learner-centered lesson planning and instruction

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Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and Instruction Arlends Chris Tuesday, November 26 th , 2013 Faculty of Psychology, Tarumanagara University

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Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and Instruction. Arlends Chris Tuesday, November 26 th , 2013 Faculty of Psychology, Tarumanagara University. Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and Instruction Learner-Centered Principles Some Learner-Centered Instructional Strategies - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and  Instruction

Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and

InstructionArlends Chris

Tuesday, November 26th, 2013Faculty of Psychology, Tarumanagara University

Page 2: Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and  Instruction

Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and InstructionLearner-Centered PrinciplesSome Learner-Centered Instructional StrategiesEvaluating Learner-Centered Strategies

Technology and EducationThe Technology Revolution and the InternetStandards for Technology-Literate StudentsTeaching, Learning, and Technology

Page 3: Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and  Instruction

LEARNER-CENTERED PRINCIPLESLC lesson planning & instruction move the focus

away from the teacher and toward the student (McCombs, 2010; Mtka & Gates, 2010).

Positive learning

environment

Interpersonal relationship with teacher

Factors associated

with learner-centered

instruction

Motivation

Achievement

Page 4: Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and  Instruction
Page 5: Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and  Instruction

The principles emphasize the active, reflective nature of learning and learners.

According to the work group, education will benefit when the primary focus is on the learner.

The 14 learner-centered principles, 4 main sets of factors:Cognitive & metacognitiveMotivational & emotionalDevelopment & social Individual differences

Page 6: Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and  Instruction

Cognitive and Metacognitive Factors

1. Nature of the learning process. The learning of complex subject matter is most

effective when it is an intentional process of constructing meaning from information and experience.

2. Goals of the learning process. The successful learner, over time and with support

and instructional guidance, can create meaningful, coherent representations of knowledge.

Page 7: Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and  Instruction

3. Construction of knowledge. The successful learner can link new information

with existing knowledge in meaningful ways.

4. Strategic thinking. The successful learner can create and use a

repertoire of thinking and reasoning strategies to achieve complex learning goals.

Page 8: Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and  Instruction

5. Thinking about thinking. Higher order strategies for selecting and

monitoring mental operations facilitate creative and critical thinking.

6. Context of learning. Learning is influenced by environmental factors,

including culture, technology, and instructional practices.

Page 9: Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and  Instruction

Motivational and Affective Factors 7. Motivational and emotional influences on learning.

What and how much is learned is influenced by the motivation. Motivation to learn, in turn, is influenced by the individual's emotional states, beliefs, interests and goals, and habits of thinking.

8. Intrinsic motivation to learn. The learner's creativity, higher order thinking, and

natural curiosity all contribute to motivation to learn. Intrinsic motivation is stimulated by tasks of optimal novelty and difficulty, relevant to personal interests, and providing for personal choice and control.

Page 10: Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and  Instruction

9. Effects of motivation on effort. Acquisition of complex knowledge and skills

requires extended learner effort and guided practice. Without learners' motivation to learn, the willingness to exert this effort is unlikely without coercion.

Page 11: Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and  Instruction

Developmental and Social Factors 10.Developmental influences on learning.

As individuals develop, there are different opportunities and constraints for learning. Learning is most effective when differential development within and across physical, intellectual, emotional, and social domains is taken into account.

11.Social influences on learning. Learning is influenced by social interactions,

interpersonal relations, and communication with others.

Page 12: Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and  Instruction

Individual Differences Factors 12.Individual differences in learning.

Learners have different strategies, approaches, and capabilities for learning that are a function of prior experience and heredity.

13.Learning and diversity. Learning is most effective when differences in

learners' linguistic, cultural, and social backgrounds are taken into account.

Page 13: Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and  Instruction

14.Standards and assessment. Setting appropriately high and challenging

standards and assessing the learner as well as learning progress -- including diagnostic, process, and outcome assessment -- are integral parts of the learning process.

Page 14: Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and  Instruction

SOME LEARNER-CENTERED INSTRUCTIONAL STRATEGIES

Theories of Piaget & VygotskyConstructivist aspects of thinkingSocial Constructivist aspects of thinking

Problem-Based LearningEssential QuestionsDiscovery Learning

Page 15: Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and  Instruction

Problem-Based LearningEmphasizes real-life

problem solving.Authentic problemsEveryday life.Small-group efforts to

identified problems/issues wish to explore, locate the necessary material & resources

Teachers act as a guides.

Page 16: Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and  Instruction

Essential QuestionsQuestions that reflect the heart of

the curriculum, the most things that students should explore and learn.

“What flies?”“How & why do things fly in

nature?”“How does flight affect humans?”“What is the future of flight?”Essential questions like these

perplex students, cause them to think and provoke their curiosity. (Lattimer, 2009)

Page 17: Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and  Instruction

Discovery LearningStudents construct an understanding on their

own.DL >< Direct-instruction approach.Students have to figure out things for

themselves.To be effective as a systematic instruction

approach – guided discovery learning.

Page 18: Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and  Instruction

Evaluating Learner-Centered Strategies

The LC model of planning & instruction has many positive features. (Help teacher develop strategies that benefit student learning)

Critics of LCI that it gives too much attention to the process of learning and not enough to academic content. (Hirsch, 1996).

Area with many ill-defined problems, such as the social science & humanities, learner-centered instruction can be effective.

In well-structured knowledge domain such as math & science, teacher-centered structure work better. (Feng, 1996)

Page 19: Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and  Instruction

Critics also say that LCL is less effective at the beginning level of instruction in a field because students do not have the knowledge to make decisions about what & how they should learn.

Research on the choice and sequencing of learning activities in the classroom indicated that the use of constructivist and direct instruction approaches are often more effective than when either approach is used alone. (Darling-Hammond & others, 2005)

Page 20: Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and  Instruction

Q&A Session

Page 21: Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and  Instruction

Technology and Education

Page 22: Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and  Instruction

Technology plays important roles in planning and instruction.

Three important ways that technology affects curriculum planning are:1. As a learning goal for students to develop certain

technology competencies;2. As a resources for curriculum planning through

the extensive materials that are available on the internet;

3. As tools that improve students’ ability to learn through techniques such as simulation and visualization in science and text analysis in literature, as well as software that encourages reflection and provides models of good performances (Darling-Hammond & others, 2005).

Page 23: Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and  Instruction

The Technology Revolution & The Internet

The Internet is a system of computer networks that operates world-wide.

Computer-mediated communication.Up-to-date information than textbooks.Nearly 100 % of public schools in the United

States are now connected to the Internet.Indonesia???

Page 24: Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and  Instruction

Introduction of the World Wide Web (the Web)The Web is a system for browsing internet sites.It presents the user with documents, called Web

pages, full of link to other documents or information systems.

Multimedia (images, video, animation, sound….)Search engines: Google and Yahoo!

Page 25: Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and  Instruction

Some effective ways that the internet can be used in classrooms:Navigating and integrating knowledge.Collaborative learning.Computer-mediated communication (CMC) Improving teachers’ knowledge and

understanding.

Graphics and Presentation

Page 26: Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and  Instruction

Standards for Technology-Literate Students

The International Society for Technology in Education has developed the following six standards for students (ISTE, 2007) and teachers (ISTE, 2007).1. Creativity & innovation.2. Communication & collaboration.3. Research & information fluency.4. Critical thinking, problem solving & decision

making.5. Digital citizenship.6. Technology operations & concepts.

Page 27: Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and  Instruction

Teaching, Learning & TechnologyA special concern is how technology can be used

to improve teaching and learning.Gap beetween the technology knowledge and

skills most student learn in school and the technology knowledge and skills they need in the 21th century workplace.

Page 28: Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and  Instruction

Martha Stone Wiske and her colleagues (2005) recently described how to more effectively use technology to teach for understanding by considering:1. The topic that are worth understanding,2. What students should understand about such

topic,3. How student develop and demonstrate

understanding,4. How student and teacher assess understanding,

and5. How students and teachers learn together.

Page 29: Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and  Instruction

Technology Pedagogical Content Knowledge (TPCK)

Content Knowledg

ePedagogical Knowledge

Technological

Knowledge

Page 30: Learner-Centered Lesson Planning and  Instruction

ReferencesSantrock