ensuring higher - end thinking developing lifelong learners

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Ensuring Higher - end Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Thinking Developing Lifelong Developing Lifelong Learners Learners www.pleasantdale.k12.il.us www.odedodea.edu http://www.edu.pe.ca/bil/images/image002.jpg

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Page 1: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

Ensuring Higher - end Ensuring Higher - end ThinkingThinking

Developing Lifelong LearnersDeveloping Lifelong Learners

www.pleasantdale.k12.il.us

www.odedodea.edu

http://www.edu.pe.ca/bil/images/image002.jpg

Page 2: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

What Are We Missing?What Are We Missing?

Process Skills

(21st Century Skills)

Quality Teachers

Academic Standards

Instructional Materials

Technology

NETS- Students

Information Literacy

Standards

Page 3: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

The illiterate of the 21The illiterate of the 21stst Century Century will not be those who cannot will not be those who cannot read and write, but those who read and write, but those who cannot learn, unlearn, and cannot learn, unlearn, and relearn.relearn.

Alvin Toffler

Page 4: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

To be college and career-ready, students must be able to…

•Think•Question•Make decisions•Find and use information based on needs•Collaborate with others

Page 5: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

The New BasicsThe New Basics• Use of technology to communicate• Work in groups• Solve problems when answers are not

self-evident• Understand how systems work• Collect, analyze, and organize data

Olson (1998) School to Work Programs

Page 6: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

Three Primary Curricular Goals

• Achievement in content area learning

• Development of higher-order thinking and problem solving skills

• Workplace preparation

Page 7: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

Research

Problem Solving

Communication

The three critical The three critical school-to-life skillsschool-to-life skills

Leading the way to 21Leading the way to 21stst Century Learning and Century Learning and College and Career ReadinessCollege and Career Readiness

Page 8: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

2010 Basics

• 3Rs

• 4Cs– Creativity/Innovative Thinking

– Communication

– Collaboration

– Critical Thinking/Problem Solving

Page 9: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

Partnership for 21st Century Skills

2010 Basics

• 3Rs – necessary; not sufficient

• 4Cs – – Analyze

– Understand data

– Maintain curiosity

Page 10: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

The 3Rs and the 4Cs

• Change school culture– Expectation of inclusion of 4Cs– Use in classroom what students are doing

outside school– “Can I use it when I need it?”

• Change the way we teach• Build bridges between in-school

learning and out-of-school learning

Page 11: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

The 4Cs

• Skill sets and dispositions that students should be acquiring

• Information and resources where learning takes place

• “Seat time”

• Content: Context within which students learn skills and process

Page 12: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

Recent Gallop PollRecent Gallop Poll• Surveyed students in grades 5-12

• 50% of 5th graders are engaged and hopeful

• Steady decline through 10th grade

• Small improvement in 11th and 12th grades

• Indicates need to personalize learning and increase relevance

Page 13: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

How Do We Keep Students How Do We Keep Students Engaged?Engaged?

• Move beyond mentality of “broadcast” education

• Embrace the “world is flat” concept for education

• Move from consumers of information to creators of information

• Push students beyond the easy research in both print and digital resources

Page 14: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

How Do We Keep Students How Do We Keep Students Engaged?Engaged?

• Meet students where they are

• Encourage, foster, facilitate critical-thinking

• GGrammar

• RRhetorical strategies

• EEvaluation of writing

• AAsk questions

• SStrengths

• EEncouragement Sarah Brown Wessling, National Teacher of the Year

Page 15: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

How Do We Keep Students How Do We Keep Students Engaged?Engaged?

• GGood Assignments

• RRubrics

• EEvaluation of skills

• AAuthentic assessments

• SStudent choices

• EEncouragement

Page 16: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

School Library Media Services

Office of eLearning Division of Standards and Learning

Suggested Final Projects for K-12 Students

Art Gallery Banner Block Picture

Story Book Brochure

Chart Choral Reading Coat of Arms Collage Commercial

Comic Strip Computer program

Costume Diary Recipe

Debate Demonstration Detailed

Description Puppet Show Picture

Dialogue Eulogy Video

Recording Riddles Story

Electronic Presentation*

Essay TV News Show Skit Story Wheel

Fact File Box/suitcase of

artifacts Diorama Vocabulary List Photo Album

Flag Game Experiment Advertisement Storytelling

Flip chart Hidden Picture Multimedia

Poster Shadow box Bulletin Board

Graph Museum exhibit

Glossary Artwork Fairy Tale

I llustrated Story

Family Tree Webquest Poem Photo Essay

Lesson J ournal Model Reader's Theater

Poster

Map Magazine Myth Scrapbook Rebus Story

Newspaper Story

Twitter update Flannel Board Travelogue Sculpture

Pamphlet Oral Report Letter Written Report Song

Panel Discussion

Mural Mobile Monologue Blog entry

Visual Display Dramatic

Presentation Editorial Speech Time Line

Podcast Video Podcast Web page Computer-

edited movie Literary Map

*For example: PhotoStory and PowerPoint,

Page 17: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners
Page 18: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

Teacher-Librarians Are Your Teacher-Librarians Are Your Best Friends!Best Friends!

• Instructional Partner– AASL Standards for the 21st Century

Learner– NETS-S

• Technologist

• Information Resource

Page 19: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

What’s my question?

Where can I find my information?

Where can I find these sources?

What information is in each source?

How can I organize and share what I learned?

Did I answer the question?

The Information Process

in Questions

The Information Process

in Questions

Page 20: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

ASSIGNMENT

Background

Locate Information

Worksheet

Cut and Clip

Report

Antique Research Unit

Page 21: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

The “Updated” Unit

BACKGROUND(from Teacher)

A LOT ABOUT A

TOPIC

MAJOR RESEARCH PROJECT

TONS OF INFORMATION

(some from LMC)

CLIP AND CUT A TON

LONG REPORT

Page 22: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

Let’s Create the CarmaxCarmax Unit

Let’s Create the CarmaxCarmax Unit

Page 23: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

BETTER ASSIGNMENT

BACKGROUNDWHAT IS THE

NEED?

WHAT IS THE PROBLEM?

ENGAGING PROBLEM OR

QUESTION

WHAT INFORMATION IS NEEDED?

HOW CAN YOU FIND INFORMATION

IN THE RESOURCES?

WHERE CAN YOU FIND THE BEST INFORMATION?

HOW CAN YOU USE THIS

INFORMATION?

HOW SHOULD YOUR

INFORMATION BE ORGANIZED?

HOW CAN YOUR INFORMATION BE

PRESENTED?

WHAT HAPPENED AS A RESULT OF

THE ASSIGNMENT?

WHAT WAS LEARNED?

CONTENTPROCESS

Page 24: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

•What needs to be done?

•What can I use to find what I need?

•Where can I find what I need?

•What information can I use?

•How can I put my information together?

•How will I know if I did my job well?

It’s about ProcessIt’s about Process

1. Task Definition

2. Information Seeking Strategies

3. Location and Access

4. Use of Information

5. Synthesis

6. Evaluation

Page 25: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

Steps of the Simple Four

Student Behavior

Plan

- Thinking about the assignment to understand the assignment - Thinking about possible topics - Thinking about the information needed to complete the assignment - Talking with teacher(s) - Talking with peers - Talking with library media specialist(s) - Browsing the library collection/searching the OPAC - Selecting the topic - Reading to become informed about selected topic - Conducting preliminary search of DISCUS, StreamlineSC, WWW - Brainstorming - Thinking and listing about topics, key words - Completing a KWL chart - Considering possible search statements and strategies - Listing possible sources that will give the most information on the chosen topic - Prioritizing list of possible information sources - Writing a clear, concise thesis statement, essential question, or focus question

ACT

- Determining most effective search strategies for each information source - Evaluating information in each source for credibility, authority, and relationship to

the topic or assignment - Talking with teacher(s) - Talking with peers - Requesting assistance from library media specialist(s) - Locating identified sources of information - Redefining topic - Taking thorough notes, including bibliographic citation for each source used

ORGANIZE

- Developing a project outline or storyboard - Determining how to present the information to demonstrate comprehension and

understanding of the topic selected or the assignment - Identifying need for additional information - Requesting assistance from library media specialist(s) - Requesting assistance from teacher(s) - Re-checking sources for pertinent information that may have been overlooked - Double-checking bibliographic citations for accuracy - Completing a draft of the project or assignment - Editing the draft - Creating the final version of the project or assignment, including a works cited

page or bibliography - Returning any books and other materials borrowed from the library media center

and other libraries

REFLECT

- Evaluating the final project for completeness and accuracy in comparison to the project/assignment requirements

- Evaluating personal research process - Talking with the teacher(s) and library media specialist(s) about the overall

research process regarding current assignment or research project

Page 26: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

Steps of the Simple Four

Student Behavior

Plan

- Thinking about the assignment to understand the assignment - Thinking about possible topics - Thinking about the information needed to complete the assignment - Talking with teacher(s) - Talking with peers - Talking with library media specialist(s) - Browsing the library collection/searching the OPAC - Selecting the topic - Reading to become informed about selected topic - Conducting preliminary search of DISCUS, StreamlineSC, WWW - Brainstorming - Thinking and listing about topics, key words - Completing a KWL chart - Considering possible search statements and strategies - Listing possible sources that will give the most information on the chosen topic - Prioritizing list of possible information sources - Writing a clear, concise thesis statement, essential question, or focus question

ACT

- Determining most effective search strategies for each information source - Evaluating information in each source for credibility, authority, and relationship to

the topic or assignment - Talking with teacher(s) - Talking with peers - Requesting assistance from library media specialist(s) - Locating identified sources of information - Redefining topic - Taking thorough notes, including bibliographic citation for each source used

ORGANIZE

- Developing a project outline or storyboard - Determining how to present the information to demonstrate comprehension and

understanding of the topic selected or the assignment - Identifying need for additional information - Requesting assistance from library media specialist(s) - Requesting assistance from teacher(s) - Re-checking sources for pertinent information that may have been overlooked - Double-checking bibliographic citations for accuracy - Completing a draft of the project or assignment - Editing the draft - Creating the final version of the project or assignment, including a works cited

page or bibliography - Returning any books and other materials borrowed from the library media center

and other libraries

REFLECT

- Evaluating the final project for completeness and accuracy in comparison to the project/assignment requirements

- Evaluating personal research process - Talking with the teacher(s) and library media specialist(s) about the overall

research process regarding current assignment or research project

Task DefinitionTask Definition

Information Seeking StrategiesInformation Seeking Strategies

Location and AccessLocation and Access

Use of InformationUse of Information

SynthesisSynthesis

EvaluationEvaluation

Page 27: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

Task DefinitionTask Definition

• Make assignment

• Introduce rubric

• Discuss essential question

Problem-solving

Decision-makingBrainstorming

Graphic organizersKWL Charts

Mind maps

Page 28: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

QuestioningQuestioning

Providing TimeTime for

Brainstorming, Thinking, and Examining

Page 29: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

Which Questions Matter?

QUESTIONSQUESTIONS similar to those found in tough tests- PASS, HSAP, EOC, ACT, PSAT, SAT.

Select a great essential essential question and then make it the focus of a Research ModuleResearch Module

Give students time to create their own essential question.

Page 30: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

Information-seeking StrategiesInformation-seeking Strategies

• Identify needed information

• Search Statements

• Know characteristics of resources

• Prioritize resources

Page 31: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

Location and AccessLocation and Access

• Engaging the resources

• Boolean Searching

• Critical Evaluation of Information

• Note-taking

• Plagiarism

Page 32: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

Provide AssistanceSource (Author, title, date, URL, etc.)

Subject:

Keywords:

Abstract:

Have students differentiate between ideas they have collected from others and those ideas which have emerged in reaction to the ideas of others. Green signifies fresh thinking, black ink the ideas of of others.

(Jamie McKenzie)

Page 33: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

• Quality of Resources– Accuracy, Authority Objectivity, Currency,

Coverage

– Web Evaluation

• Quantity of Resources– Vastness– Narrowing down

• Resource Limitations– Scope and Depth

Page 34: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

SynthesisSynthesis• Outline, storyboard• Citation, works cited• Copyright• Plagiarism• Organization• Writing• Computer/technology

skills• Presentation Skills

Page 35: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

EvaluationEvaluation

PRODUCT PROCESS

Page 36: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

Power LearnersPower LearnersPower LearnersPower Learners

• Help students learn how to learn - not just pass standardized tests

• Teaching more than just locating facts - helping students learn how to evaluate and use information for meaning

• Make assignments that require students to locate, evaluate, analyze, and synthesize

TRANSFORMINGTRANSFORMING information information

NotNot

TRANSPORTINGTRANSPORTING information information

Page 37: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

Form collaborative partnerships with colleagues, including teacher-librarians, to plan instruction and implement research activities

Begin with small projects

Provide information skills instruction at time of need

SUGGESTIONSSUGGESTIONSSUGGESTIONSSUGGESTIONS

Page 38: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

ResearchResearch that Counts

• Slow things down for kids - Scaffold

• First day of research: Use only print. Ask students to do something with information they find. What new questions do they have?

• Consider what is substance and glitz

• Take time and make many experts

Page 39: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

RememberRememberRememberRemember

"Knowing content (3Rs3Rs)" is not sufficient in itself --Students must apply knowledge to:

¤ construct new understandings¤ solve problems

¤  make decisions¤ develop products

¤ communicate

4Cs4Cs

Page 40: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

Successful ProgramsSuccessful ProgramsSuccessful ProgramsSuccessful Programs

• Constructivist view of learning

• Scaffold learning

• Set benchmarks

• Team teaching/collaboration

• Library media center is essential component. Research confirms it!

Page 41: Ensuring Higher - end Thinking Developing Lifelong Learners

Now go out and build rigorous and relevant research units!

Thank you for the invitation today.Martha Alewine

Office of [email protected]

100 Merrywood Rd. (ISC)229-4230

http://icts-sc.pbworks.com