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School and Achievement. Schools Achievement Careers, Work, and Retirement. Schools. Contemporary Approaches to Student Learning and Assessment. Constructivist Approach: Emphasizes child’s active construction of knowledge and understanding
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School and Achievement Schools Achievement Careers, Work, and Retirement
Schools Contemporary Approaches to Student Learning and Assessment • Constructivist Approach: • Emphasizes child’s active construction of knowledge and understanding • Teacher provides support for students exploring their world and developing knowledge. • Main theory: Piaget’s theory.
Schools Contemporary Approaches to Student Learning and Assessment • Social constructivist approaches: • Focuses on collaboration with others to produce knowledge and understanding. • Main theory: Vygotsky’s theory • Constructivist approaches: • Learner is center of educational process; learner-center principles
Schools Contemporary Approaches to Student Learning and Assessment • Direct Instruction Approach: • Teacher-centered approach characterized by • Teacher direction and control • Mastery of academic material • High expectations for students’ progress • Maximum time spent on learning tasks
Schools Accountability in Schools • State-mandated tests have taken on a more powerful role —No Child Left Behind • Critics argue that they lead to • Single score being used as sole predictor • Teaching to test; use of memorization • Tests don’t measure important skills like creativity and social skills
Schools Schools and Developmental Status • Early childhood education • Many ways young children are educated • The child-centered kindergarten • Emphasizes the whole child • Physical, cognitive, socioemotional development • Needs, interests, and learning style • Emphasizes learning process
Schools Schools and Developmental Status • Montessori approach: • Teacher is facilitator • Children encouraged to be early decision makers • Fosters independence and cognitive development skills • De-emphasizes verbal interactions • Criticisms vary
Schools Developmentally Appropriate and Inappropriate Education • Developmentally appropriate practice: • Focuses on typical development of children within age span (age appropriateness) and uniqueness of each child (individual appropriateness) • Developmentally inappropriate practice: • Relies on abstract paper-and-pencil activities given to large groups
Schools Education for Disadvantaged Children • 1965 – Project Head Start • U.S. programs vary for low-income children • Proven positive and quality experiences • Controversies in early childhood education • Include both academic and constructivist approaches
Schools Elementary School • Change from “home-child’’ to “school-child” • New roles and obligations • Too often, early schooling has more negative feedback; lowers child’s self-esteem • Teachers often pressured to cover curriculum; • Tight scheduling; may harm children
Benefits Independent from parents’ monitoring More opportunities for friends More subjects to select from Challenging work Feel more grown up Drawbacks Stressful — many changes at once Top-dog phenomenon Schools Educating Adolescents Transition to Middle or Junior High School
Schools Effective Schools for Young Adolescents • Criticisms: • Watered-down versions of high schools • Lack age-appropriate curricular and extracurricular schedules • Massive, impersonal, and lacking
Schools High School • Concerns about education and students: • Graduate with inadequate skills • Enter college needing remediation classes • Student drop out rates • Ethnic and racial differences • Gender differences
Schools Effective Schools for Young Adolescents • Effective programs that discourage high school dropping out include • Reading programs • Tutoring • Counseling • Mentoring • ‘I Have A Dream’ program • Projects adopt entire public grade level or cohorts in housing projects • Gives college tuition to high school grads
Schools High School • Need for more effective programs • More support needed to enable students to graduate with knowledge and skills needed to succeed • Need higher expectations for student achievement
40 35 30 25 Percent of 16- to 24-year-olds who havedropped out of school 20 15 10 5 0 1972 1976 1980 1984 1988 1992 1996 2000 Year Schools Trends in High School Dropout Rates
Schools College and Adult Education • Transition to College: • Replays the top-dog phenomenon • Many of same benefits found in high school • Movement to a larger, more impersonal school • Interact with peers of more diverse backgrounds • Increased focus on achievement and assessment
Schools College and Adult Education • Adult education includes • Literacy training • Community development • University credit programs • On-the-job training • Continuing professional education • Women — the majority of adult learners • Reasons for attending adult education and college vary among individuals
Schools Educating Children with Disabilities • Approximately 10 percent of children in the U.S. receive special education or related services • More than 40% have a learning disability
Schools Learning Disabilities • Learning disabilitycharacteristics: • A minimum IQ level • A significant difficulty in a school-related area • No other conditions, such as • severe emotional disorders • second-language background • sensory disabilities • specific neurological deficits
Schools Learning Disabilities • Dyslexia— severe impairment in ability to read and spell • Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder • Inattention, hyperactivity, impulsivity • Definitive causes unknown • Higher risk if a sibling already diagnosed • Medications are most common treatment • Other treatment recommendations vary
Schools Special Educational Law • Public Law 94-142, the Education for All Handicapped Children Act • Individualized education plan (IEP) — written program tailored to child with disability • Least restrictive environment (LRE) — child with disability educated in setting similar to where other children educated • Inclusion — educating child with special education needs in regular classroom
Schools SES and Ethnicity in Schools • Low-income, ethnic minority children face more difficulties in school • School inequalities • Schools in poor areas • underfunded • young inexperienced teachers • largely segregated • Inadequate opportunities for effective learning • ‘The Shame of a Nation’ • Ethnic school experiences vary across groups
Turn class into jigsaw classroom Use technology to foster cooperation Positive personal contact with diverse other students Engage in perspective taking Help students think critically and be emotionally intelligent Reduce bias View school and community as team Be competent cultural mediator Schools Improving relationships among ethnically diverse students
Extrinsic Incentives such as rewards and punishments Rewards can undermine motivation Intrinsic Factors such as self-determination, curiosity, challenge, and effort Increased by opportunity for choices Achievement Extrinsic and Intrinsic Motivation
Student internal motivation and intrinsic interest in school tasks increase when more opportunities for choice available Some rewards can undermine learning; rewards most effective with high interest Rewards convey mastery information Developmental shifts Achievement Self-Determination and Choice
Achievement Mastery Motivation • Mastery orientation— task-oriented; concerned with learning strategies • Helpless orientation— one seems trapped by difficulty and attributes one’s difficulty to a lack of ability • Performance orientation— achievement outcomes; winning matters
Achievement Self-Efficacy • Mindset; cognitive view of oneself • Fixed mindset: ‘carved in stone’ • Growth mindset: belief in change • promotes optimistic or pessimistic outlook • Self-Efficacy • Belief that one can master a situation and produce favorable outcomes
Achievement Goal-Setting, Planning, and Self-Monitoring • Self-efficacy and achievement improve when individuals set goals that are • Specific • Proximal (short-term) • Challenging • Can set both long and short-term goals • Expectations linked to outcomes/efforts
Achievement Ethnicity and Culture • Ethnicity and Achievement • Often tangled with Socioeconomic Status • SES better predictor of achievements • Many minorities challenged by • Negative stereotypes and discrimination • Poverty • Culture and conflicting neighborhood values
American children perform poorly on international math and science tests Korean, Taiwanese score highest Different attitudes about achievement Different teaching styles Differing parental expectations Achievement Cross-Cultural Comparisons of Educational Achievement
Achievement Cross- Cultural Comparisons of Educational Achievement
Careers, Work, and Retirement Career Developmental Changes Idealistic fantasies about what they want to be when they grow up Young children Career decision-making more serious as they explore different career possibilities High school Choosing major or specialization designed to lead to work in a field College Start full-time occupation Early adulthood
Careers, Work, and Retirement Personality Type Theory • John Holland: match personality to career • Realistic: prefer solitude, being outdoors • Investigative: interested in ideas, intellectualist • Artistic: creative, innovative ways for self-expression • Social: helping orientation, desire to be with people • Enterprising: dominating, good at persuasion • Conventional: detail-oriented, prefer highly structured situations
Careers, Work, and Retirement Values and Careers • Important aspect of choosing a career — match career to one’s values • Monitoring the Occupational Outlook • Service-producing industries will account for most new jobs • Jobs requiring college degrees will be fastest-growing and highest-paying • Labor force participation rates of women projected to increase
Careers, Work, and Retirement Work in Adolescence • U.S. high school students • 90% receive high school diplomas • 75% work part-time and attend school • Most work 16-20 hours per week • Most work in service jobs • Work more than in other developed countries; less than developing countries
Careers, Work, and Retirement Advantages and Disadvantages of Part-Time Work for Adolescents Cons • Give up sports • Forego social affairs with peers • Less sleep • Balance demands of work, school, family, and peers • Lower grades • Pros • Understand how business world works • Learn how to get and keep a job • Manage money • Budget time • Pride in accomplishments • Evaluate goals
Careers, Work, and Retirement Work • Emerging adulthood • Many variations of work patterns exist in merging roles of student and worker • Co-op programs, some dropouts, most graduate • Adulthood • The work landscape • Unemployment • Dual-career couples • Males assuming more home responsibilities • Women assuming more ‘breadwinner’ roles
Careers, Work, and Retirement Changing Percentages of Traditional & Dual-Career Couples
Careers, Work, and Retirement Age and Job Satisfaction
Careers, Work, and Retirement Careers and Work in Middle Adulthood • Midlife time of evaluation, assessment, and reflection • Recognizing limitations in career progress • Deciding whether to change jobs or careers • Rebalance family and work • Planning for retirement
Careers, Work, and Retirement Work in Late Adulthood • Percentage of older adults who work part-time steadily increased since 1960s • Good health • Strong psychological commitment to work • Distaste for retirement • Cognitive ability is best predictor • Many participate in unpaid work • Age affects many aspects of work
Careers, Work, and Retirement Retirement • Option to retire late twentieth-century phenomenon in U.S. • Today’s workers will spend 10 to 15 percent of their lives in retirement • Flexibility is key factor in adjustment • Retirement planning includes more than successful financial planning