Supporting Teachers New and 'Old' to Psychology

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Supporting Teachers New and 'Old' to Psychology

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Supporting Teachers New and 'Old' to Psychology. Objectives. By the end of the session you will be able to: Understand how to use active teaching and learning strategies Understand how the strategies demonstrate impact on the learning of students - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Supporting Teachers New and 'Old' to Psychology

Page 1: Supporting Teachers New and 'Old' to Psychology

Supporting Teachers New and 'Old' to Psychology

Page 2: Supporting Teachers New and 'Old' to Psychology

Objectives

• By the end of the session you will be able to:

• Understand how to use active teaching and learning strategies

• Understand how the strategies demonstrate impact on the learning of students

• See how to use AfL to teach an outstanding psychology lesson

• See how you can support or be supported

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Active learning strategies

• What are they?

• Why do them?

• Metacognitive benefits

• Some examples- PALS, think-pair-share, jigsaw

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Why active learning?

• Students who are taught using active learning develop better higher level thinking skills than those who are taught using only lecture based instruction.

• Richmond & Kindelberger Hagan (2011)

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PALS

• Lin Norton – Professor Emeritus Liverpool Hope University

• Psychology Applied Learning Scenarios (PALS) are an adaptation of problem-based learning using hypothetical case studies that represent situations which professional psychologists typically face.

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PALS

Problem-based learning represents a

shift away from more traditional teaching

methods to a perspective that focuses on

students’ learning.

(Boud & Feletti 1999).

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What is the pedagogical justification for the use of PALS?

• Active learning

• Metacognition

• Constructive alignment

• Constructivist learning

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PALS

• Problem based learning such as PALS, encourages students to think deeply about information and to develop a shared knowledge through the presentation of each student’s perspective

(Guenther and Miller 2011).

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PALS

• PALS provide students with the scope to apply their own knowledge to a contextualised problem (Norton 2004)

• They make reflective judgements leading to an in-depth understanding of psychology can be applied to real life

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PALS activity

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=co7BWWoF-5I

• Where’s the psychology – discuss

• How could you tackle this?

• How will you answer the question?

• How would you know when you have answered the question?

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Jigsaw technique

• Jigsaw technique involves each student being given a unique and vital part of information that must be put together within a collaborative group for any of the students to understand the whole story.

• (Perkins and Tagler 2011)

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Jigsaw technique

• Aims

• Procedure

• Findings

• Conclusions

• Criticisms

• Each person has sheet 1, 2 or 3 with details of the Dement and Kleitman study

• Expert, discuss, teach

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Jigsaw technique

• You have two minutes to read and become ‘expert’ in your area of the study

• You now have one minute to discuss and rehearse the material with the person who has the same topic area

• You have a further three minutes to teach the others in the group the information in which you have become an ‘expert’.

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Jigsaw technique

• This means that the student takes the role of the ‘‘expert’’ rather than the teacher

• They must add to the group’s learning

• The teacher becomes an assistant to the students’ understanding, evaluation, and synthesis of material

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Jigsaw technique

• Student engagement required for jigsaw tasks has been shown to play an important role in the acquisition of critical thinking skills and the development of problem solving skills

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Jigsaw technique benefits

• Cooperative learning promotes

• Meta-cognitive thought

• A willingness to take on difficult tasks

• Persistence in working on task and

• Transfer of learning from one task to another through social construction

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Think-Pair-Share

• Using AfL to plan an outstanding lesson

• Use of Think-Pair-Share

• Get a copy at

• David Weston @informed_edu49s

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AfL

• AfL clarifies learning objectives

• involves self and peer-assessment

• questioning and

• feedback

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AfL

• Learning goals – students need to know there are learning objectives and are clear about what they are trying to learn

• Should include what a good learning outcome will ‘look like’ and how this relates to subject standards.  

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AfL

• Lessons must be planned to meet learning objectives and appropriate tasks then identified.

• If formative assessment is to be effective therefore, it would imply that assessment incidents also need to be planned

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AfL

• Assessment incidents should be focused on small group tasks

• Provide evidence of student’s progress to date and

• Scaffold the learning of the group as they collaborate to complete the activity

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AfL

• Is constructive alignment achieved?

• To maintain student focus, the teacher should relate the tasks to the learning objectives and outcomes throughout the lesson.

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AfL

• Tasks provide opportunities for learner self-assessment and peer-review

• Teacher assessment is enhanced by the use of questions to provoke thinking.

• Questioning is planned, targeted and progressive

• Extend ‘wait time’

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AfL

• Feedback

• Are your students only interested in grades?

• Do you believe that your feedback is more useful than the students do?

• Does your feedback match learning criteria and challenge improvement?

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Mentoring

• Think-pair-share

• What is the most useful way of supporting a teacher?

• What makes a good teacher mentor?

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OFSTED good mentoring

• Emphasis on class management

• Phased programme to support teaching and assessment

• Observations, feedback and guidance

• Regular meetings

• Opportunities given to experience good practice

• Be a critical friend