July 1, 2011
Sorry for the delay in posting this blog. I left the book on an airplane and had to reorder! I promise to blog more frequently and besides I truly like this book and all the very practical classroom applications Norris shares with her readers. She cites many other authors and their books and I will include those in my post whenever possible. Chapter 3 covers how to activating prior learning in your students. The author states that we (educators) have to help students create brain addresses for new learning. I like this concept because I deal with dev-ed students and they often do not have good retention skills so I was interested to learn more.
Norris believes teachers need to activate prior learning regularly with students. She likes to use warm-ups that bring the students into the subject to be taught. Here is an example: Teaching nursing ethics, the instructor can ask students to turn to a partner (she is big on sharing with a partner) and describe a time the student was stuck between a rock and a hard place, what did the student do and why? How did he/she feel? Right away a simple conversation has anchored the topic of an ethical dilemma in the student’s mind. Here are some other techniques she recommends to help students activate prior learning in warm-ups:
· KWL chart- with colored post it notes
· Multiple Intelligence bingo-can substitute other topics
· Passion posters-teacher places quotes around the room (in this case about stress) and ask students to stand near the one that speaks to them.
I plan on giving all of these a try this fall but already I am wracking my brain on how to integrate this into an English class. Final thought for you all...60% of us learn by seeing, 25% learn by doing, and 15% learn by hearing. It is important to use all three components when you teach. There lies the challenge.
Can you talk more about the KWL chart and how that works?
ReplyDeleteKWL is a method you can use to help students organize and anchor new learning to old. Make a chart on the board with 3 column. K=what the students know already about the topic. W=what students want to learn. L=what new things they actually learned. I like her idea of passing out colored posted notes and having students write comments to stick on the board under one of the headings..more kinesthetic. Does that help?
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