ReportWire

Tag: Learning Models

  • 6 Domains Of Cognition: The TeachThought Learning Taxonomy

    [ad_1]

    TeachThought Understanding Taxonomy

    by Terry Heick

    How can you tell if a student really understands something?

    They learn early on to play the game—tell the teacher and/or the test what they ‘want to know,’ and even the best assessment leaves something on the table. (In truth, a big portion of the time students simply don’t know what they don’t know.)

    The idea of understanding is, of course, at the heart of all learning, and solving it as a puzzle is one of the three pillars of formal learning environments and education.

    1. What do they need to understand (standards)?

    2. What (and how) do they currently understand (assessment)?

    3. How can they best come to understand what they currently do not (planning learning experiences and instruction)?

    But how do we know if they know it? And what is ‘it’?

    Understanding As ‘It’

    On the surface, there is trouble with the word ‘it.’ Sounds vague. Troublesome. Uncertain. But everyone somehow knows what it is.

    ‘It’ is essentially what is to be learned, and it can be a scary thing to both teachers and students. ‘It’ is everything, described with intimidating terms like objective, target, proficiency, test, exam, grade, fail, and succeed.

    And in terms of content, ‘it’ could be almost anything: a fact, a discovery, a habit, skill, or general concept, from mathematical theory to a scientific process, the importance of a historical figure to an author’s purpose in a text.

    So if a student gets it, beyond pure academic performance what might they be able to do? There are many existing taxonomies and characteristics, from Bloom’s to Understanding by Design’s 6 Facets of Understanding.

    The following actions are set up as a linear taxonomy, from most basic to the most complex. The best part about it is its simplicity: Most of these actions can be performed simply in the classroom in minutes, and don’t require complex planning or an extended exam period.

    By using a quick diagram, concept map, t-chart, conversation, picture, or short response in a journal, quick face-to-face collaboration, on an exit slip, or via digital/social media, understanding can be evaluated in minutes, helping to replace testing and consternation with a climate of assessment. It can be even be displayed on a class website or hung in the classroom to help guide self-directed learning, with students checking themselves for understanding.

    How This Understanding Taxonomy Works

    I’ll write more about this soon and put this into a more graphic form soon; both of these are critical in using it. (Update: I’m also creating a course for teachers to help the, use it.) For now, I’ll say that it can be used to guide planning, assessment, curriculum design, and self-directed learning. Or to develop critical thinking questions for any content area.

    The ‘Heick’ learning taxonomy is meant to be simple, arranged as (mostly) isolated tasks that range in complexity from less to more. That said, students needn’t demonstrate the ‘highest’ levels of understanding–that misses the point. Any ability to complete these tasks is a demonstration of understanding. The greater number of tasks the student can complete the better, but all ‘boxes checked’ are evidence that the student ‘gets it.’

    36 Thinking Strategies To Help Students Wrestle With Complexity

    The Heick Learning Taxonomy

    Domain 1: The Parts

    1. Explain or describe it simply
    2. Label its major and minor parts
    3. Evaluate its most and least important characteristics
    4. Deconstruct or ‘unbuild’ it efficiently
    5. Give examples and non-examples
    6. Separate it into categories, or as an item in broader categories

    Example Topic

    The Revolutionary War

    Sample Prompts

    Explain the Revolutionary War in simple terms (e.g., an inevitable rebellion that created a new nation).

    Identify the major and minor ‘parts’ of the Revolutionary War (e.g., economics and propaganda, soldiers and tariffs).

    Evaluate the Revolutionary War and identify its least and most important characteristics (e.g., caused and effects vs city names and minor skirmishes)

    See also 20 Types Of Questions For Teaching Critical Thinking

    Domain 2: The Whole

    1. Explain it in micro-detail and macro-context
    2. Create a diagram that embeds it in a self-selected context
    3. Explain how it is and is not useful both practically and intellectually
    4. Play with it casually
    5. Leverage it both in parts and in whole
    6. Revise it expertly, and explain the impact of any revisions

    Domain 3: The Interdependence 

    1. Explain how it relates to similar and non-similar ideas
    2. Direct others in using it
    3. Explain it differently–and precisely–to both a novice and an expert
    4. Explain exactly how and where others might misunderstand it
    5. Compare it to other similar and non-similar ideas
    6. Identify analogous but distinct ideas, concepts, or situations

    Domain 4: The Function

    1. Apply it in unfamiliar situations
    2. Create accurate analogies to convey its function or meaning
    3. Analyze the sweet spot of its utility
    4. Repurpose it with creativity
    5. Know when to use it
    6. Plausibly theorize its origins

    Domain 5: The Abstraction

    1. Insightfully or artfully demonstrate its nuance
    2. Criticize it in terms of what it might ‘miss’ or where it’s ‘dishonest’ or incomplete
    3. Debate its ‘truths’ as a supporter or devil’s advocate
    4. Explain its elegance or crudeness
    5. Analyze its objectivity and subjectivity, and how the two relate
    6. Design a sequel, extension, follow-up, or evolution of it

    Domain 6: The Self

    1. Self-direct future learning about the topic
    2. Ask specific, insightful questions about it
    3. Recall or narrate their own learning sequence or chronology (metacognition) in coming to know it
    4. Is comfortable using it across diverse contexts and circumstances
    5. Identify what they still don’t understand about it
    6. Analyze changes in self-knowledge as a result of understanding

    Advanced Understanding

    Understanding by Design’s 6 facets of Understanding, Bloom’s Taxonomy, and Marzano’s New Taxonomy were also referenced in the creation of this taxonomy; a learning taxonomy for understanding

    [ad_2]

    Terry Heick

    Source link

  • The Inside-Out School: A 21st Century Learning Model

    The Inside-Out School: A 21st Century Learning Model

    [ad_1]

    by Terry Heick

    This post has been updated from a 2012 version

    As a follow-up to our 9 Characteristics of 21st Century Learning we developed in 2009, we have developed an updated framework, The Inside-Out Learning Model.

    The goal of the model is simple enough–not pure academic proficiency, but instead authentic self-knowledge, diverse local and global interdependence, adaptive critical thinking, and adaptive media literacy.

    By design this model emphasizes the role of play, diverse digital and physical media, and a designed interdependence between communities and schools.

    The attempted personalization of learning occurs through new actuators and new notions of local and global citizenship. An Inside-Out School returns the learners, learning, and ‘accountability’ away from academia and back to communities. No longer do schools teach. Rather, they act as curators of resources and learning tools and promote the shift of the ‘burden’ of learning back to a more balanced perspective of stakeholders and participants.

    Here, families, business leaders, humanities-based organizations, neighbors, mentors, and higher-education institutions all converging to witness, revere, respond to and support the learning of its own community members.

    The micro-effect here is increased intellectual intimacy, while the macro-effect is healthier communities and citizenship that extends beyond mere participation, to ideas of thinking, scale, legacy, and growth.

    The Inside-Out School: A 21st Century Learning Model

    The 9 Domains Of the Inside-Out Learning Model

    1. Five Learning Actuators

    • Project-Based Learning
    • Directed and Non-Directed Play
    • Video Games and Learning Simulations
    • Connected Mentoring
    • Academic Practice

    2. Changing Habits

    • Well-being (for teachers and students) as a matter deserving of innovation & design
    • Acknowledge limits and scale
    • Reflect on interdependence
    • Honor uncertainty
    • Curate legacy
    • Support systems-level and divergent thinking
    • Reward increment
    • Require versatility in the face of change

    3. Transparency

    • Between communities, learners, and schools
    • Learning standards, outcomes, project rubrics, performance critera persistently visible, accessible, and communally constructed
    • Gamification and publishing replace ‘grades’

    4. Self-Initiated Transfer

    • Applying old thinking in constantly changing and unfamiliar circumstances as a constant matter of practice
    • Constant practice of prioritized big ideas in increasing complexity within learner’s Zone of Proximal Development
    • Project-based learning, blended learning, and Place-Based Education available to facilitate highly constructivist approach

    5. Mentoring & Community

    • ‘Accountability’ via the performance of project-based ideas in authentic local and global environments
    • Local action –> global citizenship
    • Active mentoring via physical and digital networking, apprenticeships, job shadows and study tours
    • Communal Constructivism, meta-cognition, Cognitive Coaching, and Cognitive Apprenticeship among available tools

    6. Changing Roles

    • Learners as knowledge makers
    • Teachers as the expert of assessment and resources
    • Classrooms as think-tanks
    • Communities not just audience, but vested participants
    • Families as designers, curators, and content resources

    7. Climate of Assessment

    • Constant minor assessments replace exams
    • Data streams inform progress and suggest pathways
    • Academic standards prioritized and anchoring
    • Products, simulation performance, self-knowledge delegate academia to a new role of refinement of thought

    8. Thought & Abstraction

    • In this model, struggle and abstraction are expected outcomes of increasing complexity & real-world uncertainty
    • This uncertainty is honored, and complexity and cognitive patience are constantly modeled and revered
    • Abstraction honors not just art, philosophy, and other humanities, but the uncertain, incomplete, and subjective nature of knowledge

    9. Expanding Literacies

    • Analyzes, evaluates, and synthesizes credible information
    • Critical survey of the interdependence of media and thought
    • Consumption of constantly evolving media forms
    • Media design for authentic purposes
    • Self-monitored sources of digital & non-digital data
    • Artistic and useful content curation patterns

    The Inside-Out Learning Model Central Learning Theories & Artifacts: Situational Learning Theory (Lave), Discovery Learning (Bruner), Communal Constructivism (Holmes), Zone of Proximal Development & More Knowledgeable Other (Vygotsky), Learning Cycle (Kolb), Transfer (Thorndike, Perkins, Wiggins), Habits of Mind (Costa and Kallick), Paulo Freire, and the complete body of work by Wendell Berry

    [ad_2]

    Terrell Heick

    Source link