing College Learning Strategies, 4th ed Houghton Mifflin,2007. (Cengage) (5th edition coming out in time for fall classes) To preorder a complimentary copy, request one at end of session.