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Teaching English to Young Learners

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Teaching English to Young Learners How children learn & develop Week-2 Jerom Bruner Discovery learning Jerom Bruner Discovery learning Applying Piaget's Theory in the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Teaching English to Young Learners


1
Teaching English to Young Learners
  • How children learn develop
  • Week-2

2
Outline
  • An Overview of Child Development
  • Why Studying Development Is Important
  • Processes and Periods
  • Cognitive Development
  • The Brain
  • Piagets Theory
  • Vygotskys Theory
  • Bruner

3
Outline, continued
  • Language Development
  • What Is Language?
  • Biological and Environmental Influences
  • How Language Develops

4
Cognitive and Language Development
An Overview of Child Development
Processes and Periods
Why Studying Development Is Important
5
An Overview of Child Development
  • Development The pattern of biological,
    cognitive, and socioemotional changes that begins
    at conception and continues through the life span.

6
An Overview of Child Development Developmental
Processes
  • Biological processes and genetic inheritance
  • Development of the brain Gains in height
    and weight Changes in motor skills Pubertys
    hormonal changes
  • Cognitive processes Changes in the childs
    thinking Intelligence Language acquisition

7
An Overview of Child Development Developmental
Processes
  • Socioemotional processes Changes in the
    childs relationship with other people
    Changes in personality

8
Cognitive and Language Development
Cognitive Development
Vygotskys Theory
The Brain
Piagets Theory
9
Cognitive Development The Brain
  • Brain Growth in Childhood
  • Myelination The process in which cells in the
    brain and the nervous system are covered with an
    insulating layer of fat cells.
  • Synaptic connections The growth and pruning of
    connections between neurons in the visual,
    auditory, and prefrontal cortex is critical to
    the functioning of learning, memory, and
    reasoning.

10
Cognitive Development The Brain
  • Brain Lateralization is the specialization of
    functions in one hemisphere of the brain or the
    other.

Verbal Processing In most individuals, speech
and grammar are localized in the left
hemisphere.
Nonverbal Processing Spatial
perception, Visual recognition, and emotion are
localized in the right hemisphere.
11
Cognitive DevelopmentPiagets Theory
  • Piagets Four Stages
  • Cognition unfolds in a sequence of four stages.
  • Each is age-related and distinctive.
  • Each stage is discontinuous from and more
    advanced than another.

12
Piagets Theory
He was a child prodigy who published his first
article in a refereed journal at the age of 11.
13
Piagets Theory
  • Piaget identified 4 stages of development as a
    child grows,
  • the sensorimotor stage
  • the preoperational stage
  • the concrete operational stage
  • the formal operational stage.

14
Piaget's Four Stages of Development
Stage Age Characteristics
Sensorimotor 0-2 years Begins to make use of imitation, memory, and thought. Begins to recognize that objects do not cease to exist when they are hidden. Moves from reflex actions to goal-directed activity
15
Piaget's Four Stages of Development
Stage Age Characteristics
Preoperational 2-7 years Gradual language development and ability to think in symbolic form. Able to think operations through logically in one direction. Has difficulty seeing another person's point of view.
16
Piaget's Four Stages of Development
Stage Age Characteristics
Concrete Operational 7-11 years Able to solve concrete (hands-on) problems in logical fashion. Understands laws of conservation and is able to classify and seriate. Understands reversibility.
17
Piaget's Four Stages of Development
Stage Age Characteristics
Formal Operational 11-15 years Able to solve abstract problems in logical fashion. Thinking becomes more scientific. Develops concerns about social issues, identity.
18
The Sensorimotor Stage 0-2 Years
  • Between one and four months, the child works on
    primary circular reactions just an action of
    his own which serves as a stimulus to which it
    responds with the same action
  • (reflex actions)
    (goal-directed activity)
  • For example, the baby may suck her thumb.  That
    feels good, so she sucks some more...   

19
The Sensorimotor Stage 0-2 Years
  • Between four and 12 months, the infant turns to
    secondary circular reactions which involve an
    act that extends out to the environment 
  • For example, She may squeeze a rubber duckie.  It
    goes quack.  Thats great, so do it again, and
    again, and again. 

20
The Sensorimotor Stage 0-2 Years
  • Between 12 months and 24 months, the child works
    on tertiary circular reactions.  They consist
    of the same making interesting things last
    cycle, except with constant variation.
  • For example, I hit the drum with the stick --
    rat-tat-tat-tat.  I hit the table with the stick
    -- clunk-clunk.  I hit daddy with the stick --
    ouch-ouch .
  • It is best seen during feeding time, when
    discovering new and interesting ways of throwing
    your spoon, dish, and food.

21
Key Piagetian terms
  • Assimilation
  • Fitting new information into existing schemes.
  • For example, an infant knows how to grab his
    favorite rattle and thrust it into his
    mouth. When he comes across some other object --
    say daddys expensive watch he easily learns to
    transfer his grab and thrust schema to the new
    object.  This is what Piaget called assimilation,
    specifically assimilating a new object into an
    old schema.

22
Key Piagetian terms
  • Accommodation
  • Altering existing schemes or creating new ones
    in response to new information.
  • For ExampleWhen our infant comes across another
    object again -- say a beach ball -- he will try
    his old schema of grab and thrust. 
  • This is called accommodation, specifically
    accomodating an old schema to a new object.

23
Key Piagetian terms
  • Adaptation
  • Adjustment to the environment.
  • Assimilation and accommodation are the two sides
    of adaptation, Piagets term for what most of
    us would call learning. 
  • He saw it as a fundamentally biological process. 

24
Key Piagetian terms
  • Equilibrium
  • Search for mental balance between cognitive
    schemes and information from the environment.
  • According to Piaget, they are directed at a
    balance between the structure of the mind and the
    environment just like a pendulum swinging between
    two and he call this balance equilibrium.

25
Key Piagetian terms
  • Egocentrism
  • The assumption that others experience the world
    in the same manner as you do.
  • For Example the child is quite egocentric during
    the pre-operational stage (2-7), that is, he sees
    things pretty much from one point of view  his
    own!  She may hold up a picture so only she can
    see it and expect you to see it too.

26
Key Piagetian terms
  • Decentration
  • Focusing on more than one aspect at a time.
  • Younger children center on one aspect of any
    problem or communication at a time. 
  • For example, Since the milk in the tall skinny
    glass goes up much higher, she is likely to
    assume that there is more milk in that one than
    in the short fat glass, even though there is far
    more in the latter.

27
Key Piagetian terms
  • Reversibility
  • Thinking backward from the end to the beginning.
  • For example If I take a ball of clay and roll
    it into a long thin rod, or even split it into
    ten little pieces, the child knows that there is
    still the same amount of clay. 

28
Key Piagetian terms
  • Conservation
  • Conservation refers to the idea that a quantity
    remains the same despite changes in appearance. 
  • If you show a child four marbles in a row, then
    spread them out, the preoperational child will
    focus on the spread, and tend to believe that
    there are now more marbles than before.

29
Key Piagetian terms
  • Classification Seriation
  • Classification
  • Grouping objects into categories.
  • Seriation
  • Arranging objects in sequential order according
    to one aspect like size, weight, volume.

30
Key Piagetian terms
  • Operations
  • Actions carried out by thinking them through
    instead of actually performing the actions.
  • Piaget uses this term frequently while
    explaining his theories.

31
CONCLUSIONThe principle goal of education is
to create men and woman who are capable of doing
new things, not simply repeating what other
generations have done. Jean Piaget
?
?
32
Applying Piaget's Theory in the Primary Classroom
  • Preoperational Stage
  • Use concrete props and visual aids whenever
    possible.
  • 2. Make instructions relatively short, using
    actions as well as words.

33
Applying Piaget's Theory in the Primary Classroom
  • 3. Do not expect the students to be consistently
    to see the world from someone else's point of
    view.
  • 4. Be sensitive to the possibility that students
    may have different meanings for the same word or
    different words for the same meaning. Students
    may also expect everyone to understand words they
    have invented.

34
Applying Piaget's Theory in the Primary Classroom
  • 5. Give children a great deal of hands-on
    practice with the skills that serve as building
    blocks for more complex skills like reading
    comprehension.
  • 6. Provide a wide range of experiences in order
    to build a foundation for concept learning and
    language.

35
Applying Piaget's Theory in the Primary Classroom
  • Concrete Operational Stage
  • Continue to use concrete props and visual aids,
    especially when dealing with sophisticated
    material.
  • 2. Give students the opportunity to manipulate
    and test objects.

36
Applying Piaget's Theory in the Primary Classroom
  • 3. Make sure presentations and readings are brief
    and are well organized.
  • 4. Use familiar examples to explain more complex
    ideas.

37
Applying Piaget's Theory in the Primary Classroom
  • 5. Give opportunities to classify and group
    objects and ideas on increasingly complex levels.
  • 6. Present problems that require logical,
    analytical thinking.

38
  • Lev Semenovich Vygotsky (1896-1934)
  • Developed sociocultural approach an attempt to
    understand how social and cultural influences
    affect childrens development p. 4
  • Troika of Vygotskian school of thought
    Vygotsky, A.R. Luria and A.N. Leontev
  • Influenced by Marxist ideals created Marxist
    theory of psych. and child development

39
Vygotskys Basic Concepts
  • Learning is the internalization of tools and
  • occurs most naturally and efficiently when we
    participate in authentic, social activities.
  • Main difference the importance he gives to
    language other people in the childs world.
  • Though his central focus is on the society, he
    did not neglect the individual individual
    cognitive development

40
Vygotskys Basic Concepts
  • Cultures create mental tools which transform our
    mental work just like physical tools transform
    our physical work.
  • As we internalize these tools we become smarter
    (i.e., we develop higher psychological
    processes).
  • Language is the mother of all mental tools.

41
The Importance of Language
  • All higher mental functions--those that are
    unique to human beings--are initially created
    through collaborative activity only later do
    they become internal mental processes.
  • Mediation through Signs
  • Vygotskys views Signs are critical link between
    social and psychological planes of functioning.
  • Signs are socially generated, not biologically
    given or individually constructed.
  • Internalization
  • A.k.a. appropriation (Rogoff) children choose
    from cultural tools encountered during social
    collaboration to fit goals.

42
Mediated Activity
Signs
Tools
(Help us do mental work--So I call them mental
tools)
(Help us do physical work)
43
More Basic Concepts (Internalization)
  • These tools help us stay in the Zone of Proximal
    Development (ZPD).
  • The ZPD
  • The distance between the actual developmental
    level as determined by independent problem
    solving and the level of potential development as
    determined through problem solving under adult
    guidance or in collaboration with more capable
    peers. p.26
  • The child is an active learner in a world full of
    other people
  • Adults mediate the world for children to make
    it accessible
  • Examples?

44
Tasks I cannot do even with help
ZPD
Tasks I can do only with help
Tasks I can do all by myself
45
  • Learning to do things learning to think are
    both helped by interacting with an adult.
  • child does things in social context then
    gradually shifts away from reliance on others to
    independent action thinking
  • This shift from thinking aloud to thinking inside
    is called internalisation

46
Vygotsky in a Nutshell
  • The mental tools of our culture are what make us
    smart. We acquire these mental tools best
    through meaningful participation in authentic,
    social activities. The ZPD describes how we
    learn from others as we participate in social
    activity.
  • Overall, learning is a process of enculturation.
  • Human learning presupposes a specific social
    nature and a process by which children grow into
    the intellectual life of those around them
    (Vygotsky, Mind in Society, p. 88)

47
Implications
  • ?????

48
Jerom Bruner
  • Discovery learning

49
What is learning?
  • an active, social process in which students
    construct new ideas or concepts based on their
    current knowledge.
  • children learn by discovery he/she is a problem
    solver who interacts with the environment testing
    hypotheses and developing generalizations.
  • learning is a continual process.

50
Stages of learning
  • Learning occurs in three stages
  • Enactive- in which children need to experience
    the concrete (manipulating objects in their
    hands, touching a real dog) in order to
    understand.
  • Iconic- students are able to represent materials
    graphically or mentally (they can do basic
    addition problems in their heads)
  • Symbolic- students are able to use logic, higher
    order thinking skills and symbol systems
    (formulas, such as f--ma and understand
    statements like "too many cooks spoil the broth")

51
How are skills and knowledge acquired?
  • Not acquired gradually but in a staircase pattern
    which consists of spurts and rests.
  • Spurts are caused by certain concepts "clicking",
    being understood.
  • These "clicks" have to be mastered before others
    are acquired, before there is movement to the
    next step.
  • These steps are not linked to age but more toward
    environment.
  • Environments can slow down the sequence or speed
    it up

52
Scaffolding routines
  • Language is the most important tool for cognitive
    growth
  • He investigated how adults use language to
    mediate the world for children help them solve
    the problems

53
Parents scaffold the task to
  • make the child interested in,
  • simplify the task,
  • keep the child on track towards completing the
    task,
  • show other ways of doing,
  • control childs frustration,
  • demonstrate an idealised version

54
Good Scaffolding
  • tuned to the needs of thew child,
  • adjusted as the child become more competent

55
The process of education Four key themes
  1. Curiosity and Uncertainty
  2. Structure of Knowledge
  3. Sequencing
  4. Motivation

56
IMPLICATIONS
  • ?
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