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INSTRUCTIONAL SKILLS Dr. Len Elovitz Associate Professor Classroom Responsibilities of the Teacher INSTRUCTION Instruction is a process of deliberate decision making ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: INSTRUCTIONAL%20SKILLS


1
INSTRUCTIONAL SKILLS
  • Dr. Len Elovitz
  • Associate Professor

2
Classroom Responsibilities of the Teacher
3
INSTRUCTION
  • Instruction is a process of deliberate decision
    making and actions that makes learning more
    probable and more predictably successful than it
    would be without teaching.
  • Madeline Hunter

4
CORRECT LEVEL OF DIFFICULTY
  • KNOWLEDGE OF PRIOR LEARNING
  • USE OF QUESTIONS
  • USE OF PRE-TESTS
  • DIAGNOSTIC TESTING

5
TEACH TO THE OBJECTIVE
  • Formulate an instructional objective
  • Teacher actions
  • Give information
  • Ask questions
  • Make specific responses
  • Design activities
  • Related vs.. Relevant

6
TEACHER ACTIONS Identify the teacher actions
reflected in the statements below with an I for
information, Q for question, A for activity and
SP for specific response 1. The Lenni Lenape
Indians lived in New Jersey. 2. No, Trenton is a
city and we are listing countries. 3. Take out a
piece of paper and write down all the states
you can think of that begin with the letter
"M". 4. What is the definition of
photosynthesis? 5. How many syllables are in the
word telegram? 6. The things you wrote in your
report show me that you understand the concept
of sequence. 7. Draw a picture of what you did on
your summer vacation.
7
8. Yes, mineral is one of the three
classifications of matter. 9. Boat could be a
correct answer if we wanted all forms of
transportation, but right now we are only
talking about land transportation. 10. Tell
your neighbor the definition of relevancy in your
own words 11. You can use the technique of
expansion in three ways Words to
sentences Sentences to paragraphs Paragraphs to
composition 12. Answer the questions at the end
of the chapter. 13. Jackson Township was named
after President Andrew Jackson. 14. There will be
10 questions on this test and you will
need space for each one.
8
Which Activity is More Relevant?
9
TO PRINT THE LETTER M
  • 1. Demonstrate formation of M on the chalkboard
  • 2. Have students color pictures beginning with
    the letter M

10
To locate all of the counties in New Jersey
  • 1. Label the counties on a map of NJ
  • 2. Explain how all of the counties were named

11
To visually discriminate a hexagon and pentagon
  1. Label hexagon and pentagon shapes on a ditto of
    assorted shapes
  2. Use a protractor to measure the angles of a
    hexagon and pentagon

12
To predict an outcome
  1. Read an incomplete story and write a concluding
    paragraph.
  2. Read a short story and write the ending in your
    own words.

13
Teaching to an Objective
  • The teacher has identified a learning she/he
    wishes to have kids learn. All behaviors of the
    teacher promote activity that leads the learner
    to achieve the objective. The teacher will make
    all teaching decisions using the criterion, "Does
    it promote the learning in my objective?"

14
Teaching to an Objective
  • Teaching to an objective means the activities in
    which student are involved relate directly to the
    learning the teacher wants the children to
    master. In addition to the activity, the
    questions the teacher asks,the way she/he
    responds to the learner, and the explanation
    she/he gives must all speak directly to the
    learning.

15
Teaching to an Objective
  • Teaching to an objective means to select a topic
    for instruction and clearly present it. This
    objective should clearly generate learning by the
    student.

16
Teaching to an Objective
  • Teaching to an objective is that part of the
    teaching process in which the teacher's actions
    (such as explanations, directions, questions,
    etc.)elicit relevant, observable student
    behavior. This student behavior should be
    relevant to or reflect the critical attributes of
    the learning.

17
Teaching to an Objective
  • The learning that takes place in a classroom is
    directly related to the activities the student
    does. Therefore, those activities should be
    closely structured and controlled by the teacher
    so everything the student does is related to a
    specific learning. When the teacher does this,
    he/she is teaching to an objective.

18
Teaching to an Objective
  • Teaching to an objective means that all
    activities used to teach the objective should be
    relevant to the objective.

19
Teaching to an Objective
  • It means all teachers actions, questions,
    explanations, input, response to learners'
    answers and planned activities will be directed
    toward the desired learning.

20
Teaching to an Objective
  • The teacher having students do 'things' which
    are directly relevant to that which the teacher
    has decided the students are to learn. This
    implies the teacher will use all kinds of input,
    questions, activities,but all these 'doings' must
    be relevant to the learning.

21
Educational Objectives
  • A goal is a long-range aim to work toward
  • An objective is statement of what the learner
    will know or be able to do as a result of the
    instruction

22
Educational Objectives
  • Curriculum Objectives Long-range, overall
    outcomes for a curriculum area, these are also
    called terminal or content objectives
  • Instructional Objective Short-term, specific
    objectives that state what the student will do
    after the instruction has taken place, these are
    also called performance or behavioral objectives.

23
  • INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES
  • IDENTIFY WHAT THE STUDENT SHOULD KNOW OR BE
    ABLE TO DO AS A RESULT OF INSTRUCTION
  • Components
  • Learning
  • Behavior
  • Conditions

24
BLOOMS TAXONOMY OF THE COGNITIVE DOMAIN
LEVEL OF COMPLEXITY 1. KNOWLEDGE RECALL,
MEMORY, FACTS 2. COMPREHENSION
UNDERSTANDING, TRANSLATION 3. APPLICATION USE
INFORMATION IN A NEW
     SITUATION 4.
ANALYSIS TAKE APART, COMPARE/CONTRAST 5.
SYNTHESIS PUT TOGETHER A NEW CREATION 6.
EVALUATION JUDGMENTS BASED ON MORE THAN

OPINIONS
25
OBJECTIVE DEVELOPMENT USING BLOOMS
TAXONOMY LEVEL VERB 1. KNOWLEDGE LIST,
LABEL, DEFINE, NAME, STATE 2. COMPREHENSION SUMM
ARIZE, EXPLAIN, DESCRIBE IN YOUR OWN
WORDS, ILLUSTRATE, PARAPHRASE, IDENTIFY 3.
APPLICATION COMPUTE, DEMONSTRATE, USE, SOLVE 4.
ANALYSIS BREAK INTO PARTS, CLARIFY,
OUTLINE, COMPARE/CONTRAST 5.
SYNTHESIS DESIGN, REARRANGE, COMPOSE,
WRITE AN ORIGINAL ENDING


6.
EVALUATION SUPPORT, DECIDE, CRITICIZE, CHOOSE
ONE AND JUSTIFY
26
SAMPLE INSTRUCTIONAL OBJECTIVES THE STUDENTS
WILL DEMONSTRATE THE ABILITY TO -IDENTIFY THE
POSITION OF THE EARTH RELATIVE TO THE SUN, THE
MOON, AND OTHER PLANETS. -DESCRIBE THE ROTATION
AND REVOLUTION OF THE EARTH AND OTHER PLANETS
AROUND THE SUN. -DEMONSTRATE HOW THE EARTHS
POSITION AND TILT OF ITS AXIS PRODUCE THE
SEASONS. -COMPARE THE POSITIONS OF THE EARTH,
MOON, AND SUN DURING A SOLAR ECLIPSE AND A LUNAR
ECLIPSE.
27
MONITOR ADJUST
  • ELICIT OVERT BEHAVIOR
  • CHECK FOR UNDERSTANDING

SIGNAL
SAMPLE
CHORAL RESPONSE
28
MONITOR ADJUST
  • INTERPRET THE BEHAVIOR
  • ACT ON INTERPRETATION

PROCEED
PRACTICE
RETEACH
QUIT
29
PRINCIPLES OF LEARNING
POWERFUL TOOLS THAT TEACHERS USE TO
ENCOURAGE STUDENTS TO
EXHIBIT BEHAVIORS THAT LEAD TO INCREASED
LEARNING RESULT FROM CONTINUOUS DETAILED
RESEARCH TEACHER DECIDES ON WHICH, WHEN AND
HOW THEY ARE USED USE MUST BE CONGRUENT WITH
STANDARDS NOT NECESSARY TO INCLUDE ALL
PRINCIPLES IN ALL LESSONS
30
Set
Active Participation
Reinforcement
PRINCIPLES OF LEARNING
Motivation
Retention
Transfer
Closure
31
Active Participation
  • Aims at keeping the mind of the learner
    focused on the objective. It involves consistent,
    relevant engagement of all learners in the lesson
    and process of learning.

32
It is the responsibility of the teacher to
actively
  • engage the brain of the learner,
  • create relevant learning and activities,
  • engage students consistently throughout the
    lesson, and
  • involve all students

33
Types of Active Participation
  • Overt activities are observable, measurable,
    elicited by the teacher, and relevant to the
    learning.
  • 2. Covert activities are not observable, not
    measurable, elicited by the teacher, relevant to
    the learning

34
Most Effective Use of Active Participation
  • puts covert and overt together
  • gives direction for covert activity
  • allows thinking time
  • followed by overt activity
  • Holds learner accountable for covert - level of
    concern

35
Active Participation
  1. Helps retention by giving immediate practice
  2. Provides overt responses which allow for
    monitoring and adjustment
  3. Elicits student behavior when teaching to an
    objective
  4. Helps to determine if level of difficulty is
    correct
  5. Establishes anticipatory set
  6. Helps establish reinforcement through repetition
  7. Gives knowledge of results for motivation

36
Indicate if the words are used to stimulate Overt
orCovert behavior
  • summarize to yourself
  • make a mental list
  • jot down the answers in your notebook
  • give some thought to
  • hold up your pencil
  • discuss in your group
  • show me 2 fingers
  • draw a picture in your mind
  • think of another example
  • whisper to your neighbor

37
ACTIONS THAT HINDER ACTIVE PARTICIPATION
  1. call a student's name first and then ask a
    question
  2. send one person to the board
  3. say "who would like to answer a question"
  4. "who can tell us"
  5. raise your hand
  6. what do you think?

38
  • round robin
  • alphabetical order in calling on students
  • call on the same people
  • answer your own questions
  • straight lecture
  • any questions?
  • silence means they've got it!
  • same routine process

39
Anticipatory Set
  • Provides focus
  • The opportunity for the mind of the learner to
    bring forward prior knowledge to current
    learning.
  • Must be relevant

40
Anticipatory Set must
  • Involve the learners in active participation
  • Draw upon prior learning
  • Relate to the new learning

41
Motivation
  • Motivation is a state of need or desire that
    activates
  • the person to do something to satisfy that need
    or
  • desire. Motivation is a state within a person. We
    as
  • teachers cannot motivate a student, but we can
  • manipulate variables in the environment which may
  • result in increased motivation. Motivation
    implies that
  • the student is no longer in passive equilibrium,
    but is
  • activated to change his behavior in order to
    achieve
  • some goal.

42
Variables of Motivation
  1. Degree of tension or concern. Each student has a
    different optimum level of tension. Too much
    tension diverts energy off task. A moderate
    amount of tension is best.
  2. Feeling tone. A moderate amount of pleasant or
    unpleasant tone should increase motivation. Too
    much will produce debilitating tension. Absence
    of feeling tone tends to decrease motivation.
    Positive reinforcement leads to positive feeling
    tone.

43
Variables of Motivation
  • 3. Interest. If teachers make topics interesting,
    student may be more motivated.
  • 4. Success. If the task is too easy, the student
    doesn't feel success If the task is too difficult
    or the student is unsuccessful motivation is
    decreased. Success and the correct degree of
    difficulty should increase motivation.

44
Variables of Motivation
  • 5. Knowledge of results. The more specific the
    feedback on performance, the more motivation
    should increase.
  • 6. Relation of activity to reward
  • a. Intrinsic motivation When the activity
    itself is rewarding doing the activity will
    always achieve the goal and motivation compounds.
  • b. Extrinsic motivation depends on, and
    changes with the specific environmental
    situation. The activity produces the reward
    rather than being the reward.

45
RETENTION
  • Retention is the preservation of a learning that
    makes recall and recognition possible and
    relearning easier.

46
VARIABLES OF RETENTION
  • A. MEANING
  • One of the most important variables
  • When material is meaningful it is learned faster
    and remembered long
  • The more meaningful the task, the easier
  • Meaning does not exist in the material - it is
    the relationship of the student's past experience
    to the material which is to be learned. The
    teacher must explain the use.
  • Learning is made more meaningful if we can
    translate it into other forms - words, charts,
    diagrams
  • Mnemonic devices

47
VARIABLES OF RETENTION
  • B. DEGREE OF ORIGINAL LEARNING
  • anything that is not learned well is rapidly
    forgotten
  • Teach well - not just "once over lightly
  • Vary examples so it's not boring
  • Vary activities
  • "When I hear, I forget
  • When I see, I remember
  • When I do, I learn!"

48
VARIABLES OF RETENTION
  • Practice
  • Involves how long, how much, how well, how often
  • For new learnings
  • a. Massive - many times as opposed to many
    examples
  • b. Close together
  • c. Short units that have meaning
  • Intensive - mind focused
  • Review learning - Distributed practice for
    longer retention
  • Practice makes perfect permanent

X
49
VARIABLES OF RETENTION
  • Feeling Tone
  • The presence of feelings, either pleasant or
    unpleasant, aids retention.
  • Positive feeling tone is a better enhancer of
    learning than negative feeling tone.
  • Caution should be taken not to overuse negative
    feeling tone because the learner may try to avoid
    that subject from there on.
  • Neutral feeling tone does not aid retention.

50
VARIABLES OF RETENTION
  • E. Transfer
  • Past learnings can transfer into the present and
    assist or interfere with learnings.
  • The more similar the learnings, the more the
    transfer.
  • Positive transfer - similarity of an old learning
    assists a new learning.
  • Negative transfer - the old learning interferes
    with the new learning.
  • The skilled teacher constantly thinks about what
    a student already knows or has experienced

51
VARIABLES OF RETENTION
  • F. Modeling
  • 1. A correct model must be presented.
  • 2. The criteria that makes the model correct
    must be
  • known before or during the learning
    experience.
  • 3. Children learn patterns of behavior by
    observing
  • adult models.

52
Reinforcement
  • THE PROCESS OF LEARNING IS ESSENTIALLY THE
    PROCESS OF CHANGING BEHAVIOR. ANYONE ENGAGED IN
    THIS PROCESS WILL SEE THE VALUE OF REINFORCEMENT
    THEORY.

53
Positive Reinforcement
  • A positive reinforcer can be anything that is
    desired or needed by a student. A positive
    reinforcer will strengthen the behavior it
    follows and make the behavior more likely to
    reoccur. (This interaction between the behavior
    and the reinforcer is positive reinforcement.)
    The positive reinforcer must follow the behavior
    IMMEDIATELY to result in positive reinforcement

54
Positive Reinforcement
  • Whenever children behave in a way that we want
    them to continue, immediate positive
    reinforcement will increase the likelihood that
    they will keep on doing it.

55
Negative Reinforcement
  • A negative reinforcer can be anything unpleasant
    or not desired by the student. A negative
    reinforcer weakens the response it immediately
    follows. This can happen in two ways
  • 1. Negative reinforcement strengthens the
    behavior that takes away the negative reinforcer.
  • 2. Negative reinforcement suppresses the behavior
    that brought on the negative reinforcer.

56
Extinction
  • Nothing happening (neither positive or negative
    reinforcement) simply ignoring a behavior is the
    action of a technique called extinction. The
    principle here is that a behavior is extinguished
    by withholding reinforcement. A person will not
    continue a behavior that they get nothing out of.

57
Reinforcement
  • Ignoring a behavior helps a child forget it
  • Negative reinforcement helps a child remember
    what not to do
  • Positive reinforcement helps a child to know what
    is continually desired

58
Closure
  • Closure is a process which allows the mind of
    the learners to summarize for themselves, their
    perceptions of what has been learned. It is not
    an attempt for mastery, rather it is time for the
    student to study the various pieces of a
    learning, though the puzzle may not fit together
    as yet. The entire process of closure must be
    worked through by the student..., the teacher
    just provides the time and means to do this.
  • It is not summarizing by the teacher.

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