Planning for
Significant Learning
By Prof. Jonathan
Acuña-Solano, M. Ed.
School of English
Faculty
of Social Sciences
Universidad
Latina de Costa Rica
Sunday,
May 15, 2016
Post 277
·
Articulate the benefits of incorporating active,
collaborative, and problem-based learning into your classroom.
·
Include the impact these would have on the approach your
students would take to learning the course material.
|
Deep
learning provides a context and rationale for learning. That is, students are
involved with the importance of theory that can be applied to specific
projects, problems, or tasks that need to be developed. Incorporating active,
collaborative, and problem-based learning can prove that students can develop
new knowledge for new skills and competences.
Deep
learning connects new concepts to what students already know. From a cognitive
perspective, the instructor needs to activate learners’ prior knowledge and
have them relate the new concepts to existing schemata to build knowledge and
then understanding quite readily. Many times, this schema activation is better
done when collaboration mediates the process of learning. That is, what some
segment of the class knows can engage and guide the other sections of the class
that do not have much training on various areas.
Deep
learning helps instructors spend more class time on the most critical and
difficult ideas. Though there should not be a negative labeling in certain
course contents, there are parts that become a bit more difficult for students
than others. Modeling of the new concepts by the teacher is of great importance
in this section to help them comprehend and then perform a task successfully.
Collaboration along with problem-based learning can provide the ground to
challenge students to go beyond their immediate boundaries and transcend course
content and see how newly-acquired knowledge can be used in real life
situations, making learning much more active and meaningful.
Deep
learning has the power to engage students in active, collaborative,
problem-based activities and discussions around authentic problems. If a class
is gravitating on very abstracts grounds, learners may simply get lost “in
space and time.” But if authentic situations can be simulated in class,
students will relate better to them after their schemata has been activated.
Having them deal with real life situations they will face in their working
environments can make the whole experience worthwhile for the sake of student
knowledge building and their corresponding skills and competences.
Deep
learning uses assessment methods that ask students to apply and synthesize
concepts. Deep learning then is a great approach to a constructivist curriculum
in which evaluation aims at having students interact with theory in applicable
situations that can help them internalize it and collaboratively –even with the
teacher- build knowledge.
Deep
learning provides feedback to students on their strengths and ways to improve
their performance. The teacher as the role model and guide can help students
become more autonomous in their learning by providing formative assessment and
guidance towards higher levels in the understanding of course theory and its
applicability.
I
wouldn’t say that there have been great changes in my attitude towards my
teaching practices. I have been a follower of problem-based learning for many
years and have understood the importance of schema activation due to Rod Ellis
book Task-Based Instruction. It is on
this ground that my teaching has been evolving in new scenarios such VLEs
(virtual learning environments).
·
Describe one new teaching tool you can incorporate into
your teaching.
|
Based
on Rebecca Oxford and her research on recycling in language learning, which is
my field of work, I want to experiment much more with spiral
learning to provide real deep learning among my students and
then have them take the quantic leap towards full acquisition of the language
as described by Stephen Krashen.
·
Explain some of the challenges or concerns about
implementing active, collaborative, and problem-based learning teaching tools
in your classroom.
|
More
than a concern regarding the implementation of more active and collaborative
learning based on problem-based teaching tools for one’s classroom, it is
important that instructors are certain of how to go about the experience. In
other words,
1) What
educational purposes should you seek to attain in your course?
2) What
educational experiences can be provided that are likely to attain these
purposes?
3) How
can these educational experiences be effectively organized?
References
Tyler,
R. (1949). Basic Principles of Curriculum and Instruction. Chicago: University of Chicago Press
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