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“Active learning - critical thinking and creative methods “ Leahu Diamanda – Toni, C.C.D. IASI 09.02. – 13.02.2010. Protocol. Be punctual! Mutual respect Be an active listener! Do not interrupt the speaker? Respect the time for your intervention / task! Be tolerant!
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“Active learning - critical thinking and creative methods “ Leahu Diamanda – Toni, C.C.D. IASI 09.02. – 13.02.2010
Protocol • Be punctual! • Mutual respect • Be an active listener! Do not interrupt the speaker? • Respect the time for your intervention / task! • Be tolerant! • If you have a question, ask it! • Ask for an example if the task is not clear to you! • Be skeptical, do not accept everything you hear! • Criticize the idea, not the speaker! • Argue when you disagree! Propose alternatives! • Signs agreed: left hand - silence, right hand – ask the permission to speak
CT (Bloom): involves - analysis, synthesis, evaluation based on criteria and values - assumed by individuals and practiced with skill and efficiency. CT does not mean "attack the person”. CT is one way to address and solve problems based on convincing, coherent-logical, rational arguments. To think critically does not necessarily have a negative, impractical, ineffective position! Criticism can be:- constructive, with the aim of substantiation and foundation of opinion; of rational argumentation, of acceptance - destructive, with the purpose of demolition, an attempt to justify what is difficult (or nearly impossible) to be justified and accepted (by all).
Cooperative Learning Roles • The timer - ensures that the group focuses on the task and the work to be conducted within the time set • The active listener - gets ideas from all group members and repeats or reorders what the others have said • The person in charge with the materials –distributes and collects the necessary materials for thegroup • The reader -reads the materials for the group • The reporter - exhibits the conclusions in front of the class NOTE: The students should change roles during every activity
Framework for thinking and learning Evocation • It requires studentsto brainstorm and compile lists ofwhat they know orbelieve thatthey know, as a starting point(individually, in pairs and / or group). - Someone writes the group ideas on the board, accepting them all The role of the teacher is to guide, underline the main ideas, andlisten carefully to the students. 1. What is the subject? (identify) 2. What you know about that? (write on the board) 3. What do you want to know about that? (write on the board) 4. Why do youfindthese informations?
Making sense Learning Phase The student comes into contact with a newcontent (reading of texts, watching a movie,listening to lectures) Grasping meaning is done by each student as they search for information that would confirmtheir predictions. Teacher:- doesn’t influence students - supports the efforts of the students in monitoring their understanding
ReflectionStudents:- are reinforcing their knowledge actively and restructure the scheme to includetheir new information;-by acquiring the real knowledge, sustainable learning takes place1. What did you learn? (largest possible answers) 2. Ask questions to extract important information not mentioned in the evocation stage. 3. In response to their answers, ask: "Why do you thinkthat?"
Evocation (for the next segment of content) What else do you think you will find out? What haven’t you find out from what you would like to know? Why is this important? Why do you think that? (Boost discussion and add information to the ones already writtenon the blackboard.)
Brainstorming (a creative way of thinking) Generates ideasNo evaluationTime limitedRead ideas / keywords aloudClarify ideasRepeat the processEvaluate the ideas (select the best)
SINELG- Interactive Grading System for Streamlining Reading and Thinking Methodsteps : • Write everything you know/ you think you know about ... (3-5 min) • Say whatyou know about ... (write down ideas) • Readthe text andput signs on the article: “√” - if you read something that confirms what you knew / you thought you know “-” - if you read a piece ofinformation that contradicts / differs from what you knew / you thought you know “+” - if a read piece of information is new to you “?” - if you findinformationthat seem confusing to you or if you want to know more about this
Short break (think 2-3 minutes)Resume the list of what you already know, discuss in pairs about knowledge confirmed and dispelledDraw up a table SINELG individually, then in pairs (15 min) Ideas in class discussion on questions (10 min)The need to indicate other sources of information
I KNOW/I WANT TO KNOW/I’VE LEARNT(Ogle, 1986) Evocation (Brain storm info) • The students work in pairs and make a list with everything they know about the new subject • Make up on the board/notebook a chart and you fill in column 1 • They make up questions to which the answers are going to be given in the lesson (column 2) Comprehension techniques • They read the text/ attend a lecture/ a didactic movie Reflection • The Ogle pattern is being repeated and the students decide what they have learnt by filling in column 3 • Some questions can have no answer or there may appear new ones • The students who know answer, the teacher or information sources are being given
The method: „THE GRAPE” • Write a word or a keysentence in themiddle of a page • Start towritewords/expressionsthat come toyourmindrelatedtothegivensubject • Start todrawlinesbetweentheconnectingideas • Write as manyideasas come toyourminduntiltimeis off or youhavenothingelsetosay Basic rules • Writeeverythingthatcomestoyourmind • Don’t evaluate yourideas, just writethemdown • Don’tbotheraboutpunctuation,spelling or otherrules of thewritten text • Don’t stop writinguntilenoughtimehaspassed • Iftheideasrefuse o come, insist uponthepaperand in the end they’ll show up • Allowseveralconnectionsto come up. Don’tlimitthenumber of ideasandconnexions.
The method: „The Venn Diagram” • It is made up of two large circlespartiallyjuxtaposed • It isusedto show theresemblancesandthedifferencesbetweentwoideas, concepts or characters • Ifthestudents compare thejourney of Columbuswiththatof Marco Polo, thediagramallowstopoint out thedifferencesbetweenthetwoevents, showing at the same timethecommonelements • The studentsworking in pairsfillin just onecircle, whichreferstoone of thetwoexplorers • Theycan come in groups of fourto compare theircircles, filling in thecommonarea of thecircles.
The method: „ The gallery tour’ • In groups of three or four, thestudentsfirstwork on a problem thatcanbecome a final product (a diagram, achart, a grape) • The products are beingexhibited on thewalls of theclassroom • At theteacher’ssign, thegroupsgoroundtheclassroomtoexamineanddiscusseach product • (10 minutes) • Theycantake notes andwritecomments on theexhibitedpapers • Afterthegallerytour, thegroupsreexaminetheirownproductsbycomparisonwiththeothersandreadthecommentswritten on their product (10 minutes)
The method: „The quintet” The aim: to shape the ability of resuming the information, to grasp the complexity of ideas, feeling and convictions. • A five verse poem, with a clear presentation of the ideas which express opinions upon the given subject Time: 5-7 minutes • The students work first on the individual draft, then in pairs, they rewrite a final quintet which they read in the class Instructions • Line 1:one word-the title (describes the subject) • Line 2: two adjectives ( description) • Line 3: three gerund verbs which express actions ( action) • Line 4 : four words which express the feelings towards the subject • Line 5: a word which expresses the essence of the subject
Selfevaluation in using the activity directed by reading and thought Always Sometimes Never I make predictions based on the titles and photos I guess what’s going to happen based on the type of the story 3. When I read I think at my predictions 4. I pay attention to the details that can help me to make new predictions 5. Even when I read something else I stop and wonder if I already know what’s going on next
Group self-monitoring Group self-evaluation for discussions Almost always Sometimes Never 1. We check if we have understood very well what we have to do 2. We follow our tasks 3. Each of us contributes with opinions 4. Each of us listens to the end before answering 5. We express several opinions before reaching conclusions 6. In the end we round up our conclusions 7. One of us takes detailed notes of our discussion.
The Portfolio • *A “pact” between the student and the teacher which should help the student in the process of self-evaluation • * At the beginning of the period we discuss what the student must know/ must do during the whole process of learning • * We diagnose the learning needs of the students in order to establish the evaluation objectives and their criteria; we discuss with the students involved in the evaluation process. • *The presentation/introductory one: the selection of the most valued products • *The progress/working one : all the elements on display in activity • *The evaluation one: the objectives, the strategies and the instruments of evaluation, the result charts.
The Structure of the Student’s Portfolio • The summary • The argument (the works included and their importance) • Summaries of the studied literary works • Essays on different topics suggested by the teacher, adapted to the age and the student’s interests • Articles, commentaries on different books/articles of criticism • Individual worksheets • Individual/group projects • Current home assignments • Term tests • Drawings which illustrate scenes from literature or just possible illustrations ( for students with visual abilities) • Charts/graphic representations for connections between genres ,literary species, current works/literary movements, narrative processes (for students with logical-mathematical intelligence) • Recordings, photos from individual/group activities (museum visits, memorial houses, trips, movies after famous books, shows) • Definitions of the operational concepts of the national programmes • Interviews with different personalities of the cultural/literary life • Supplementary commentaries/evaluations of the teacher or group colleagues.
The Portfolio Evaluation Evaluation criteria items Yes Partially No Observations 1. Presentation - a clear evolution in comparison with the previous presentation - completeness - general layout 2. Summaries - the quality of the paperwork - the coordination with the given subject - the quantity of the final products 3. Practical workshops -adequate target -the efficiency of the working method - individual/group work 4. The student’s opinions on different parts of the portfolio - reflections upon his own work - reflections upon group work - reflections upon group w - the student’s expectations from the ongoing activity.
5)Chronology - ordering the materials according to their chronological status 6) Self-evaluation - self-evaluation of the performed activities - the coordination between target and result - the registered progress - the grade he thinks he is entitled to 7) Other materials - their quality - their relevance to the proposed theme - their importance to raising appraisal
The Group Portfolio The Cover ( it reflects in a creative way the group’s personality) • The contents • The introduction of the group and its members • The introduction and the argumentation of the chosen samples • Samples which have required the joint effort of the group members • Observations of the group members according to the way they interacted during common activities • Self-evaluation of the members and their own group evaluation • Individual samples changed upon the received feed-back from the group ( essays, final products) • Self-evaluation of the members regarding the qualities and weak points of the social interaction • The way they have raised group awareness and helped other colleagues to learn • The list of the future learning targets and social behavior which the group members establish • Commentaries and feed-back from the teachers, Methodists and other study groups.