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Improving Learning Quality Some basic principles. Dr. Peter den Boer Lecturer VET-college W. Brabant. Improving Learning Quality. LQ concerns students – learners / Lerner How can we see this quality : Competencies of students : knowledge , skills, attitudes
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Improving Learning QualitySome basic principles Dr. Peter den Boer Lecturer VET-college W. Brabant
Improving Learning Quality • LQ concerns students – learners / Lerner • How can we seethisquality: • Competencies of students: knowledge, skills, attitudes • What does thisqualityreflect? • The quality of the educational environment: the quality of teachers, teaching, trainers, supervisors, counsellors
Improving Learning Quality • Basicallyconcersteachers/trainers and teaching (in school, companies, etc) Qualities of Learner Teaching Quality Learning Quality
How canteachersimprovequality • By being good professionals (didactics & Pedagogics) • NZL: John Hattie (2003) • NL: Robert Marzano(2003) Marzano & Miedema (2011) • By working in a supportive environment: • Learning environment: buildings, class rooms, possibilities for learning in companies, leraning materials, etcetc • Supportive / learning teams • Supportive Management
Quality of Management Quality/ Support Team Learner Qualities Teaching Quality Learning Quality
Quality of management (verybriefly) AppreciativeInquiry: 4D + ! Flexibleleadership
Expert teams are learning teams Psychologicalsafety Shared mentalmodels Team situation awareness Situation awareness Plan formulation Team Learning Plan execution (Salas et al. 2006)
Quality of learners • Learning capacities (=? Time) • Learning strategies (cfHattie & Marzano) • Motivation
Motivation • Content of subjects • Perspective
Chocolate studyChernev, 2003 • Assignment: Choose a chocolate • Preparation • What is your favourite (i.e. truffle , pure, vanilla, hazelnut) • Offer • Group 1: 4 chocolates • Group 2: 16 chocolate • Assignment: choose 1 • Question: do you want to swap?
Norway Netherlands • 9 domains 350 training programmes • Both: problems with choice, drop out and switching behavior • WHY ?
Empiricalevidence(N=15) Experience (withlabour) .71 .65 Vocational Identity Self-direction Metal processing Den Boer, Jager & Smulders, 2003
Two types of reflection • Taskreflection: • what went well? what went wrong? whatwillyou do differently next time? what do you want/have tolearn?assessementby expert necessary! • Personal reflection: • what have youexperienced? how was thatforyou? what was the most important thing? what made thatso special? what does thattellyouaboutyourpreferences in work?
Craftsmanship 60’s & 70’s Perspective / Identity Knowledge Skills Work attitude
Craftsmanship 80’s - 2000 Perspective / Identity Knowledge Skills Work attitude
Craftsmanship 21st century Perspective / Identity Knowledge Skills Work attitude
Talent • Galton (1865): possibilities limited by innate factors • Recent research (Ericsson & Lehman, ‘99): people we consider talented have spent much more time practicing than the rest • 10 year rule • 10.000 flying hours
DeliberatePractice(Ericsson, 1996, 1998) • Deliberate, well structuredpractice: • Focussed (concentration) • Programmatic • Extended periods of time • Monitoring & guidance (trainers) • Examples: • Chess • Sports – Epke Zonderland • Typing
Does goodtyping make a goodsecretary? • Broader concept of talent / expertise • Whataboutteachers, trainers, tutors supervisors, etc.?
Fields of expertise teachers Education practice Mostteachers (Gen. Educ.) Subject theory practice theory
Education practice SubjectEnthousiasts Practitioners Pedagogues Subject theory practice theory
Expert teams (revisited) • Shared mentalmodels • Team situation awareness • Psychologicalsafety
Teachers & Students • Both needa perspectivetoenhancelearning • Teachers are AT WORK: • Experientiallearning! • With time outs for off the job training, BUT: • Transfer does notoccurautomatically • Studentstooneedexperientiallearning • Whenwhat?
Learning strategies 2 basic types of learning • Knowledge / Skill acquisition – pouring knowledge into their heads / cognitive apprenticeship • Participation – experiential learning
2 types of learning: not either or, but which when? Knowledge / Skill acquisition • Context of certainty Experiential learning • Context of UNcertainty • Learning through reflection
Principles 1 • ILQ is about teachers, tutors, trainers, counsellors, supervisors, etc. • ILQ is about motivating students by helping them gain perspective: • Organise experience • Take time to reflect on that to make learning possible • Perspective motivation, meaning
Principles 2 • ILQ is about which type of learning when: • Knowledge acquisition when needed • Experiential learning when context (including motivation) uncertain • ILQ is about a supportive learning environment: • Learning teams • Supportive management (knowing how to encourage and lead different processes appropriately)
Principles 3 • Supportive teams use the available talents in the team: Subject knowledge, practical knowledge, pedagogical knowledge • Talent needs practice! • 10 year rule • 10.000 flying hours