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Teaching & Learning Methods

Teaching & Learning Methods. Evaluation. Knowledge. Levels of Cognition. Bloom’s Taxonomy Knowledge (verbal recall) Comprehension Application Analysis Synthesis Evaluation. Normality. Psychomotor Domain. Readiness & Imitation Independent performance Acceleration & Accuracy

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Teaching & Learning Methods

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  1. Teaching & Learning Methods

  2. Evaluation • Knowledge Levels of Cognition • Bloom’s Taxonomy • Knowledge (verbal recall) • Comprehension • Application • Analysis • Synthesis • Evaluation

  3. Normality Psychomotor Domain • Readiness & Imitation • Independent performance • Acceleration & Accuracy • Coordination • Normality Readiness & Imitation

  4. Characterization Affective Domain • Receiving • Responding • Valuing • Organization • Characterization Receiving

  5. A Continuum of Teaching Methods Lecturer participation learner participation Lecture Small Research Lab work Self study group teaching supervision

  6. Learning Situations • Lectures • small group teaching • Teaching in clinical skills center • Bedside teaching • Ambulatory care teaching • In the community • Distance education • Peer- assisted Learning • PBL • Self study

  7. To Teach Effectively, you must know: • Your subject, • How your students learn , • How to teach.

  8. Effective small group teaching

  9. What is small group learning? • Active participation • A specific task • Reflection

  10. The goals of small group teaching • The development of communication skills • The development of intellectual and professional competencies. • The personal growth of student( and perhaps the tutor)

  11. How Much Small? • By definition a small group comprises of 3 – 20 student and usually one tutor. • Best size for complex issues is five or six. • Twenty is the approximate upper limit for group interaction.

  12. Small group preparation Strategy Method Goals Content Setting

  13. Student perspective about advantages of SGT • I personally have a greater influence on what is being discussed and understand what we are discussing. • You can discuss issues together rather than be told them. • Being able to participate and to find out other peoples ideas. • It’s less formal, there is the possibility of asking questions. • You get more individual attention. • I like the flexibility of small group. • Helps develop your power of analyzing problems and arriving at solutions.

  14. Tutors perspective about advantages of SGT • The informal atmosphere –opportunity to get know students at a personal level and for them to get to know me. • Their attainment is not constrained by pressures of curriculum, difficulties associated with large group inflexibility, and passive lethargy in a mass lecture environment. • I can be stimulated by students’ ideas.

  15. Tutors perspective about problems of SGT • Getting students to see me as an equal. Talk to me as they would to their peers. • Very difficult to establish the kind of atmosphere in which students will begin to talk. • Keeping my mouth shut. • How to deal with a poor or irrelevant answer.

  16. Methods of small group teaching • Lecturing • The post- lecture tutorial • Step by step discussion • The seminar paper • Mini-presentation • Springboard seminar • Problem-solving • Case studies, simulations • Syndicate

  17. The skills of small group teaching • Explaining • Questions and questioning • Listening • Summarizing and closing

  18. Some common errors in questioning • Asking too many questions at once • Asking a question and answering it yourself • Asking a difficult question too early • Asking irrelevant questions • Always asking the same type of questions • Asking questions in a threatening way • Not giving time to think • Not correcting wrong answers • Ignoring answers • Failing to see the implication of answers

  19. Examples of probing questions • Does that always apply? • Can you give me an example? • Is there an alternative viewpoint? • How reliable is the evidence? • How accurate is your description? • You say it is “x”, which particular kind of “x” ? • In what situation would this rule breakdown? • What distinguishes the two cases?

  20. Listening • Skim Listening • Surveying Listening • Search Listening • Study Listening

  21. The skills of small group teaching • Explaining • Questions and questioning • Listening • Summarizing and closing

  22. Facilitating small group teaching • Seating arrangement • Expectations and ground rules • Safety • Making the small group smaller

  23. Seating arrangements (Argyle 1983) L L L H L H H L L H H × × • Tutor dominated • Interactions: • Tutor student • Student tutor

  24. Facilitating small group teaching • Seating arrangement • Expectations and ground rules • Safety • Making the small group smaller

  25. Facilitating small group teaching • Seating arrangement • Expectations and ground rules • Safety • Making the small group smaller

  26. Facilitating small group teaching • Seating arrangement • Expectations and ground rules • Safety • Making the small group smaller

  27. Making the small group smaller • Brain storming • Buzz groups • Snowballing

  28. After the small group activity • Evaluate the success of the session • Reflect on the experience

  29. Evaluation and development • Evaluation of the product • Evaluation of the process

  30. Evaluating small group teaching • Direct observation • Interaction analysis • Question analysis • Leadership discussion

  31. Thank You !

  32. Forming • Storming • Norming • Performing

  33. Small Group ArrangementsinLarge Classes

  34. Classic Model      

  35.                  Floating Tutor Model 

  36.                   Floating Tutor Model

  37.                   Peer Tutor Model

  38. Small Group Arrangements inLarge Classes

  39. Small Group Arrangements inLarge Classes

  40. Small Group Arrangements inLarge Classes

  41. Small Group Arrangements inLarge Classes

  42. Seating arrangements(Argyle 1983)

  43. Team V/S Group • High level of commitment to the welfare of the group • High level of trust among members

  44. TL V/S TL • Change in the focus of instructional goals: learning course concept vs. practice using course concpt • Change in the nature of events leading to learning :lectures vs. application focused team assignment • Change in the role of teacher: dispensing information vs. design and management of progress • Change in the role of student: passive vs. responsible

  45. Potential Impacts of TL on Student’s Learning • Understanding the course content • Applying the course content to problem solving decision making • Developing the skills for work effectively as a team • Valuing the team approach to solving complex intellectual tasks • Providing social support for at risk students

  46. Building and maintaining faculty member’s enthusiasm for their teaching

  47. Getting Started With TL

  48. Before class Begins • Partitioning the course content • Identifying the instructional goals and objectives (knowing, Doing) • Designing grading systems

  49. The First Hours of Class • Laying ground work for team learning • Forming groups • Alleviating student concern about grades

  50. Each Major unit of Instruction

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