Saturday, June 23, 2018

Creating High Performance Learning Environments

Creating High-Performance Learning Environments

Three very different classrooms and instruction styles but all demonstrate high expectations for student's academic and behavioral progress. A Chinese teacher is teaching math to third-grade students, a science teacher plans a very complex project of science, engineering, and physics and a teacher teaches her students with (WBT) Whole Brain Teaching techniques. 
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In the Roller Coaster Physics lesson plan, the teacher sets high expectations for the students' vocabulary, science, and math. The engineering field offers good salaries and there are plenty of job openings. Building interest in the field of engineering is important for our future as a society. The teacher does not modify the vocabulary or simplify the steps. They are taught that part of the learning process is making mistakes. They continue to try until the mistakes are all corrected. She is helping them advance their knowledge by demanding that they use correct vocabulary.

The roller coaster physics lesson plan was the most extensive and detailed plan I have ever viewed.  The students are doing work that engineers would be doing. I was impressed. I see another person prepared the lesson plan but the details that need to be taught are extensive.  She was very organized and because she set high standards the students returned high-quality work. I enjoyed the team labs in biology in high school but was not able to do this in elementary. This is where interest needs to begin in all subjects.

One strategy that I think all three teachers could use in the classroom is Dig Deeper. Dig Deeper refers to critical thinking or thinking harder. In an article in Edutopia on Student Engagement, the author explains that in order for a student to use critical thinking to Dig Deeper they need to think analytically. When we analyze the information we break it down. We see how it works. The second step to Dig Deeper strategy is to be critical of or criticize. To criticize one needs to judge the faults and merits. Analyzing and Criticizing are two different skill sets but both are needed to think critically (Johnson, 2013).

Academic Expectation-The held the students to very high expectations and they all responded with motivation, creativity and an eagerness to learn. This is not the traditional classroom, but then students are learning math, science, and physics at accelerated speeds.

Behavior Expectations - In the traditional classroom, you may not see teams of for or five students performing as many measurements, calculations, vocabulary demands and choosing to do this after school and during recess. The students are behaving exactly as expected for the STEM class. If a teacher from the 1960’s were to be transported to the Roller Coaster Physics classroom, as in Star Trek episodes, he or she would see students not sitting at assigned seats, talking during class, wandering around the room and may think the class was unruly.

Norms and Procedures - The norms here are to work together as a team, assign each team member a job to do and to keep trying until they succeed. Mistakes are part of the process and they are analyzed then resolved by trying only one change. If the change does not resolve the problem then the team knows that they need to find a different solution. Students are up and down from the floor, seats and team meetings. If they are not moving around they may not be doing what is expected.  

Chinese Math video- Math fundamentals are important and teaching at young ages ensures the students will have this memorized for life.  I don’t especially like reciting route memorization but it works. Studying more subjects than just math makes for a well rounded or social individual. The strategies are practical because there are so many students, every parent wants their one child to get a good job. This seems to take away time that could also be devoted to the arts, dancing, painting, music, and writing. One very good thing about learning at such a young age is that the long-term memories are easier to draw upon as we get older.

I’m glad our students can have the experience of having brothers and sisters and the classrooms are not quite as crowded.  Working conditions do not seem to be as good and where teachers in the United States buy many items for their class, I don’t think Chinese teachers have that option or the resources. There were some subtle things that I missed until I read the information about Chinese math the video made more sense. The teacher had very good control of such a large classroom.

Academic Expectations - The class was difficult to analyze on my first watch through, the Explainer article helped me to understand what was happening in the classroom. The teacher devotes large blocks of time to math instruction. Ancient math recitations or songs are said as a classroom.  Materials are minimal by design. Chinese students reach high academic achievement levels. The entire class worked together to solve the one subtraction problem. She asks until the right answers are found.

Behavior Expectations -The students appear obedient in a traditional sense. They all appear to enjoy the lessons. It appears that the reward is shared by the entire class by reciting something fun. The Chinese classroom has high expectation for behavior and receives strong parental support. The teacher uses some memorized content as a transition to another part of the lesson.

Norms and Procedures -Students take many standardized tests, wear uniforms and are expected to participate. Parents are involved in teaching at home since the country’s rule on one child only.  The students appear obedient in a traditional sense.

The Whole Brain Teaching  The first time I watched the video watching a classroom  I can see that when children use as many of their senses as possible they would tend to remember more.  Her they are using body language as well as speaking and reading out loud. I would have to gradually ease into some of her strategies because I tend to learn in quiet meditation. I really think she has learned some useful strategies for teaching that engage her students.

I have taught many children and adults to play guitar in the past fifteen years. I always say that our brain is in our hands, feet and whole body.  The brain may understand how to do something but the nerve endings in your feet and fingers also learn. Sometimes they take a little longer and this type of learning appears to be more of a skill. Having children involves all parts of their kinesthetic, voice, and vision reinforce what she is trying to teach. When the students clap and react to verbal and visual commands their blood gets pumping, they are using adrenalin when they challenge speed reading partners. I would have to take a workshop to learn these teaching strategies.

Since she began teaching this way in the middle of a school year she waited the next year to modify the rules. The website for certification is Web Brain Teaching website. The lesson is self-paced and there are four different levels:, Bronze, Silver, Gold and Platinum Certification levels.
Academic Expectations - The Whole Brain Teaching video were set high, the loud volume of the classroom and repeating the teacher is far from the traditional classroom that I attended.

Behavior Expectations - The students are meeting the teachers high expectations and learning quickly. The loud volume is the norm and students who are not verbal when expected would not be meeting this expectation.

Norms and Procedures -I read further on the Youtube site and she said that since she began teaching WBT she wanted to change her rules. She said, in the notes, that she had a different set of rules the first year because they began teaching this way in the middle of the school year. The next year the rules were changed to the list below.

Here is her list:
1. Follow directions quickly.
2. Raise your hand for permission to leave your seat.
3. Raise your hand for permission to speak.
4. Make smart choices
5. Keep your teacher happy.

Conclusion:
I think that each teacher does set high-expectations for all the students in all three videos. In video one with the Roller Coaster Design teams, the teacher expects high levels of vocabulary to be used. She is enforcing adherence to low budgets, good accounting practices, and efficiency with materials.

I grew up in the 70's and 80's, traditional classrooms were boring and many teachers did not hold student expectations very high. If a student did not raise his or her had frequently the teacher would ignore that student when a hand was raised. Bias was very common and obvious. Terms like Teacher's Pet were still used and in elementary, school some students went to the Principal's office for a paddle. There were many times I would walk off campus without any reprimand. I want to set high expectations for my students and develop strategies that work well for me. I will search for examples such as these three excellent teachers in the three videos. There are new and old ways to teach more efficiently. It starts with expectations from the teacher. Humans are capable of learning so much information, I will focus on quality teaching with high expectations that teach students to use critical thinking. I want to be a positive example. 

The big takeaway from watching all three videos is all three teachers set high expectations for their students but with completely different strategies. All three teachers are highly effective because they each have high expectations for all of their students. There is another lesson here and that is other teachers teach differently than you do, that is okay as long as; teachers set high expectations for their students.


References:

Chen, Crystal (2011), 3rd Grade Chinese Math Class

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h7LseF6Db5g

Glogster EDU (2015) Roller Coaster Lab,

     Lesson plan retrieved on June 20, 2018 from:

http://pilotrobertmace.edu.glogster.com/roller-coaster-lab/

Johnson, Ben (2013), Teaching Students to Dig Deeper, Student Engagement    

     Edutopia, Retrieved on June 23, 2018, from:

     https://www.edutopia.org/blog/teaching-students-dig-deeper-ben-johnson

Shane, Roxi, (2011), Whole Brain Teaching Richwood High - The Basics,

     Lesson plan retrieved on June 20, 2018, from:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8iXTtR7lfWU&feature=youtu.be

Teaching Channel (N.D.) Roller Coaster Physics STEM in Action

     Retrieved from Teaching Channel on June 20, 2018, from:


https://www.teachingchannel.org/videos/teaching-stem-strategies

Wei, Kan (2018), Explainer: what makes Chinese maths lessons so good?  
  
     Lesson plan retrieved on June 20, 2018, from:

http://theconversation.com/explainer-what-makes-chinese-maths-lessons-so-good-24380

Whole Brain Teaching (ND), Whole Brain Teaching Website

     Retrieved on June 20, 2018, from:

http://wholebrainteaching.com/certification/   

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