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Teaching Strategies for Successful Learning

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The how in ensuring that the objectives of a learning situation are achieved by ... (Schiller & Phipps, 2002) Characteristics learning needs of the young child. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Teaching Strategies for Successful Learning


1
Teaching Strategies for Successful Learning
  • Presenter Fay Dixon
  • (Shortwood Teachers
    College)
  • April 11, 2007

2
Introduction
  • In this presentation we will address the
    following
  • 1. Teaching strategies and learning
  • 2. Characteristics of 3-5 year olds
  • 3. Learning needs
  • 4.The framework
  • 5. Implementation/management of strategies

3
Teaching Strategies????
  • The how in ensuring that the objectives of a
    learning situation are achieved by the learners.
  • It entails the methods/procedures, techniques,
    activities, media/materials eg. problem solving,
    discovery, gaming etc.

4
Problem Solving
  • Steps in problem solving
  • I D E A L
  • What activities for the children?
  • Case in story form that is to be
    solved.
  • What technique? Eg. Cueing/hints
  • What media for solving the case? Manipulatives

5
3-5 year olds ? ?
  • Are developing in several areas or domains
    simultaneously and each of these areas of
    development is equally important to them.
  • Not only are the developmental domains
    equally important, but are interwoven. It is said
    that the social-emotional well-being of the child
    fuels the intellect. Early brain development
    research states that social-emotional development
    and cognitive development walk hand in hand.
  • (Schiller Phipps, 2002)

6
Characteristics learning needs of the young child.
  • Young children learn in concrete experiential
    ways rather than abstract process
  • Young children naturally integrate new
    information into their previous experiences
  • Young children learn best when they can go at
    their own pace.

7
The framework???
  • The curriculum and the contextual factors such
    as
  • Parents
  • Community
  • School -resources, conditions, socio-political
    issues

8
Features of the curriculum
  • It is based on principles of hands-on, concrete
    experiences and active learning
  • It builds new experiences upon existing knowledge
    and gradually extends that knowledge
  • It provides a wide range of activities and
    experiences which can accommodate differences in
    childrens style and pace of learning.

9
Effective teaching strategies
  • Storytelling
  • Questioning
  • Discussion
  • Problem solving
  • Gaming
  • Peer coaching
  • Experimenting
  • Simulation

10
Effective techniques
  • Acknowledge
  • Give positive attention that tells the child you
    notice what he or she did, for example
  • (You wrote your name on your picture Thanks
    for your help Dawn).

11
Validate
  • Offer comments or non verbal actions that promote
    the childs persistence and effort.
  • (This is a hard one, but you are all coming out
    with lots of ideas
  • Joshs story tells us just what the cat looks
    like -- I can really picture him )
  • Rather than giving the child evaluative
    praise (Good job, Josh)

12
Give Specific Feedback
  • Offer specific rather than general comments on
    the childs performance
  • (Thats a d, Pam, not a b- It looks like a
    b but its turned the other way, see?).

13
Model
  • Display for children a skill or desirable way of
    behaving.
  • (whispering when you want the children to lower
    their own voices modeling cooperation and
    problem solving by saying,
  • You both want the bucket, so lets search
    together for something else that would work in
    the sand).

14
Demonstrate
  • Show the correct way to perform a procedure that
    needs to be done in a certain way
  • (e.g., how to use a hammer or wash ones hands
    thoroughly).

15
Create or add Challenge
  • Generate a problem or add difficulty to a task or
    step so that it is a bit beyond what children
    have already mastered
  • (e.g., when the children are easily able to throw
    bean bags through a large hole in a box, rotating
    the box offering a smaller hole instead of
    having children just observe the outcome of
    mixing two substances, ask them to predict-
  • What do you think will happen when?).

16
Give a cue, hint, or other assistance
  • Help children to work on the edge of their
    current competence
  • (e.g., initially labeling work storage areas
    with both picture and print labels
  • the pictures to be removed later
  • helping two quarrelling children through the
    steps of conflict resolution until they can work
    through conflict on their own).

17
Provide Information
  • Directly give children facts
  • (Bird makes nests like this one to live in),
  • verbal labels
  • (This is a chair), and other information.

18
Give Direction
  • Provide instructions for childrens action or
    behaviour
  • (Move the blocks to the top of the table" "
    Pour very slowly so we dont lose any of the
    sand).

19
Example
  • Julene, Suzette, Diane and Joseph are in the home
    centre, Mrs. Long (the teacher) joins their play.
    Choosing a theme that she knows these children
    have experienced birthdays- she enters the
    centre and models the role of the birthday
    person. Hi, Im planning to have a party for my
    birthday. I wondered if you could help me?

20
  • The children quickly become interested and
    gather around. Mrs. Long sits at the table. What
    will we need for my party? she asks to prompt
    their language interaction. A cake! Balloons!
    Presents! they reply.

21
  • Whom shall we invite? she asks. The children
    start shouting out names, and Mrs. Long says, I
    cant remember all those names. We need to make a
    list. She creates a challenge one she knows
    will vary with the individual child by asking,
    Who can write their name on a list ?
  • Paper for the list is found, and the children
    begin to take turns

22
  • writing their name or the name of a
  • friend. For Suzette , Mrs. Long gives
  • assistance in the form of name cards the
  • child can copy. For Joseph, she
  • demonstrates how to make the first
  • letter of his name. For Julene, who can
  • write at least some letters of her name on
  • her own, she adds more challenge. What
  • comes after your J? she asks Julene. What letter
    do you think your friend
  • Daves name starts with? as the children
  • write, Mrs. Long acknowledges and
  • validates their efforts.

23
  • You made an N, she tells Julene.
  • I know youve been practicing that letter every
    day.
  • When the list is made, Mrs. Long adds some
    mathematics to the learning experience.
  • We have a long list of people to invite, but
    dont know if we have enough plates for all these
    people. How can we find out? The children begin
    to count the people on their list and the
    plates in the cupboard.

24
  • Sometimes a child gets stuck, at a loss for the
    next number. Carol supplies the appropriate
    counting word or several, as needed that is,
    she provides information

25
  • These are some of the teaching strategies and
    techniques that are useful for successful
    learning.

26
  • CONTINUE THE
  • EXPLORATION
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