introducing teaching for understanding

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Introducing Teaching for Understanding Marian McCarthy, Ionad Bairre, The Teaching and Learning Centre , UCC [email protected]

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Introducing Teaching for Understanding. Marian McCarthy, Ionad Bairre , The Teaching and Learning Centre , UCC [email protected]. Getting Started: Teaching for Understanding. The Project Zero Exercise: Think about the following questions: on your own and then with a partner - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Introducing Teaching for Understanding

Introducing Teaching for Understanding

Marian McCarthy, Ionad Bairre, The Teaching and Learning Centre , UCC

[email protected]

Page 2: Introducing Teaching for Understanding

The Project Zero Exercise: Think about the following questions: on

your own and then with a partner What do I understand really well? How did I come to that understanding? How do I know I understand it?

Feedback : group response and discussion

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Getting Started: Teaching for Understanding

Page 3: Introducing Teaching for Understanding

MMc-Reflective Questions : What kind of a process is learning in the

above? What does understanding look like? What are the implications of this exercise for

how we teach? What are its implications for how our

students learn?

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Reflecting on this exercise

Page 4: Introducing Teaching for Understanding

Knowledge, skill and understanding are the stock in trade of education- What conception of these underwrites what happens in schools?

Knowledge is information on tap Skills are routine performances on tap But understanding calls for more than

reproduction or routine

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What is Understanding? Chap 2: TFU, Wiske (1998)

Page 5: Introducing Teaching for Understanding

“Understanding is a matter of being able to do a variety of thought-demanding things with a topic – like explaining, finding evidence and examples, generalising, applying, analogising, and representing the topic in a new way. Understanding is being able to carry out a variety of “performances” that show one’s understanding of a topic and at the same time, advance it”.

D. Perkins and T. Blythe, “Putting Understanding Up Front” in Educational Leadership, 1994.

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Putting understanding up front...

Page 6: Introducing Teaching for Understanding

Understanding is the ability to think and act flexibly with what one knows.

An understanding of a topic is a “flexible performance capability”

learning for understanding is like learning a flexible performance- learning to hold a good conversation, to improvise jazz- rather than rote learning

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Defining understanding (Chapter 2, Perkins, in Wiske, TfU: Linking

Research with Practice )

Page 7: Introducing Teaching for Understanding

Learning facts can be a crucial backdrop to learning for understanding, but learning facts is not learning for understanding

This performance view of understanding contrasts with the prominent representational/mental image view of understandings as things possessed, rather than performance capabilities

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Understanding…contd.

Page 8: Introducing Teaching for Understanding

In casual speech, phrases like “I see what you mean”, “I see the point”, “I see through you”, “I see the answer” testify to a firm link in folk psychology between perception and understanding. Therefore, understanding- as- seeing requires achieving a mental representation that captures what is to be understood.

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The Representational View

Page 9: Introducing Teaching for Understanding

Understanding lies in possession of the right mental structure or representation. Performances are part of the picture but simply in consequence of having the right representation. A flexible performance capability is a symptom. It does not constitute the understanding but simply signals possession of an appropriate image..

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Implications of representational model

Page 10: Introducing Teaching for Understanding

Understanding is seen as lying in the performance capability itself, which depending on the case may or may not be supported by representations

Understanding performances go beyond rote and routine- they challenge

They do not undermine the importance of basic knowledge and skill-we need these

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The performance view

Page 11: Introducing Teaching for Understanding

We can have a mental model of something without understanding it

A mental model is not enough for understanding simply because it does not do anything by itself

For performances that show understanding a person must operate on or with a model-must manipulate and interpret it =runnable

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Why performance over representational view?

Page 12: Introducing Teaching for Understanding

No one views acquiring a complex performance as a matter of “getting it”

Performances acquire attention, practice, refinement.

Performances involve multiple aspects that need careful and artful coordination.

Developing understanding = attaining a repertoire of complex performances

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A performance view: contd...2

Page 13: Introducing Teaching for Understanding

Attaining understanding is less like acquiring something and more like learning to act flexibly

in this model, teachers less in the role of informers and testers and more in that of facilitators or coaches. Their challenge is one of choreographing performance experiences that constantly extend understanding

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A performance view: 3

Page 14: Introducing Teaching for Understanding

Though teachers acting in the performance model may well give a lecture or grade a test, these are supportive, not central, activities.

The main agenda is arranging, supporting, and sequencing performances of understanding.

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A performance view: 4

Page 16: Introducing Teaching for Understanding

PZ Classroom, Harvard (1998) & Perrone (2000) Lessons for new teachers:

Generative Topics:

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Central to the discipline

Exciting to students and teachers

Accessible to students

Multiple connections, think points and entry points

These topics give you the big picture - the key ideas in your field around which lessons can be organised

History: Revolution English:Stereotypes Science: Evolution Business: Money

Page 17: Introducing Teaching for Understanding

Understanding Goals

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Publicly state what teachers want students to understand

State as explicit statements or open ended questions

Explicitly link to UP’s and assessment

Science: “Students will understand why some things sink and others float”

Democracy: “Students will understand the relationship between rights and responsibilities”

Page 18: Introducing Teaching for Understanding

Performances of Understanding

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Active engagement by students that develops and demonstrates understanding of one or more goals

varied, complex and often collaborative

sequenced purposefully

These challenge students’ misconceptions, stereotypes, and rigid thinking

DTS: Build a character sketch of X in a key scene, focusing on props, costume design, set design and lighting.

Page 19: Introducing Teaching for Understanding

Ongoing assessment

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Clear,public criteria tied to U Goals

Formal and informal assessment tied to each performance

Varied sources: self, peer, teachers

Indicates progress and informs planning

Any discipline: “Students brainstorm a list of questions about a particular topic, before they begin to study it. They review the list regularly and identify which questions they have answered”.

Page 20: Introducing Teaching for Understanding

“At first glance the framework seems simple and rather obvious. Five years of collaborative research have demonstrated that this framework is more subtle than it first appears. Teachers who have used the framework to structure extended enquiry about their practice have found that it stimulates them to learn more about their subject matter, their students and their assumptions about learning even as it guides them to make profound changes in the way they plan, conduct, and assess their work with students”. (M. Stone Wiske, Teaching for Understanding; Linking Research with Practice Jossey Bass 1998)

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TFU framework….

Page 21: Introducing Teaching for Understanding

The Dimensions of Disciplinary Understanding

Knowledge: ( What ?) What questions do experts ask?

What do they need to know about?

Methods: (How?) How do experts find out?

Purposes (Why?) Why do they do what they do? What is the goal?

How do experts use what they know?

Forms (How Expressed?) How do experts communicate?

What are the tools of the discipline?

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Page 22: Introducing Teaching for Understanding

Teaching for understanding

Pedagogical framework

Generative Topics: central, accessible, exciting, making multiple connections

Understanding Goals: public, interrogative, holistic and specific – the big picture

Performances of Understanding –what the students do to demonstrate and develop understanding

Ongoing assessment : continuous feedback to students

Disciplinary Framework – the Dimensions of understanding

Knowledge – conceptual frameworks of the discipline

Method – how experts think in the discipline

Purpose – why this topic is worth studying – ownership

Form – how understanding is represented

“Pedagogical content knowledge”

TfU fuses the two SoTL lens- grammar of practice

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Page 23: Introducing Teaching for Understanding

SotL steps

TfU and SoTL

TfU as sotl process : It has all the rigour of good

curriculum design and its focus on student learning

The focus is on active learning and student performance/doing to demonstrate and develop understanding

Methods of assessment provide raw data for faculty re their student learning – and for me

It helps faculty to develop a language of practice – the naming of parts

Embedding Sotl in the culture -

Developing a community of practice

Building trust and security over time

Creating opportunities for discussion and reflection at each session

Providing food for thought Aligning assessment with SoTL Providing opportunities for

teachers to publish and to gain recognition ( President’s Awards, NAIRTL grants and publications and international conferences )

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Page 24: Introducing Teaching for Understanding

Bernstein, D., Burnett, A., Goodburn, A & Savory, P. (2006). Making Teaching and Learning Visible: Course Portfolios and the Peer Review of Teaching. Bolton, MA: Anker Publishing Co.

Blythe, T. (1999) The Teaching for Understanding Guide Cross, K. P. (1996). Classroom Research: Implementing the Scholarship

of Teaching. San Francisco: Jossey- Bass. Hetland, L. (2002). Introduction to TfU video resources, Harvard: Project

Zero Classroom, 1-5. Hutchings, P. (ed.), (1998a). The Course Portfolio: How Faculty Can

Examine Their Teaching to Advance Practice and Improve Student Learning, Washington, DC: American Association for Higher Education (AAHE).

McKinney, K. (2004). The scholarship of teaching and learning: Past lessons, current challenges and future visions, in C. Wehlburg & S. Chadwick- Blossey (eds.) To Improve the Academy: Vol 22. Resources for Faculty, Instructional and Organizational Development (pp.3- 19). Bolton, MA: Anker.

McKinney, K. & Jarvis, P. (2009) Beyond lines on the CV: Faculty applications of their SoTL research. IJSoTL, Vol.3. No 1.

Shulman, L (2004) Teaching as Community Property: Essays on Higher Education

Wiske, M. (1998) Teaching for Understanding: Linking Research with Practice

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Bibliography: key TfU/SoTL texts