Educ 522 Week 2 Obseravable Actions
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Transcript of Educ 522 Week 2 Obseravable Actions
MI Domain WheelIntrospective DomainVisual, Intrapersonal, Existential 1
Visualize the fluid relationship among the different intelligences.
Wheel of MI Domains
Introspective Domain
“Affective”
Visual - Uniquely emotional componet to visualizing a piece
of art before creating it.
Existential - It is necessary to make that a leap of faith in order to contribute to the
collective human experience.
Intrapersonal - everything is reinforced and mastered by the
emotional connection the learner has with the material
they are learning.
Visual
VisualAllows students to picture
ideas and solutions to problems in their minds before trying to verbalize them or put
them into practice.
VisualAllows students to picture
ideas and solutions to problems in their minds before trying to verbalize them or put
them into practice.
VisualAllows students to picture
ideas and solutions to problems in their minds before trying to verbalize them or put
them into practice.
Include
VisualAllows students to picture
ideas and solutions to problems in their minds before trying to verbalize them or put
them into practice.
IncludeCharts, graphs, maps, tables,
illustrations, art, puzzles, costumes
Visual Observable Actions
observe, symbolize, draw, sketch, draft, illustrate, paint, color, contour, outline, rearrange, design, redesign, invent, create, conceive, originate, innovate, imagine, picture, envision, visiualize, pretend.
Visual
Visual
Non-Digital TechnologiesPicture books, art supplies,
white boards, overhead projectors, TVs, DVDs,
cameras, video cameras
Visual
Non-Digital TechnologiesPicture books, art supplies,
white boards, overhead projectors, TVs, DVDs,
cameras, video cameras
Visual
Non-Digital TechnologiesPicture books, art supplies,
white boards, overhead projectors, TVs, DVDs,
cameras, video cameras
Digital TechnologiesMonitors, digital cameras,
camcorders, scanners.
Intrapersonal
IntrapersonalIt is the part of us that expects
learning to be meaningful. The more we find pertinence in what we study, the more
inclined we are to take ownership for our learning and the better we will retain what
we have learned.
IntrapersonalIt is the part of us that expects
learning to be meaningful. The more we find pertinence in what we study, the more
inclined we are to take ownership for our learning and the better we will retain what
we have learned.
IntrapersonalIt is the part of us that expects
learning to be meaningful. The more we find pertinence in what we study, the more
inclined we are to take ownership for our learning and the better we will retain what
we have learned.
Include:
IntrapersonalIt is the part of us that expects
learning to be meaningful. The more we find pertinence in what we study, the more
inclined we are to take ownership for our learning and the better we will retain what
we have learned.
Include:feelings, values, attitudes -
“Why do I need to learn this?” Learning must be meaningful.
Intrapersonal Observable Actions
Express, imply, support, sponsor, promote, advise, advocate, encourage, champion, justify, rationalize, characterize, defend, validate, vindicate, assess, evaluate, judge, challenge, survey, poll.
Intrapersonal
Intrapersonal
Non-digital TechnologiesJournals, diaries, surveys, voting machines, learning
centers, children’s literature.
Intrapersonal
Non-digital TechnologiesJournals, diaries, surveys, voting machines, learning
centers, children’s literature.
Intrapersonal
Non-digital TechnologiesJournals, diaries, surveys, voting machines, learning
centers, children’s literature.
Digital TechnologiesOnline forms, real-time
projects, webquest
Existential
ExistentialThe intelligence of
understanding processes within a larger, existential
context. Students have the ability to summarize and
synthesize ideas from many disciplines and sources.
ExistentialThe intelligence of
understanding processes within a larger, existential
context. Students have the ability to summarize and
synthesize ideas from many disciplines and sources.
ExistentialThe intelligence of
understanding processes within a larger, existential
context. Students have the ability to summarize and
synthesize ideas from many disciplines and sources.
Include:
ExistentialThe intelligence of
understanding processes within a larger, existential
context. Students have the ability to summarize and
synthesize ideas from many disciplines and sources.
Include:aesthetics, philosophy, religion, see place in big
picture - classroom, world, universe
Existential Observable Actions
Reflect, contemplate, deliberate, ponder, summarize, synthesize, associate, relate, recap, enxapsulate, elaborate, appreciate, eppraise, critique, evaluate, assess, speculate, explore, dream, wonder.
Existential
Existential
Non-Digital TechnologiesArt replicas, planetariums,
stage dramas, classic literature, classic philosophy,
simulation games.
Existential
Non-Digital TechnologiesArt replicas, planetariums,
stage dramas, classic literature, classic philosophy,
simulation games.
Existential
Non-Digital TechnologiesArt replicas, planetariums,
stage dramas, classic literature, classic philosophy,
simulation games.
Digital TechnologiesVirtual reality, virtual
communities, blogs, wikis, simulations.
Dinner Break30 minutes
Bloom’s TaxonomyEDUC 522
Learning in the 21st Century: Multiple Intelligence and Instructional Technology
The mind is not a vessel to be filled, but a fire to be ignited.
-Plutarch
What is Higher Order Thinking?
A guide to Productive Pedagogies: Classroom reflection manual states that:
Higher-order thinking by students involves the transformation of information and ideas. This transformation occurs when students combine facts and ideas and synthesize, generalize, explain, hypothesize or arrive at some conclusion or interpretation. Manipulating information and ideas through these processes allows students to solve problems, gain understanding and discover new meaning. When students engage in the construction of knowledge, an element of uncertainty is introduced into the instructional process and the outcomes are not always predictable; in other words, the teacher is not certain what the students will produce. In helping students become producers of knowledge, the teacher’s main instructional task is to create activities or environments that allow them opportunities to engage in higher-order thinking.
(Department of Education, Queensland, 2002, p. 1)
Bloom’s Taxonomy Revisited
Bloom’s Taxonomy Revisited
• Taxonomy of Cognitive Objectives
Bloom’s Taxonomy Revisited
• Taxonomy of Cognitive Objectives
• 1950s - developed by Benjamin Bloom
Bloom’s Taxonomy Revisited
• Taxonomy of Cognitive Objectives
• 1950s - developed by Benjamin Bloom
• Means of expressing qualitatively different kinds of thinking
Bloom’s Taxonomy Revisited
• Taxonomy of Cognitive Objectives
• 1950s - developed by Benjamin Bloom
• Means of expressing qualitatively different kinds of thinking
• Adapted for classroom use as a planning tool
Bloom’s Taxonomy Revisited
• Taxonomy of Cognitive Objectives
• 1950s - developed by Benjamin Bloom
• Means of expressing qualitatively different kinds of thinking
• Adapted for classroom use as a planning tool
• Continues to be one of the most universally applied models
Bloom’s Taxonomy Revisited
• Taxonomy of Cognitive Objectives
• 1950s - developed by Benjamin Bloom
• Means of expressing qualitatively different kinds of thinking
• Adapted for classroom use as a planning tool
• Continues to be one of the most universally applied models
• Provides a way to organize thinking skills into six levels, from the most basic to the higher order levels of thinking
Bloom’s Taxonomy Revisited
• Taxonomy of Cognitive Objectives
• 1950s - developed by Benjamin Bloom
• Means of expressing qualitatively different kinds of thinking
• Adapted for classroom use as a planning tool
• Continues to be one of the most universally applied models
• Provides a way to organize thinking skills into six levels, from the most basic to the higher order levels of thinking
• 1990s - Lorin Anderson (former student of Bloom) revisited the taxonomy
Bloom’s Taxonomy Revisited
• Taxonomy of Cognitive Objectives
• 1950s - developed by Benjamin Bloom
• Means of expressing qualitatively different kinds of thinking
• Adapted for classroom use as a planning tool
• Continues to be one of the most universally applied models
• Provides a way to organize thinking skills into six levels, from the most basic to the higher order levels of thinking
• 1990s - Lorin Anderson (former student of Bloom) revisited the taxonomy
• As a result, a number of changes were made
Bloom’s Taxonomy Revisited
• Taxonomy of Cognitive Objectives
• 1950s - developed by Benjamin Bloom
• Means of expressing qualitatively different kinds of thinking
• Adapted for classroom use as a planning tool
• Continues to be one of the most universally applied models
• Provides a way to organize thinking skills into six levels, from the most basic to the higher order levels of thinking
• 1990s - Lorin Anderson (former student of Bloom) revisited the taxonomy
• As a result, a number of changes were made(Pohl, 2000, Learning to Think, Thinking to Learn, pp. 7-8)
Original Terms New Terms
(Based on Pohl, 2000, Learning to Think, Thinking to Learn, p. 8)
Original Terms New Terms
Evaluation Creating
(Based on Pohl, 2000, Learning to Think, Thinking to Learn, p. 8)
Original Terms New Terms
Evaluation
Synthesis
Creating
Evaluating
(Based on Pohl, 2000, Learning to Think, Thinking to Learn, p. 8)
Original Terms New Terms
Evaluation
Synthesis
Creating
Evaluating
(Based on Pohl, 2000, Learning to Think, Thinking to Learn, p. 8)
Original Terms New Terms
Evaluation
Synthesis
Creating
Evaluating
(Based on Pohl, 2000, Learning to Think, Thinking to Learn, p. 8)
Original Terms New Terms
Evaluation
Synthesis
Analysis
Creating
Evaluating
Analyzing
(Based on Pohl, 2000, Learning to Think, Thinking to Learn, p. 8)
Original Terms New Terms
Evaluation
Synthesis
Analysis
Application
Creating
Evaluating
Analyzing
Applying
(Based on Pohl, 2000, Learning to Think, Thinking to Learn, p. 8)
Original Terms New Terms
Evaluation
Synthesis
Analysis
Application
Comprehension
Creating
Evaluating
Analyzing
Applying
Understanding
(Based on Pohl, 2000, Learning to Think, Thinking to Learn, p. 8)
Original Terms New Terms
Evaluation
Synthesis
Analysis
Application
Comprehension
Knowledge
Creating
Evaluating
Analyzing
Applying
Understanding
(Based on Pohl, 2000, Learning to Think, Thinking to Learn, p. 8)
Original Terms New Terms
Evaluation
Synthesis
Analysis
Application
Comprehension
Knowledge
Creating
Evaluating
Analyzing
Applying
Understanding
Remembering
(Based on Pohl, 2000, Learning to Think, Thinking to Learn, p. 8)
Change in Terms• The names of six major categories were
changed from noun to verb forms. • As the taxonomy reflects different forms
of thinking and thinking is an active process verbs were more accurate.
• The subcategories of the six major categories were also replaced by verbs
• Some subcategories were reorganized.• The knowledge category was renamed.
Knowledge is a product of thinking and was inappropriate to describe a category of thinking and was replaced with the word remembering instead.
• Comprehension became understanding and synthesis was renamed creating in order to better reflect the nature of the thinking described by each category.
(http://rite.ed.qut.edu.au/oz-teachernet/training/bloom.html (accessed July 2003) ; Pohl, 2000, p. 8)
BLOOM’S REVISED TAXONOMY
CreatingGenerating new ideas, products, or ways of viewing thingsDesigning, constructing, planning, producing, inventing.
Evaluating
Justifying a decision or course of actionChecking, hypothesizing, critiquing, experimenting, judging
Analyzing
Breaking information into parts to explore understandings and relationshipsComparing, organizing, deconstructing, interrogating, finding
Applying
Using information in another familiar situationImplementing, carrying out, using, executing
Understanding
Explaining ideas or conceptsInterpreting, summarizing, paraphrasing, classifying, explaining
Remembering
Recalling informationRecognizing, listing, describing, retrieving, naming, finding
Hig
her-
orde
r th
inki
ng
RememberingThe learner is able to
recall, restate and remember learned
information.Recognizing
ListingDescribingIdentifyingRetrievingNamingLocatingFinding
Can you recall information?
Remembering ActivitiesListMemorizeRelateShowLocateDistinguishGive exampleReproduceQuoteRepeatLabelRecallKnowGroupReadWriteOutline
Listen Group Choose Recite Review Quote Record Match Select Underline Cite Sort
Quiz
Definition
Fact
Worksheet
Test
Label
List
Workbook
Reproduction
Vocabulary
Products Include
Teacher roles
DirectsTells
ShowsExaminesQuestionsEvaluates
Student roles
RespondsAbsorbs
RemembersRecognizesMemorizes
DefinesDescribes
RetellsPassive recipient
Classroom Roles
1.Make a story map showing the main events of the story.
2.Make a time line of your typical day.3.Make a concept map of the topic.4.Write a list of keywords you know
about….5.What characters were in the story?6.Make a chart showing…7.Make an acrostic poem about…8.Recite a poem you have learnt.
Potential Activities and Products