Effort-Based Education Students have the responsibility to put forth the effort required to complete complex, rigorous assignments that help them reach high standards of achievement. At the same time, they have a right to demand as much time and expert instruction as they need to support their efforts. Educators have the responsibility to support students through this difficult work by providing the resources they need. We set an absolute standard for what we expect in the way of results, and allow time and the other resources that go with it to vary. Some students need more time and support than others but this does not change expectations according to the initial starting point. In our Standards/Research-Based Education delivery model, the 3 key Principles of Learning we are focusing on are: Clear Expectations - If we expect all students to achieve at high levels, then we need to define explicitly what we expect students to learn. These expectations need to be communicated clearly in ways that get them "into the heads" of parents, the community and, above all, students themselves. Descriptive criteria and models of work that meets standards should be publicly displayed, and students should refer to these displays to help them analyze and discuss their work. With visible accomplishment targets to aim toward at each stage of learning, students can participate in evaluating their own work and setting goals for their own effort. Academic Rigor in a Thinking Curriculum - Thinking and problem solving will be the "new basics" of the 21st century. But the common idea that we can teach thinking without a solid foundation of knowledge must be abandoned. So must the idea that we can teach knowledge without engaging students in thinking. Knowledge and thinking are intimately joined. This implies a curriculum organized around major concepts that students are expected to know deeply. Teaching must engage students in active reasoning about these concepts. In every subject, at every grade level, instruction and learning must include commitment to a knowledge core, high thinking demand, and active use of knowledge. Accountable Talk - Talking with others about ideas and work is fundamental to learning. But not all talk sustains learning. For classroom talk to promote learning it must be accountable—to the learning community, to accurate and appropriate knowledge, and to rigorous thinking. Accountable talk seriously responds to and further develops what others in the group have said. It puts forth and demands knowledge that is accurate and relevant to the issue under discussion. Accountable talk uses evidence appropriate to the discipline (e.g., proofs in mathematics, data from investigations in science, textual details in literature, documentary sources in history) and follows established norms of good reasoning. Teachers should intentionally create the norms and skills of accountable talk in their classrooms.
principles of learning
Principles of Learning for Effort-Based Education metacognition and self-regulatory capabilities are widely recognized as a key aspect of what it takes to be a good learner. Moreover, there is little argument that metacognitive strategies are both learnable and teachable. But effective strategy instruction depends on certain conditions. For example, students need to know how and why the strategies work. They need to understand that their mastery of the strategies is a developmental process and that sustained effort will produce increasing competence. They need scaffolding at firstin the form of modeling, direct teaching, and promptingand then that scaffolding needs to be gradually removed so students assume responsibility for using the strategies appropriately. In other words, the spontaneous and appropriate use of metacognitive strategies is teachable only if we broaden our view of teaching to include not just specific lessons, but a much broader socialization process into a learning orientation, or what Ted Sizer calls "habits of mind": a way of taking responsibility for what you know, what you can learn, and how you use it.
According to the latest National Research Council report (Bransford, Brown, & Cocking, Eds.,1999) on how people learn, Individuals can be taught to regulate their behaviors, and these regulatory activities enable self-monitoring and executive control of one's performance. The activities include such strategies as predicting outcomes, planning ahead, apportioning one's time, explaining to one's self in order to improve understanding, noting failures to comprehend, and activating background knowledge. This, then, is where the two bodies of research begin to converge in support of the claim that human capability is open-ended, and where the convergence begins to point the way to a pedagogical approach based on a new definition of intelligence. A growing number of educators and lay people are now coming to believe that an environment that routinely challenges learners to use metacognitive strategies fosters learning-oriented habits of mind, and vice versa. The idea is that environments in which a lot of strategic problem-solving is going on are ones in which people view themselves as getting smarter. And they actually are getting smarter because they are learning a whole body of skills, processes, habits of mind, and attitudes that are what we now can define as intelligence. Socialized Intelligence is a set of beliefs about oneselfone's right and obligation to understand and make sense of the world, and one's capacity to figure things out over time * a set of problem-solving and reasoning capabilitiesboth a toolkit of cognitive strategies and the social skills of knowing how and when to get help * the disposition to use the skills of intelligent thinking regularly.
Cited by: Individual Differences and School Learning Environments MC Wang, CM Lindvall - Review of Research in Education, 1984 - JSTOR Individual Differences and School Learning Environments. Margaret C. Wang. C. Mauritz Lindvall. Review of Research in Education, Vol. 11, 161-225. 1984. ...
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