Saturday, October 19, 2013

Beyond Learning Styles


Hi all,
Hope you are feeling refreshed and relaxed after your vacation. This is a very short food for thought for this week. I have selected two articles on different topics, the first is short and from my weekly Annie Murphy Paul blog update about learning styles and the second is an article on how we maintain focus in our classrooms when we introduce increased amounts of technology.

Here is the survey that I sent out at the end of last week, if you have time and are able and the inclination to complete this survey please follow the link below:


Hope you enjoy the articles and you weekend,

Yours
Adrian

 Beyond learning styles

Whenever I speak to audiences about the science of learning, as I’ve been doing a lot this fall, one topic always comes up in the Q&A sessions that follow my talk: learning styles. Learning styles—the notion that each student has a particular mode by which he or she learns best, whether it’s visual, auditory or some other sense—is enormously popular. It’s also been thoroughly debunked.”

The scientific research on learning styles is “so weak and unconvincing,” concluded a group of distinguished psychologists in a 2008 review, that it is not possible “to justify incorporating learning-styles assessments into general educational practice.” A 2010 article was even more blunt: “There is no credible evidence that learning styles exist,” wrote University of Virginia cognitive scientist Daniel Willingham and co-author Cedar Riener. While students do have preferences about how they learn, the evidence shows they absorb information just as well whether or not they encounter it in their preferred mode.

This doesn’t mean, however, that teachers and parents should present material to be learned in just one fashion. All learners benefit when information is put forth in diverse ways that engage a multitude of the senses. Take, for example, a program that teaches math using music. At Hoover Elementary School in Northern California, a group of third-graders learned to connect the numerical representation of fractions with the value of musical notes, such as half-notes and eighth notes. Fractions are notoriously difficult for young students to grasp, and a failure to catch on early can hobble their performance in math into middle and high school. Clapping, drumming and chanting gave these pupils another avenue through which to understand the concept.

Called “Academic Music,” the program was designed by San Francisco State education professor Susan Courey and three colleagues. Courey recently
reported on the results of Academic Music in the journal Educational Studies in Mathematics. After six weeks of music-based teaching, students scored 50 percent higher on a fractions test than students in the same school who attended conventional math classes. Children who started out with less fraction knowledge responded well to the musical instruction, Courey writes, “and produced post-test scores similar to their higher achieving peers.”

The lesson here: The “learning style” that teachers and parents should focus on is the universal learning style of the human mind, and two characteristics of it in particular.

First, students benefit from encountering information in multiple forms. They learn more, for example, from flashcards that incorporate both text and images—charts, graphs, etc.—than from cards that display text alone.

Second, students’ interest is kept alive by novelty and variety, so regularly turning away from textbooks and blackboards is key. As long as the new activity genuinely informs the students about the academic subject at hand, clapping a math lesson—or sketching in science class, or acting during story time—can help every student to learn better.

One more thought about learning styles: instead of dividing learners into categories such as visual, auditory, and kinesthetic, a classification I find much more useful is the one proposed by historian and educator Ken Bain, author of the
book What the Best College Students Do. In Bain's scheme, there are three types of learners:

• surface learners, who do as little as possible to get by;
• strategic learners, who aim for top grades rather than true understanding; and
deep learners, who leave college with a real, rich education.

Bain then introduces us to a host of real-life deep learners: young and old, scientific and artistic, famous or still getting there. Although they each have their own insights, Bain identifies common patterns in their stories. You can read more about these deep learners (they include astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson and comedian Stephen Colbert) on the Brilliant Blog,
here. And right now, take a moment to appraise your own "learning style": is it surface, strategic, or deep?”
 
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antonio.scardinale via Compfight cc
This article about technology in the classroom reiterates many of the ideas and strategies that can already be seen in classrooms at ISHCMC. However they are not always consistent across all classrooms and perhaps as we move forward should be built into our technology policies and procedures so they remain clear in our thinking about tech and our 1-1 programmes.
 
For Teachers, Wired Classrooms Pose New Management Concerns
“In a growing number of K-12 schools, the use of 1-to-1 computing devices—including iPads, laptops, and Chromebooks—is becoming a central part of instruction. For teachers making the digital leap, one of the greatest hurdles can be figuring out how to manage the tech-infused classroom. How do you keep kids, who suddenly have the Internet at their fingertips, on task? How do you ensure the devices are safe and well-maintained? And how do you compete with your most tech-savvy students?”
 

2 comments:

  1. The first article has resonance with the idea from the Decimal Institute which I am participating (observing) at the moment.
    http://christopherdanielson.wordpress.com/2013/10/14/childrens-experiences-with-partitioning-tdi-3/
    The question basically is why do decimals before fractions when the students have no experiences of dividing into groups of 10. Why wouldn't it be better to provide them with real life situations and build up experiences that would allow them to work with decimals better.

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  2. The second article raised some concerns for me. First, why should educators be in a position where we need to “complete with our most tech-savvy students”? In my opinion, educators need to be slower adopters of technology because we need to consider a wide range of students’ needs. I think we risk chasing fads if we focus on the newest developments.
    Also, the program Hapara makes me very uncomfortable because it’s a surveillance tool. I imagine that teachers can sit behind their computers & monitor students rather than use technology as a way to engage them in meaningful tasks. I know some librarians who insist on having students sit where she can see their screens, which I think is similar to Hapara. How does this instill digital citizenship skills? What kind of role models will we become if we show students we don’t trust them to use technology responsibly? Yes, we need to monitor them, but going around the room & talking to students about what they’re doing should be sufficient.
    I think the concepts presented in this article miss the mark.

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