1. Descriptions of the levels of classroom
discussion:
teacher to teacher
– After designing a project, teachers continue to communicate to work together
on procedural and formative assessment to guide instruction. This can be done in person, on blogs, and
using Wikis, etc.
students to
students – Students communicate about their learning experiences within
their teams and with each other; while the teacher remains the facilitator to
give feedback and allow for opportunities to practice skills learned and help
students take on more responsibility for their own learning.
teacher to
students – Teachers circulate, observe, carefully listen, and ask probing
and follow-up questions to smaller groups of students to promote higher-order
thinking. These higher-order questions
need to be in the form of evaluation, analysis, comparison, etc. from Bloom’s
Taxonomy and help students garner a deeper understanding of content/concepts
taught.
Overall, classroom discussion is encouraged with and in
small groups and teachers need to stay away from too much whole-class
instruction. This is interesting, because when I did my
pre-internship, my mentor teacher was required to do whole-class instruction
everyday for twenty minutes for the language arts block alone. It was a new requirement.
I agree, however,
that teachers should not be the only ones providing information to
students, rather students should be learning from each other by researching and
investigating, using their curiosity to guide investigation and construct their
own understanding, and learn how to ask good questions to find answers.
2. Questions for “checking in” on students
during a project:
Questions for “checking in” are
all probing questions that allow us to get a better understanding of how
students learn best and where we need to focus to make necessary adjustments to
our projects and to keep students on task.
As teachers, we need to ask procedural questions (e.g., Are we
staying on schedule?), where we track student’s progress towards milestones and
deadlines by reminding them of the project calendar and by monitoring their
project logs and checklists. We can ask questions
about teamwork (e.g., Are team members getting along? Is one student
carrying too much of the load for the whole team?), that allow us to find out
about the team’s progress, the team dynamics, and who is contributing, in order
to start a dialogue about team work if students are slacking. Answers can be given in person, on blogs, in
journals, and by using Wikis, which allow us to see who is actually
contributing. We can ask questions to
promote understanding (e.g., Have you considered/thought about this…?),
which are necessary when students get off task.
These questions or suggesting resources/tools to keep projects moving,
redirect students, and are a way to push students beyond expectations. Lastly, we can ask questions as
encouragement for self-assessment and reflection about the project that
allows students to describe their challenges and frustrations, as well as ask
their own questions and share their excitement.
3. Benefits to students when optimizing the
use of technology:
When optimizing the use of technology, students are able to
gain new insight into how to communicate key content and with a culturally diverse
audience; follow their interests to meet learning goals; replay technology such
as podcasts to match their learning speeds without having to ask the teacher to
go back over information they did not understand the first time; stay
organized; expand their horizons by
connecting to outside experts or a broader community via e-mail and online
collaborative tools; access their workspace anywhere, anytime, and from any
computer connected to the Internet; use appropriate tools to extend their
reach; take advantage of available tools to help organize their research; keep
track of important milestones; collaborate with team members; receive timely
feedback from teachers on their projects; critique their peers as authentic
feedback, and use technology to keep parents involved in student learning.
4. 21st-century skills that can
make or break a project:
One of the 21st-century skills that can make or
break a project is being familiar with troubleshooting strategies for getting a
project back on track after dealing with real-world challenges that can cause
setbacks. As teachers, we need support
students through questioning rather than giving them all the answers and emphasize
conversation/discussion that includes brainstorming with students and teachers
to help students understand that real-world projects come from real-world
challenges. Another skill that can
affect the success of a project is teamwork.
Sometimes the team dynamics may be not ideal, and as teachers we need to
help students learn to manage their own team conflicts with the help of team
contracts where roles and responsibilities are spelled out, and make teamwork a
focus of formal assessment with the help of a teamwork-scoring rubric. I have not had very many good experiences
with teamwork in the past since I often ended up doing the majority of the
work. Therefore, I feel that it is
important to hold each student accountable for the success of the group.
5. How does this chapter relate to our
project/topic:
This chapter informs us of how we
can keep a project moving by giving us ideas of how to interact with each other
and students, as well as thinking on our feet if unexpected situations arise or
if students veer off in the wrong directions.
We are at this point of our project and we need to brainstorm to make
sure we are not doing the same lessons and that all of our lessons are meeting
learning goals by asking each other questions in our small groups to become real-world
problem solvers. Understanding the right
questioning is important for student’s success and we need to discuss and ask
each other questions as to how we can get to the final presentation of our
project and make certain that each of our team members is contributing
equally. Our instructor has only used
whole-class instruction to make announcements, to introduce a new concept, or
to demonstrate a skill. We are starting
to recognize the benefits of using technology in our projects, such as
accessing our blogs/projects anywhere, keeping track of our milestones, getting
feedback from our professor about our lessons, and authentic feedback from our
peers, etc. Overall, we need to be aware
that teaching students how to communicate properly and ask the right questions,
troubleshooting, and managing conflict is critical to the success of a project.
I really like how much detail you put in your reflection! The more we really answer these questions the more we can benefit from the readings itself! I really like how you described each classroom discussion as well as stating that as teachers we shouldn't be leading the whole instruction! The students should be the ones leading the discussion to see what they already know and have learned. Its really important to monitor troubleshooting , managing conflict, and teamwork in all projects and discussions. These are all really important issues that come up in groups! Also checking in with students is so important because many students need someone to just check in to see whats going on and what they are learning.
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