Thursday 28 April 2016

Evaluating Teaching and Learning: The Departmental Review


Evaluating Teaching and Learning: The Departmental Review
Tom Sherrington 

One of the key issues for us, as it is in any school, is to ensure that the quality of teaching
and learning is as good as it can be.  This requires us to engage every teacher and every department in a continuing cycle of evaluation, feedback and planned improvement. Over the last two years
the main vehicle for this process has been our Departmental Review, as I described in this post. 
The key aspect of this process is that individual observations and scrutiny processes
are conducted under the umbrella of a whole departmental review so that collective learning
is undertaken in parallel with the development of individuals:

Teaching 1
Originally, our main aim was to ensure that we captured as much developmental value
as we could from the formal observation process.  We even ditched giving OfSTED grades for a year to reclaim the core purpose of observation as a feature of CPD rather than primarily
an accountability mechanism.  However, with the framework changing so many times
since our last full inspection in 2006 (yes… that’s right!) we invited a team of external observers
last summer to help keep us up-to-date and we’ve returned to the grading this year
as part of the second cycle of the process.  We’ve learned a great deal about the value
and impact of external visitors making snap-shot judgements and about our self-belief
in terms of the quality of what we’re doing.

 In thinking about the next cycle, next year, two key observations have been important to me:
 I watched a lesson alongside an observer taught by someone who I believe is a cast-iron teaching expert, who year on year secures extraordinary outcomes and who I feel knows their subject so well that if they think teaching a certain way is appropriate, no-one bar none (and certainly no inspector) could really argue. So how on Earth did we end up accepting that this lesson segment
was judged ‘Good’ without running the observer out of town?  I’m ashamed of myself
for allowing that to happen. Not enough differentiation? Get away…..  Nothing about the overall, long-term experience of learning in this teacher’s lessons is less than outstanding;
it was the snap-shot observation process that was flawed.

In the second year of our Departmental Review cycle we have kept the Line Managers the same
as in the first.  I was involved with Art, History, Maths and DT – a good cross-section.
After two years I now feel I know the teachers in these departments in a well-rounded sense;
some I know so well that a one-off lesson observation couldn’t really change my view
of their overall impact on learning outcomes. It could be dazzling or it could have some weaknesses but I know enough context to put that in the right perspective. I also now understand in some detail how progress and feedback are monitored over time, what excellent work looks like
by the end of the course in each subject across the ability and age range and what the key areas
of concern are around matching pedagogical developments to measurable outcomes. 
The point is that it has taken me two years to develop this knowledge…
and now the observations just slot in to a big picture without being overly important in themselves.

I have also been keen to embed the thinking that underpinned my post 
‘How do I know how good my teachers are?” into our formal processes more explicitly.
With these ideas in mind, we’ve been looking to develop what I call a ‘longitudinal’ process,
that moves us far, far away from the limits of snap-shot observations.  Our most recent Middle Leaders meeting explored this issue and there seemed to be a few key tensions to absorb:

1.  We want a highly developmental process where lesson feedback helps us to improve;…
but we can’t meaningfully separate that entirely from accountability responsibilities.

2.  Snap-shot processes are inherently limited but adding other elements and taking a more longitudinal view does also add to the level of scrutiny (albeit scrutiny that already exists). 
It’s an unavoidable double-edge:  a chance to demonstrate the good work you are doing
is also another moment of scrutiny.

3.  Middle leaders are primarily interested and skilled in supporting in a collegial style
but are also responsible for maintaining standards in their area – which must include
securing improvement and tackling underperformance whenever issues are identified.

4. Student work, with the organic record of feedback, represents the best evidence
of the routine practices of individual teachers and of the department in securing progress over time but work sampling can be cumbersome and is, de facto, a source of scrutiny pressure.

5. Subject specific processes allow for more subtle fine-tuning
but there is a need for a fair and transparent process that allows standards to be consistent.


Thinking about all of this we’re suggesting that the best way to move forward is to develop the Departmental Review Process to include more formalised elements and here is the current proposal:
Departmental Review: work in progress.

Most of these things are happening already; we just need to make sure that they happen consistently.  The exact timing and sequence of these elements is flexible
so departments can absorb them in a way that works for them.

There are two elements that need to be more explicit:
 The Assessment, Feedback and Progress Review:  Making sure the Line Manager and HoD engage
in dialogue across the year about the nature of marking and feedback and how this leads to
progress as shown in books, tests, pieces of work, folders – or wherever.  

Regular engagement with this would avoid a cumbersome one-off collection process ;
however it is done,  line managers and HoDs need a good overview of the nature of students’ work in each class and how this is informed by the feedback dialogue.

Line managers are obliged to educate themselves about the long-term outcomes
in their subject areas…so that any observation has a broader context.
 It isn’t good enough to extrapolate from what you see in just one lesson…

Student Focus Group:  This is for the HoD to organise or delegate,  with a simple report-back
to the department and line-manager on the key strengths identified and suggestions
that students make.  It’s a powerful source of constructive information that HoDs
can manage with appropriate ground rules and so on.  I’ve suggested this is biennial
because that keeps it in proportion in terms of effort and information value.

There is also the opportunity for departments to re-draft the school’s OfSTED-referenced lesson observation template into a be-spoke departmental version that is more relevant for their purposes.  In each of my line-management areas, I feel we’d get better value from a subject-specific set of observation criteria and that will be an area for us to develop in the coming year.

So, that’s where we are now.  No pain no gain as they say…. but I’m optimistic that this approach, enabling the scrutineers to getter ever closer to the true picture of learning and achievement,
will be successful. And if OfSTED ever do come… I will say,
‘Sorry, we don’t do that false snap-shot thing; it’s not good enough for us… we have a better way.’

 Update January 2014: Today we decided to ditch lesson observation grades. 
With growing disquiet around grading and evidence from Professor Rob Coe amongst others, highlighting the flaws in the grading process, we’ve decided not to give them. 
Instead we will develop our use of feedback following lesson observations so that
perceived strengths and areas for development are expressed clearly. 
For example, if a lessons are slightly less than ideal, the scale of improvement needs to be conveyed in a way that is different from when lessons are actually quite poor.   With Lesson Study finding favour with more teachers, the snap-shot drop-in approach seems less and less satisfactory. 
https://headguruteacher.com/2013/06/03/evaluating-teaching-and-learning-the-departmental-review/



You can TCR software and engineering manuals for spontaneously recall – or pass that exam.
I can Turbo Charge Read a novel 6-7 times faster and remember what I’ve read.
I can TCR an instructional/academic book around 20 times faster and remember what I’ve read.
Introduction to Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
A practical overview of Turbo Charged Reading YouTube  
How to choose a book. A Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
Emotions when Turbo Charged Reading YouTube

Advanced Reading Skills Perhaps you’d like to join my FaceBook group ?

Perhaps you’d like to check out my sister blogs:
www.innermindworking.blogspot.com         gives many ways for you to work with the stresses of life
www.ourinnerminds.blogspot.com               which takes advantage of the experience and expertise of others.
www.happyartaccidents.blogspot.com        just for fun.

To quote the Dr Seuss himself, “The more that you read, the more things you will know.
The more that you learn; the more places you'll go.

Monday 25 April 2016

10 GET Phrasal Verbs: get down, get off, get through, get up, get away..

 
Dog mercury flowering.



You can TCR music, poetry or self development material for internal knowing.
I can Turbo Charge Read a novel 6-7 times faster and remember what I’ve read.
I can TCR an instructional/academic book around 20 times faster and remember what I’ve read.
Introduction to Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
A practical overview of Turbo Charged Reading YouTube 
How to choose a book. A Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
Emotions when Turbo Charged Reading YouTube

Advanced Reading Skills Perhaps you’d like to join my FaceBook group ?

Perhaps you’d like to check out my sister blogs:
www.innermindworking.blogspot.com         gives many ways for you to work with the stresses of life
www.ourinnerminds.blogspot.com               which takes advantage of the experience and expertise of others.
www.happyartaccidents.blogspot.com        just for fun.

To quote the Dr Seuss himself, “The more that you read, the more things you will know.
The more that you learn; the more places you'll go.”

Sunday 10 April 2016

Writing - Transitions - THEREFORE, THUS, CONSEQUENTLY

 Self heal.



Writing - Transitions - THEREFORE, THUS, CONSEQUENTLY
The transitions Therefore and thus, consequently, so, then, hence, as a  result.
A transition is a bridge – it connects two ideas.

TRANSCRIPT:
I'm Adam. Some people asked me about transitions, again, specifically, "therefore" and "thus".
But I figured I would do the whole package because they can all work together.
If you're writing essays, you can use more than one of these, more than two of these,
especially for longer essays. So first, we're going to look at the differences or similarities –
as the case may be -- of these words and when and how they are used. Okay?
So the words we're looking at today are "therefore", "thus", "consequently", "so", "then, "hence", and the expression "as a result". Okay? So again, all of these are transitions. I'll put it here.
So a little review. What is a transition? A transition is like a bridge that connects two ideas. Okay?
So what are we connecting here? What are the ideas that we want to connect? We want to connect a logical conclusion. Okay? Or we want to connect a consequence. What is a "consequence"?
A consequence is, basically, a result. So for example, in life, we make choices, we make decisions, and then, we have to live with the consequences, whatever those choices bring us. Okay?
So there's a very, very slight difference in these three words, especially.
These are the three that I want you to use most on essays if you're going to be writing essays. Okay? We use "therefore" -- again, it's more of a mathematical word, but we use it, obviously, to write,
as well. When we have a premise, from there premise, we generally reach a conclusion.
Now, what is a "premise"? A "premise" is an idea that we believe to be true.
And because we believe it is true, from that truth we reach a conclusion. Okay?
I think everybody knows a very famous "premise + conclusion" sentence. "I think" -- premise -- "I believe that I think, therefore I am." That's the conclusion I reach. Because I think, I am. Okay.
Don't be confused. It's not "because".
Premise and conclusion, but I'm just trying to simplify it a little bit.
"Thus" means "result". Now, it's a little bit different from "consequence".
"Result" means a result of the last argument. Okay? And "consequence" is -- again, it's a result,
but a consequence. Something's going to happen as a result of the thing before.
Now, it's very, very important to remember, something had to be mentioned before you can use
any of these words. Okay? All of these words and whatever sentence or clause or whatever comes after it is in relation to what came before. Okay? I said something before; this is my conclusion now. Or this is the result of what happened or this is the consequence.
More informally, we can use "so" also to talk about a consequence or a result.
We use "then". So, "This happened. Then, I did this." Not "then" like time, like sequence.
"Then" means more like, "This happened, so I did this."
"This happened. Then, I did that as a result of the first thing."
Now, a lot of people ask me about this word, "hence". The first thing I will say is don't use it.
One, it's a bit old-fashioned and a bit snobby. And two, most people don't use it correctly anyway.
I personally don't like this word, but if you must use it, then, remember it's also like a consequence. Use it instead of "thus" -- probably instead of "therefore".
And of course, very casual, "as a result". Okay? So before we look at this -- all of these individually, let's look at some examples. "I am cold." Okay?
This is the situation. "I am cold. Therefore, I'll put on a coat." [Coughs] Excuse me.
Actually, you know what? Let me change this. Sorry. I'll put a period here.
If I were going to use "therefore" with this, I would start a new sentence.
All of these words can be used to start a sentence or mid-sentence. But some of them are better used to start. Some of them are better used in the middle. "I'm cold. Therefore, I'll put on a coat."

You can TCR music, poetry or self development material for internal knowing.
I can Turbo Charge Read a novel 6-7 times faster and remember what I’ve read.
I can TCR an instructional/academic book around 20 times faster and remember what I’ve read.
Introduction to Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
A practical overview of Turbo Charged Reading YouTube 
How to choose a book. A Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
Emotions when Turbo Charged Reading YouTube

Advanced Reading Skills Perhaps you’d like to join my FaceBook group ?

Perhaps you’d like to check out my sister blogs:
www.innermindworking.blogspot.com         gives many ways for you to work with the stresses of life
www.ourinnerminds.blogspot.com               which takes advantage of the experience and expertise of others.
www.happyartaccidents.blogspot.com        just for fun.

To quote the Dr Seuss himself, “The more that you read, the more things you will know.
The more that you learn; the more places you'll go.”

Thursday 7 April 2016

Stress Affects Learning and Memory


Stress Affects Learning and Memory
Rick Nauert PhD

Although it is known that long-term or chronic stress can affect the brain’s learning and memory region, a new finding discovers short-term stress, lasting as little as a few hours,
can also impair brain-cell communication in these critical areas.
The study by University of California, Irvine researchers appears in the March 12 edition
of theJournal of Neuroscience.
“Stress is a constant in our lives and cannot be avoided,” said Dr. Tallie Z. Baram, the Danette Shepard Chair in Neurological Sciences in the UC Irvine School of Medicine and study leader.
“Our findings can play an important role in the current development of drugs
that might prevent these undesirable effects and offer insights into why some people
are forgetful or have difficulty retaining information during stressful situations.”
In their study, Baram and her UC Irvine colleagues identified a novel process by which stress
caused these effects. They found that rather than involving the widely known stress hormone cortisol, which circulates throughout the body, acute stress activated selective molecules
called corticotropin releasing hormones, which disrupted the process by which the brain collects
and stores memories.
Learning and memory take place at synapses, which are junctions through which brain cells communicate. These synapses reside on specialized branchlike protrusions on neurons called dendritic spines.
In rat and mouse studies, Baram’s group saw that the release of CRH in the hippocampus,
the brain’s primary learning and memory center, led to the rapid disintegration of these dendritic spines, which in turn limited the ability of synapses to collect and store memories.
The researchers discovered that blocking the CRH molecules’ interaction with their receptor molecules eliminated stress damage to dendritic spines in the hippocampal cells involved
with learning and memory.
In addition, the authors replicated the effects of stress on dendritic spines by administering low levels of synthetic CRH, and watching how the spines retracted over minutes.
“Fortunately, once we removed the CRH, the spines seemed to grow back,” Baram said.
Baram also noted that there are compounds under development that show the ability to block CRH receptors, and that this study can play a role in the creation of therapies based on these compounds to address stress-related learning and memory loss.

http://psychcentral.com/news/2008/03/12/stress-affects-learning-and-memory/2031.html

You can TCR specialist and language dictionaries that are spontaneously accessed.
I can Turbo Charge Read a novel 6-7 times faster and remember what I’ve read.
I can TCR an instructional/academic book around 20 times faster and remember what I’ve read.
Introduction to Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
A practical overview of Turbo Charged Reading YouTube 
How to choose a book. A Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
Emotions when Turbo Charged Reading YouTube

Advanced Reading Skills Perhaps you’d like to join my FaceBook group ?

Perhaps you’d like to check out my sister blogs:
www.innermindworking.blogspot.com        gives many ways for you to work with the stresses of life
www.ourinnerminds.blogspot.com              which takes advantage of the experience and expertise of others.
www.happyartaccidents.blogspot.com       just for fun.

To quote the Dr Seuss himself, “The more that you read, the more things you will know.
The more that you learn; the more places you'll go.”

Monday 4 April 2016

Maximizing Learning:

Maximizing Learning:
A Conversation with Renate Nummela Caine and Carolyn R. Pool

What do the neurosciences, biology, and psychology teach us about what our schools should be like? How can we change our mental models of education to meet the needs of children?
Renate Caine answers these difficult questions in exploring how children learn.
In Making Connections and in Education on the Edge of Possibility, you and Geoffrey Caine discuss principles of brain-based learning. Some people might say, "Well, of course, we learn with our brains—so what else is new?" But you and Geoffrey
have connected the latest cognitive and neurological research to education.
What is new? What is the most significant finding that relates to what we do in schools?
We debated about using the term brain-based learning because, of course, all learning is brain based. But if we just said "learning," then people might not understand what we were talking about, either. Humans have a marvellous brain, whose possibilities appear endless. So when we refer to brain-based learning, we are concerned about maximizing learning—understanding how the brain works best—and we have encapsulated our findings in 12 learning principles that emphasize
the connections and patterns our brains make (see fig. 1). Our current studies are taking us
into the great impact that early childhood development has on the way children learn.
These findings have enormous implications for schools—even preschools—because so many neurological pathways critical for later life are laid down from age zero to age 3.
These pathways affect the way children interact with formative experiences during
later developmental stages. These patterns also include children's beliefs about themselves
and their world, which continue into adulthood.


Brain/Mind Learning Principles
The brain is a complex, dynamic system.
The brain is a social brin.
The search for meaning is innate.
The search for meaning occurs through “patterning.”
Emotions are critical to patterning.
Every brain simultaneously perceives and creates parts and wholes.
Learning involves both focussed attention and peripheral perception.
Learning always involves conscious and unconscious processes.
We have at least two ways of organising memory.
Learning is developemental.
Complex learning is enhanced by challenges and inhibited by threat.
Every brain is uniquely organised.
Source: Education on theEdge of Possibility, by R.N.Caine and G. Caine (Alexander, Va.: ASCD, 1997)

In your work, you discuss threats that inhibit learning.
What are these threats? What happens to learning when we feel threatened?
Many children's lives are filled with threats to learning—child abuse, poverty, malnourishment, family and community violence. These are devastating experiences for the child—and for the human brain. These experiences can program the child to effectively live in anticipation of such experiences. Children who have lived with extreme threat develop perceptual loops; they look for certain signals in the environment that to some extent replicate their own experiences.
Their brains are not programmed to help them cope in a healthy way. When we feel threatened,
we downshift our thinking. Downshifted people feel helpless; they don't look at possibilities;
they don't feel safe to take risks or challenge old ideas. They have limited choices for behavior.

What does downshifting mean for teachers?
We define downshifting as the psychophysiological response to threat, accompanied by a sense
of helplessness or fatigue. The downshifted person experiences a sense of fear or anxiety,
not the excitement of a challenge. Downshifting is accompanied by a feeling that you cannot access your own ability to deal with the situation. Downshifting can result from very drastic conditions
in early childhood, as I mentioned; but what we're seeing is that, to a lesser degree,
downshifting is everywhere in the schools.

Do children face threats in school?
Yes, but here we're not talking about traumatic threats like guns in school. We are concerned about emotional threats to higher-order thinking and learning. The system of traditional education
can be a threat that inhibits higher levels of learning. If as a teacher I am in charge of the curriculum, you as the student are supposed to learn what I say you must learn. I know the answers that you have to get. I'm also going to tell you how long it will take you to learn this and when it's due.
And not only that—I evaluate you and your work. In this approach, where is your input?
Where is your self-efficacy? And what are you learning but compliance? So students are doing
what teachers want them to do. And downshifted people can do some things well, like memorizing, because the brain perseverates under threat and likes to do things over and over again—
repetition provides a sense of safety when you feel helpless. Memorization is compatible
with traditional teaching. But real learning—making connections, higher-order thinking,
and creativity—is incompatible with that kind of environment.
What are some examples of strategies that are compatible with brain-based teaching and learning?
Let me give you an example that shows how teachers faced a challenge that they first perceived
as a threat. Geoffrey and I were working with teachers beginning to use a rich, brain-based approach to learning to read and write. The district suddenly mandated its own literacy program.
All the teachers dropped the brain-based approach; they abandoned their new understanding
of learning—they just implemented the district's mandates. They were frightened; they did not
have the self-efficacy they needed. In the mandated program, the students were scheduled
to do unrelated tasks and drills every day. Soon, kids began to ask, "Why are we doing this?
This isn't any fun and we're not learning anything!" Geoffrey and I also asked,
"Why are you doing this?" Basically, the reason was fear; the teachers felt helpless
in dealing with the district—they downshifted.
We encouraged the teachers to examine the literacy program and start incorporating it into what they knew about the human brain. The teachers then said, "Okay, what do we know about learning? We understand that children need to be in a community. They need to follow their own interests, and we need to constantly question and challenge them." The teachers began to see that
brain-based learning moves away from what you do on Monday morning to how children learn.
They began to see that brain-based learning is not limited to one approach or strategy.
In the process, the teachers took the best from the district's program—but they also took the best out of Reading Recovery, whole language, and phonics. They began seeing kids in kindergarten
and 1st grade doing critical thinking and analysis. As a result, this school has gone from
the second from the bottom in reading in their district to the second from the top.
What are some ways that a brain-based approach to, say, language arts, might differ
from a traditional approach? I remember being intrigued by your discussion
in Making Connections of relaxed alertness, orchestrated immersion,
and active processing as conditions for learning.
Well, you cannot really separate these conditions. Relaxed alertness means "low threat,
high challenge." If children are to think critically, they must feel safe to take risks. And if the teacher insists on one correct answer and is going to evaluate them, children are not foolish.
They will give the answer the teacher wants. But for making connections and actually changing
their thinking on the basis of accrued knowledge, they need relaxed alertness—that is,
safety and challenging learning experiences.
As for orchestrated immersion, children learn best if they are immersed in complex experiences
and are given the opportunity to actively process what they have learned.
The best learning happens when necessary facts and skills are embedded in experiences t
hat relate to real life, when there's a big picture somehow.

Can you give an example?
Even though many teachers creatively use haiku and other forms of poetry that appeal to students, most teachers approach poetry as a subject to cover. Many children don't understand or feel poetry. One teacher using a brain-based approach to language arts decided to turn her whole classroom
into a coffeehouse. The kids helped set it up—low lights, candles on the tables, tablecloths,
music playing softly. The teacher asked adults from the school and community to come in and read their favorite poetry and talk about it. Through this complex experience, the teacher gave her students a sense, or felt meaning, for what poetry is and that it is valued by adults in the real world. Teachers can do the same thing in science and math.

What would be an example of brain-based science or math?
In science and math, teachers and students might ask natural questions like "What happened?" "How did you do this?" "What happened when we added this element?" and "How else might this have worked out?" They ask critical questions that are not necessarily in the book or worksheet.

Take the "owl pellet" lesson, for example.
Owl pellets are material that owls regurgitate after they eat. The pellets include the bones and fur
of rodents and birds the owls consume. In a science lesson that I was observing, students
pulled some owl pellets apart and then answered worksheet questions about what owls eat.
I walked around this classroom and asked another question: "You know, I'm wondering—
how does an owl's stomach know how to separate the meat from the bones?"
This was a genuine question. And the students looked at me as though I were crazy
because that question was not on the worksheet.
A teacher asking real, live questions provides rich possibilities for students. But for these possibilities to become reality, teachers need to shift their thinking about teaching and learning.
They also need extensive resources, including technological support.
Brain-based learning is wonderfully compatible with technology.
Your examples remind me of some good teachers I've had. My 9th grade chorus teacher took
our class to many concerts, shows, and competitions. Her bubbling enthusiasm for all sorts of music, from gospel to folk to classical, stays with me to this day.

What suggestions do you have for teachers to improve their own practice?
In our recent work, we found three distinct styles of teaching.
In the first instructional approach, the teacher is in charge,
using traditional strategies like lecturing, memorization, testing—
the old factory model. When you speak of relaxed alertness or orderliness to teachers
who are dedicated to this approach, they tend to think in terms of good discipline,
of going along with the teacher's plan. Orchestrated immersion might consist of a teacher's bringing in some World War II artefacts to introduce a lecture,
or allowing students to ask questions of a guest speaker.
In the second approach, the teacher is comfortable with many innovative learning strategies
and sees new possibilities for defining discipline, but still largely directs student learning.
We have found that more and more teachers are moving to the second approach,
though most teachers still operate from the mental model of the traditional approach to education, because that was the way they were taught.
In the third (and rarest) instructional approach, which is actually brain-based teaching,
learning becomes collaborative—teachers and students have much more mutual responsibility. Here, students know what they want to do, time parameters are flexible, and orderliness
and coherence prevail. Teachers have an extensive repertoire of strategies.
These classrooms are characterized by ongoing questioning and analysis.
Students and teachers ask experts, they get on the Internet, they learn together.

That reminds me:
I heard of a new program called STTC—it stands for Students Teaching Teachers about Computers.
I like that. Students are often much more comfortable with the third instructional approach.
On the other hand, some students are so used to the traditional factory model that they are initially confused when they encounter brain-based teaching. And it is difficult for some parents
to understand that the traditional approach to teaching is no longer going to prepare their children for the future. But five years from now, if I was a parent and I still saw my children sitting
in a classroom with desks in a row and a teacher up front,
I would panic because that will absolutely be inappropriate.
What if parents disagree with what you're doing and insist on a certain type of curriculum?
Parents need to be brought into the educational community wherever possible.
Orderliness depends on constant communication among teachers, students, and parents.
But for parents who fundamentally disagree with the rest of the community, charter schools are
a real possibility. Parents can create their own school, organized around their own purposes
and meanings. Private and religious schools can also meet some of these needs, though I am not
in favor of vouchers. Acknowledging and celebrating diversity—in a democratic community—
is an important outcome of principle 12, "Every brain is uniquely organized."

Speaking of diversity, what is your view of multiple intelligences?
We all have different talents, skills, perspectives, and intelligences. We need to encourage children's gifts in two ways. First, we need to acknowledge diversity; second, we need to focus
on our commonalities, what makes us human and what ties us to the rest of nature.
So Geoffrey and I agree with the basic premise of multiple intelligences. But how is it used
in the classroom? Do teachers simply incorporate variation into traditional presentations?
Or do they address multiple intelligences by providing complex experiences within which students can use their individual intelligences (expanding into other types of skills and modes and benefiting from other people's intelligences)? Interaction and complexity are key.
In a recent article, Bob Sylwester  discusses neurological research concerning the effects of serotonin on self-esteem—not only through drugs like Prozac, but by positive social feedback students
get from portfolios, cooperative group learning, and nurturing from caring adults.

Where does brain-based learning fit in this picture?
On the whole, I would tend to agree with Bob about the importance of positive social feedback
and the benefit of the strategies he mentions. But here, again, we must consider developmental learning and the effects of downshifting on children's ability to become self-motivated,
to believe in their own capacities and abilities.
We have suggested that the opposite of downshifting is self-efficacy.
I think we need to be very careful that we do not depend on Prozac and other psychotropic drugs
for other than temporary assists, particularly for downshifted people who have difficulty
in ascribing any success to their own efforts and who are easily influenced by others.
 There seems to be a real danger here. How can I believe in my own strengths and initiative
when I know that a drug has changed my behavior? I know that Bob is not advocating
the use of Prozac with children—I am pleading for the exploration of other ways to enhance children's self-esteem and self-efficacy, such as by removing threats from our classrooms and making them safe, challenging places for children to learn. This should be the focus of education.
In Education on the Edge of Possibility, you and Geoffrey describe your work with two elementary schools in implementing brain-based teaching. What was this process like?
Shifting out of an exclusively traditional instructional approach is difficult.
Our book relates the challenges and setbacks the schools faced. First, I want to recognize
all the teachers who use traditional approaches really well. It's not that their work is wrong;
the times are changing on us. Our knowledge base is changing, with new information
from the neurosciences and biology and technology. We're living in a different world.
There's so much for us to understand, and we can't do it by getting what I call
"surface knowledge"—what somebody else tells us is important to learn.
Second, to change our mental models, we have to address how our own brains learn—and immerse ourselves in interactive, real-life, complex experiences out of which we can process new ideas.
To help teachers change their mental models, we found that using "process groups" was critical.

What is a process group?
We encouraged teachers to get together in small groups and look at new information
from the sciences, examine educational research, and study the brain/mind principles—as people, not just as teachers. They asked questions like "What does it mean that the brain is a complex, dynamic system?" Then they began to reflect on how their own practices did (or did not)
maximize learning. The groups included not only teachers but also custodians, librarians,
and other nonteaching staff, in an attempt to arrive at common beliefs, purposes, and values—the foundation for orderliness. They all shared ideas on how to create a school and environment based on how children learn. The groups came up with their own solutions to the "time and energy" problems that plague many other reforms: How can we allow time for complex experiences
when we have to cover the curriculum? Do children really learn best in 50-minute increments? Where do we get planning time? A supportive administration and funding arrangements
gave the groups time to constantly rethink and enrich what they were doing in school—
and this work is ongoing. We see no other way to produce effective change in schools—
there's no top-down way to teach a new mental model.
It has to come from the educators themselves.
http://www.ascd.org/publications/educational-leadership/mar97/vol54/num06/Maximizing-Learning@-A-Conversation-with-Renate-Nummela-Caine.aspx

You can TCR software and engineering manuals for spontaneously recall – or pass that exam.
I can Turbo Charge Read a novel 6-7 times faster and remember what I’ve read.
I can TCR an instructional/academic book around 20 times faster and remember what I’ve read.
Introduction to Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
A practical overview of Turbo Charged Reading YouTube  
How to choose a book. A Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
Emotions when Turbo Charged Reading YouTube

Advanced Reading Skills Perhaps you’d like to join my FaceBook group ?

Perhaps you’d like to check out my sister blogs:
www.innermindworking.blogspot.com        gives many ways for you to work with the stresses of life
www.ourinnerminds.blogspot.com              which takes advantage of the experience and expertise of others.
www.happyartaccidents.blogspot.com        just for fun.

To quote the Dr Seuss himself, “The more that you read, the more things you will know.
The more that you learn; the more places you'll go. 

Friday 1 April 2016

Master Modals with the SEAM method - may, might, could, etc.

Greater Knapweed.


This grammar lesson will teach you how to express possibility, prohibition, ability, necessity,
and more with the appropriate modals.

The cuff is joined to the sleeve of his shirt.

You can TCR music, poetry or self development material for internal knowing.
I can Turbo Charge Read a novel 6-7 times faster and remember what I’ve read.
I can TCR an instructional/academic book around 20 times faster and remember what I’ve read.
Introduction to Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
A practical overview of Turbo Charged Reading YouTube  
How to choose a book. A Turbo Charged Reading YouTube
Emotions when Turbo Charged Reading YouTube

Advanced Reading Skills Perhaps you’d like to join my FaceBook group ?

Perhaps you’d like to check out my sister blogs:
www.innermindworking.blogspot.com         gives many ways for you to work with the stresses of life
www.ourinnerminds.blogspot.com               which takes advantage of the experience and expertise of others.
www.happyartaccidents.blogspot.com        just for fun.

To quote the Dr Seuss himself, “The more that you read, the more things you will know.
The more that you learn; the more places you'll go.”