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CONTEXTUAL TEACHING AND LEARNING

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Title: CONTEXTUAL TEACHING AND LEARNING


1
CONTEXTUAL TEACHING AND LEARNING
  • Muchlas Yusak

2
CTL ASSUMPTIONS
  • Teaching and learning are interactional
    processes.
  • Individual learners must decide to learn and to
    engage in the attentional, intellectual, and
    emotional processes needed to do so.
  • Teaching isnt happening if learning is not
    occurring.
  • Learning is a developmental process that takes
    place throughout life.

3
SIX INTERRELATED STRATEGIES
  • (Who are the learners?)
  • Help students become self-regulated learners
    capable of high achievement.
  • Address the diversity of students unique skills,
    interests, and cultural backgrounds so that they
    feel valued and learn respect for others.

4
SIX INTERRELATED STRATEGIES
  • (Where does learning take place?)
  • Make learning take place in many sites multiple
    contexts not just in the classroom. Museums,
    parks, government offices, and health-care
    facilities are just a few of the places where
    learning can occur in the community.

5
SIX INTERRELATED STRATEGIES
  • (How does learning take place?)
  • Make the students learn from real world problems.
  • Encourage the students to work in interdependent
    learning groups.
  • Give authentic assessment.

6
1. SELF-REGULATED LEARNING
  • Teach students to take responsibility for their
    own learning. As adults, they will be expected to
    acquire knowledge and skills on their own.
  • Self-regulated learners have both academic
    learning skills and skills in self-control that
    help them to learn more easily.
  • Self-regulated learners have the skill and the
    will to know.

7
SELF-REGULATED LEARNERS THE
SKILL THE WILL TO KNOW
8
SELF-REGULATED LEARNERS KNOWLEDGE
  • Knowledge about
  • themselves
  • the subject
  • the task at hand
  • learning strategies
  • the contexts in which the students will apply
    their learning

9
SELF-REGULATED LEARNERS KNOWLEDGE
  • The students shall become expert learners who
    know how they learn best
  • their preferred learning styles
  • what is hard or easy for them to learn
  • how to use their strength to learn.
  • They approach different learning tasks in
    different ways.

10
SELF-REGULATED LEARNERS KNOWLEDGE
  • They know a range of specific learning tactics
    networking, mapping, self-questioning, taking
    notes, using imagery, hypothesizing, etc.
  • They understand how to match the most effective
    learning tactic to the task .
  • They think about the contexts in which they will
    apply their knowledge and when and where they
    might use it again in the future.

11
SELF-REGULATED LEARNERS MOTIVATION
  • Self-regulated learners are motivated to learn.
  • School assignments are interesting to them
    because they value learning.
  • They know why they are studying and see
    themselves as being in control of their actions
    and choices.
  • Even if they are not intrinsically motivated by
    their school activities, they still attempt to
    derive a benefit from what they are learning.

12
SELF-REGULATED LEARNERS SELF-DISCIPLINE
  • Self-regulated learners are disciplined.
  • They know how to avoid or deal with distractions
    so that they are not distracted.
  • They know what to do if they feel unmotivated or
    sleepy. In other words, they persist and keep
    themselves on task.

13
Encouraging the Students to Become
Self-Regulated Learners
  • Teach the students specific learning tactics
  • taking notes networking
  • mapping self-questioning
  • using imagery hypothesizing
  • identifying reasons for actions
  • analyzing similarities and differences
  • Teach the students how to compare their own
    performance to expert models.

14
Improving students level of motivation their
self-discipline by
  • Tying instruction to students backgrounds and
    experiences.
  • Encouraging students to set goals.
  • Providing opportunities for problem-solving,
    decision-making, and cooperative learning.
  • Giving options in assignments.
  • Teaching study skills.

15
Improving students level of motivation their
self-discipline by
  • Grading students progress.
  • Allowing students to progress at their own rate.
  • Developing leadership opportunities for all
    students.
  • Teaching students to monitor and evaluate their
    own progress and to correct their learning
    strategies as needed.

16
Helping students become self-regulated learners
involves coordinating
  • knowledge about child development in general
  • knowledge of the particular childs development
    and progress, and
  • knowledge of strategies to help children

17
2. Teaching and Learning in Diverse Contexts
  • All students can learn, regardless of race,
    ethnicity, gender, socioeconomic status, family
    background, or initial level of (dis)ability and
    knowledge.
  • Children usually learn best in classroom
    communities that reflect diversity.
  • Students often learn because of diversity, rather
    than in spite of diversity.

18
2. Teaching and Learning in Diverse Contexts
  • Plan instruction in relation to the diverse
    beliefs, values, skills, and experiences that
    students bring to class.
  • These prior experiences, and the values and
    knowledge each student has constructed from them
    are the very foundation and mental context for
    future learning.

19
2. Teaching and Learning in Diverse Contexts
  • Encourage each of the students to build on prior
    knowledge and to make meaningful connection
    between their own knowledge and values and the
    material to be learned.
  • Offer the students a variety of ways to learn and
    to demonstrate their learning.
  • Diversity is a valuable resource for the learning
    of all participants in the classroom community,
    including the teacher.

20
2. Teaching and Learning in Diverse Contexts
  • Bring diverse elements and members of the outside
    community into the classroom and to take students
    out of the classroom into a variety of community
    settings for many of their learning activities.
  • Value and accommodate students individual
    qualities and backgrounds
  • Let students develop at a rate and along paths
    that are right for them.

21
2. Teaching and Learning in Diverse Contexts
  • Because students work together to achieve real
    goals with others who are quite different from
    themselves, they learn to understand and value
    different viewpoints and abilities and to
    collaborate effectively with people who have
    ideas and talents different from their own.

22
2. Teaching and Learning in Diverse Contexts
  • Students have a greater chance of retaining what
    they have learned because
  • the teacher connect learning to students lives
    in the community
  • the students are encouraged to set and pursue
    personal goals in their learning

23
2. Teaching and Learning in Diverse Contexts
  • Employ an array of strategies for individualizing
    students work.
  • Have very good interviewing techniques.
  • Get students to talk with you about their
    background and their interests.
  • Invite students to incorporate these interests
    in the projects they choose.
  • Consider the students past participation in
    projects.
  • Confer with past teachers to find out if there
    were problems with maturity.

24
3. Teaching and Learning in Multiple Contexts
  • Students retain higher-level knowledge and skills
    longer when their learning experiences are framed
    by contexts that are as close to real life as
    possible.
  • Learning is situated in particular physical and
    social contexts.
  • Knowledge is inseparable from the contexts and
    activities within which it develops.

25
3. Teaching and Learning in Multiple Contexts
  • How and where the person learns a particular set
    of knowledge and skills are fundamental to what
    the student learns.
  • Students make sense of new information, given
    their internal mindsets, by relating it to their
    past social, cultural, and physical experiences.

26
3. Teaching and Learning in Multiple Contexts
  • Learning occurs naturally in a variety of
    contexts, both inside and outside the school.
  • Before, during, and after the school day, as well
    as before and after the school year, students are
    continually learning.
  • The contexts may be home, community, or
    workplace.
  • Some contexts may be less tangible, such as
    cyberspace and the imagination.

27
3. Teaching and Learning in Multiple Contexts
  • Use as many different contexts as possible
    because they offer meaningful learning sites
    where students can engage in authentic tasks.
  • Authentic tasks are those that resemble real-life
    activities.
  • Involve the students in a variety of learning
    experiences outside of the classroom.

28
4. Problem-Based Learning
  • Specific touchstone teaching and learning
    events need to be present in problem-based
    learning. Touchstone events include
  • Engagement. Learners prepare to be self-directed,
    collaborative problem-solvers and encounter a
    situation that invites them to define one or more
    problems and to propose hunches, actions, and so
    forth.

29
4. Problem-Based Learning
  • Inquiry and Investigation. Learners explore a
    variety of ways of explaining events and their
    implications they gather and share information.
  • Performance. Learners present their findings.
  • Debriefing. Learners examine costs and benefits
    of the solutions generated and reflect on the
    effectiveness of their problem-solving approach.

30
4. Problem-Based Learning
  • Employ instructional techniques that raise
    questions, issues, and challenges or present
    difficulties that are in need of a solution.
  • Activities are organized around solving problems
    in context in order to increase students
    learning of subject matter.

31
4. Problem-Based Learning
  • Generating solutions to problems is complex,
    requiring students to
  • Use critical thinking skills and a systematic
    approach to inquiry.
  • Draw on multiple content areas.
  • Address a series of questions of different types.
  • Acquire new skills and knowledge.
  • Apply, analyze, synthesize, transfer, and
    evaluate old skills and knowledge in new ways.

32
4. Problem-Based Learning
  • Meaningful solutions requires a significant
    amount of time and should not be relegated to a
    brief encounter with the issue or problem.
  • Focus on worthwhile problems that are relevant to
    students families, school experiences, workplace
    activities, and community issues.

33
4. Problem-Based Learning
  • These types of problems hold greater intrinsic
    motivation for students and serve as the catalyst
    for engaging in inquiry that promotes the
    learning of new knowledge and skills, while
    generating heightened understanding of specific
    content.
  • Support student-centered instructional activities
    to set expectations for students that encourage
    them to define and research their own problems
    collaboratively with a teacher or other
    practicing professional.

34
4. Problem-Based Learning
  • Thus students experience the messiness of
    ill-structured situations that are typical in
    real world environments.
  • Design authentic assessments to allow students to
    demonstrate their ability to apply and transfer
    these new or enhanced skills, knowledge, and
    understandings to multiple situations.

35
5. Interdependent Learning Groups
  • Divide students into work groups on a regular
    basis.
  • Learning is a social process.
  • Learning can be enhanced when the learner has
    opportunities to interact with others about
    instructional activities.
  • Structure schools as democratic learning
    communities.
  • Use different kinds of learning groups.

36
Cooperative Learning a particular type of
interdependent learning groups
  • Five elements define true collaborative-learning
    groups
  • Face-to-face interaction
  • Positive interdependence
  • Individual accountability
  • Collaborative skills
  • Group processing

37
Cooperative Learning a particular type of
interdependent learning groups
  • Students interact face-to-face rather than across
    the classroom.
  • Group members need each other for support,
    explanations, and guidance.
  • Even though group members work together, hold
    them individually accountable for learning.

38
Cooperative Learning a particular type of
interdependent learning groups
  • Teach the students collaborative skills
  • giving and receiving feedback,
  • reaching consensus,
  • involving others.
  • Students practice collaboration before starting a
    new learning task.
  • Teach the students how to monitor group processes
    and relationship to make sure the group is
    working effectively.

39
Cooperative Learning a particular type of
interdependent learning groups
  • Learning environments that encourage social
    interactions and respect diverse ideas encourage
    flexible thinking and social competence.
  • In interactive and collaborative learning
    contexts, students have opportunities to adopt
    various perspectives and think reflectively in
    ways that foster social and moral development and
    self-esteem.
  • Learning groups can help students feel safe about
    sharing their ideas an actively participating in
    the learning process.

40
Cooperative Learning a particular type of
interdependent learning groups
  • Help each student to develop his or her own
    approach to the project, so that each persons
    contribution is clearly identifiable.
  • Make sure that students get credit for the work
    that they do.
  • It helps to identify the less mature students as
    well as the students who give far more than a
    teacher might reasonably expect.

41
How the Groups Get Chosen
  • Who is interested in a particular topic
  • Get the students working with new people.
  • Dont let them become too social.
  • Keep social cliques from getting in the way of
    the learning we share.

42
6. Authentic Assessment
  • Authenticity in learning is based on the premise
    that its demonstration must be through
    experiences with and performance in the real
    world.
  • For learning to have personal value, to generate
    interest, and to produce functional knowledge and
    skills, the act of learning must be in the
    context of and directly relevant to the
    knowledge, skills, and performances expected in
    the real world.

43
6. Authentic Assessment
  • To gauge ones performance authentically is to
    have both oneself and the group examine the
    process of learning through reflection, feedback,
    and redirection of performance.
  • Authentic assessment can best be distinguished
    from traditional modes of education assessment by
    qualities that foster formative development of
    teaching and learning processes.

44
6. Authentic Assessment
  • Qualities that foster formative development of
    teaching and learning processes (authentic
    assessment) include
  • Using assessment tasks that are real instances
    of extended criterion performances of actual
    learning goals.
  • Involving students in in-depth situations in
    which they develop and habitually solve problems
    and employ higher-order thinking.

45
6. Authentic Assessment
  • Featuring collaboration between students and
    teachers to determine meaning and to produce
    knowledge.
  • Including multiple opportunities for students to
    learn and practice the desired outcomes, along
    with multiple opportunities for feedback and
    reflection.
  • Directing students toward producing discourse,
    products, and performances that they value beyond
    school success

46
6. Authentic Assessment
  • Using rubrics and other criteria checklists at
    the core of authentic assessment as standards to
    improve learning and teaching.
  • Drawing on multiple sources of information over
    time and in multiple contexts, employing
    reflective use of journals, reflective essay
    writing, portfolios, applied performance
    exhibits, work samples, peer mirroring, action
    research, case studies, checklists, and the like.

47
6. Authentic Assessment
  • Sampling the actual integration of knowledge,
    skills, and dispositions desired of teachers as
    they are used in multiple kinds of pedagogical
    practice contexts.

48
Report Card
  • The report card for every student is really a
    qualitative assessment.
  • Each student fills out parts of his/her own
    report card, listing goals and accumulated
    evidence of achievement.
  • Add comments about this evidence.
  • Fill out a rubric on the achievement of the
    goals, as well as your perspective on the
    appropriateness of the goals each student chooses.

49
Report Card
  • The report card is cumulative in that, each term,
    the teacher and students add new goals and
    comments. This helps parents see their childrens
    progress throughout the year.
  • Assess on many levels
  • Think about each of the subject areas and tease
    them out from cross-curricular approach in order
    to make sure students are developing
    competencies.
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