Tuesday, 4 November 2014

Teaching and Learning - my take of it

I have found Erikson’s Psychosocial Development and Piaget’s Cognitive development approach as most meaningful in my understanding of how children learn and develop.  Erikson anchors a child’s moral judgment in his growth in resolving basic crisis during certain periods of his biological development.  

A “normal” child goes through stages below, set along with Piaget’s Cognitive Development approach sees growth of a person as both an event happening outside and inside the child.  As his biology or physique grows, the relationships and the mind also develop.  Recently, there have been studies about the development of generations, from the baby boomers to generation Z.  Looking at the different generations of humanity right now, I am often overwhelmed and perplexed at the generational differences brought about by the dynamic change in our culture, more specifically, the influence of technology in our growth and learning.   Much of the generational differences though would, I believe, redound to how our brains process information, our exposure to technology and how it impacts our lives.

Despite the generational differences, which I believe are real and varied, the fundamental stages still should serve as framework for understanding growth of persons and teaching developmentally.  The generational differences do not alter the stages of psychosocial and cognitive development which makes, more than ever, Erikson and Piaget, as relevant, and to me, more appealing in their learning theories.   The newest generation, despite its disparity in characteristics to, say, the baby boomers, will definitely follow the same stages proposed by Erickson and Piaget.


Developmental/ Biological age
Erikson’s Stages of Psychosocial Development
Piaget’s Stages of Cognitive development
Connections/Insights on the present generations
0 – 18 mos.
Infancy
Trust vs. Mistrust
Sensorimotor
0 – 2yrs
Gen ?.  The next generations growing in the middle of the 21st century will certainly have a different world and education.  A glimpse of their world now points to technology such as Augmented Reality and String Theory.  I wonder what this gen’s learning style would be like.  Certainly their brains are wired differently.  Security and confidence for this generation could only be enhanced by technology integration in their learning.
-sense of security and assurance is important
18mos./2yrs – 3yrs
Early Childhood
Autonomy vs. Shame/ Doubt
-sense of confidence and independence in functional skills
3 – 5 yrs
Preschool
Initiative vs. Guilt



Preoperational
2 – 7 yrs





Concrete Operational
7 – 11 yrs
Gen Z.  Born after 1990 and introduced to the graphical web.  Amateurs internet searchers lacking skills in evaluating web content.

These kids were the first born with the Internet and are suspected to be the most individualistic and technology-dependent generation. Sometimes referred to as the iGeneration.

These pre- and elementary schoolers at present do miss out on concrete learning if all exposures are virtual.
-exploration and sense of control of factors in environment to accomplish tasks
5 – 11 yrs
School age
Industry vs. Inferiority
-sense of competence to accomplish is important, e.i. to make things and make things together
12 – 18 yrs.
Adoslescence
Identity vs. Confusion
Formal Operational (Adolescence – Adulthood)
11 yrs up
Gen Y.  Millennials.  Born 1980-2000 (Age 14-34).   They experienced the rise of the Internet, 9/11 and the wars that followed.   Because of their dependence on technology, they are said to be entitled and narcissistic.

-sense of individual identity in the midst of a group (fitting-in) as primarily important
19 – 40 yrs
Young Adulthood
Intimacy vs. Isolation
Gen X. 
Born 1965-1979 (Age 35-49)
They were originally called the baby busters because fertility rates fell after the boomers. As teenagers, they experienced the AIDs epidemic and the fall of the Berlin Wall. Sometimes called the MTV Generation, the "X" in their name refers to this generation's desire not to be defined.
-value for relationships
40 – 65 yrs
Middle Adulthood
Generativity vs. Stagnation
Baby Boomers. 
Born 1943-1964, the boomers were born during an economic and baby boom following World War II. These hippie kids protested against the Vietnam War and participated in the civil rights movement in the west, all with rock 'n' roll music blaring in the background.

 In our society, they are now the main force of leadership in our institutions – business, politics, culture and education.  Most of them have the resources and influence over others.
-a sense of legacy
65 yrs – death
Maturity
Ego Integrity vs. Despair
-sense of fulfillment



I belong to Gen X and within the later phase of Piaget’s Formal-Operational Cognitive development period and currently dealing with issues of Intimacy if by Erikson’s Psychosocial development yet I deal with different generations in their varying periods.  I deal with students who are Gen Ys working on their psychosocial Identity who are in their early phase of Formal-Operational Cognition.  For the most part though, I deal with teachers who are either Gen Xs (majority of them) or Baby Boomers (our veterans and guardians). Reflective administration entails understanding well the contexts of the people I work with, work for and those I lead.

On a sidelight, at home, I have Gen Zs who demand attention and wit too.

Genuine learning, I believe, happens when there is understanding, the ultimate objective of teaching.  Understanding however has to be manifest on the side of the learners, this has to be seen or evident.  When I see students demonstrating mastery of (a) skill/s, demonstrate confidence in delivery of this skill or ability, execute accurately a concept, skill or task, I can say there is learning that takes place.  However, not all learnings can be exhibited immediately, some learned skills or concepts come later in the year or even later in life.

I had a privilege of working as a prefect of discipline in the past before becoming an administrator.  From my observations, learning a value is not immediate.  The change I hope for in the student or students come later in either a similar situation he is faced with again or even after school, I mean, after high school when they come back and tell me, sir, I realized, learned or appreciated this from you or from what you taught, albeit the teaching happened informally and not in the formal setting of the classroom.
Psychology plays a crucial role for education. By analogy, psychology is to teaching as anatomy is to medicine.

An approach cannot work for a long term unless anchored on a principle of how children learn.

People have a natural disposition to learn, it is in our nature to explore.  Human babies are born with an innate desire to know the world around them and are relentless with curiosity to explore them.  The need to know is like a drive, an urge like hunger or thirst that need to be satisfied.  According to Dr. Medina, which most recent researches also assert, babies are preloaded with software that upon birth activates to satisfy the need to know.  It’s not anymore the tabula rassa view of a learner.

 All throughout life, we do not seem to outgrow the thirst for knowledge.  According to Dr. John Medina, researchers have already shown that even the adult brain stays malleable like a baby’s brain, and so, as adults, we can grow new connections, strengthen existing ones and even create new neurons allowing us all to be lifelong learners.  If children are allowed to remain curious, they will continue to deploy the natural tendencies to discover and explore.

Piaget’s approach of schema and disequilibrium are important concepts for me.  That as persons, as learners, we categorize our sensory information in order for us to attain a sense of equilibrium, a sort of sense of stable-zone in our brains.  But when an issue or doubt is set in, we find ways to adapt the information into our schema if not, change schemas to adapt to the change of equilibrium.

It seems to me that it connects to this inherent desire in us to be curious.  Curiosity stems from this sense of urge to seek equilibrium in our schemas.  But because the real world is dynamic, always interplaying, our exposure to the real world – real people, relations and animate and inanimate surroundings - always shakes our schema which prompts us to seek answers to attain an equilibrium.

In the classroom, the importance of the art of questioning which triggers curiosity of students or “shakes” or in a sense intrigues their schema is very important such that knowledge or subject content facilitated to them is dealt like thirst being quenched. 

A healthy learner has to have a flexible schema, which is attained through varied exposures.  In this way, the fixed schema disposition of a child or learner is avoided where parang bigot, or at worst, contented or stagnating mind na tayo.  A student or child who does not learn falls into a fixed schema condition.

I think here in this Piagetian concept, it underlies as well the importance of theory testing among high school students.  For Piaget, this is the formal stage of cognitive development where students can tackle less concrete information, the abstract knowledge or the possibilities given the realities.  Meaningful learning especially for students at this stage need testing in real experience and not just in theoretical contexts.   In the context of Vygotsky saying that the learners must individually transform complex information to make it their own, the need to interact with people and the world becomes even more important.

Implications to learning would be that children should be consistently exposed to the real world or should be consistently exposed to people who operate the real-world.

TEACHERS and TEACHING

However, on teachers naman, they are not homogeneous in their interest to learn and in fact are not always wanting to learn even if the students they teach are dynamic individuals produced by their dynamic times.

Developmentally appropriate teaching means that the teachers’ method adapts to the developmental period of the students, catering to needs appropriate during the period of the child and that the teachers understands what it takes to do so.

Working in a Jesuit school, I have come to understand that we proceed from a certain charism, if you call it, in our way of facilitating learning.  This way of proceeding is called the Ignatian Pedagogical Paradigm or the IPP, a way of teaching and formation patterned after the Spiritual Exercises of St. Ignatius of Loyola.  In the IPP, as in the Spiritual Exercises, the importance of reflection is central.  Because “Jesuit spirituality is a spirituality of choice, and it is natural for Jesuits to be both non-coercive and nondirective in assisting the young with their decision-making challenges without in any way just leaving the decision-maker to his or her own inexperience, fears, and impulses” (Ignatian Pedagogy).

The framework in the next page, to me, presents in brief the relation ship of the learning core (teacher-student-content) as akin to the relationship between the retreatant-retreat director and God.  What nourishes learning in this triangle of the learning core is the interplay of the process of Experience-Reflection-Action.
  


             In this paradigm, the students are supposedly engaged not just cognitively but affectively.  Not just the intellect or mind but also the heart is involved in the learning process for effective learning to take place.

            To me, there are certain aspects of the paradigm that sound like abstract, but I come to realize that much of its aspects are now confirmed or affirmed by research and educational practice.

The emphasis on Experience and Reflection, for instance, parallels with Information Processing Model where it posits that a strength of a lesson is on how much of it goes into the long term memory.   From stimulus, all lessons do not however proceed directly to long term memory, as much of it will be lost to either decay or some going into the short-term and working memory.  Some “experience” about the lesson should be undergone by the learner for the lesson to be more effectively committed to long term memory.  Repetitions, which I believe, is essentially the cycle of the Ignatian Pedagogical Paradigm - the Experience-Reflection-Action process - helps to commit lessons or content or truth for that matter, into the long term memory of the learner.

I am a believer of the Ignatian Paradigm.  Albeit at the moment, I struggle very much with it, but my readings in neuroscience, learning processes and the brain as well as on assessments further affirm my faith in the importance of the interplay of Experience-Reflection-Action in the learning process.

Most of the classrooms I visit and the teachers I see now in school do a lot of front-loading, e.i., the traditional  input & “download” via, mainly, the lecture  or “banking” (depositing information into the students head) then testing or assessment in the traditional way.

I pretty much want to enhance the E-R-A cycles in our teachers and in our teaching but I don’t seem to be able to do so.  I get lost often and end up continuing what has been continually done by our teachers.  I grope for an effective approach on raising the level of impact our teachers make on our students through their lessons.

In our curriculum frameworks, we have articulated that it should be along Ignatian Paradigm albeit UBDized (based on the 3-stage lesson format starting with goals & evidence of learning as the first step), as we usually call it, but I don’t seem to concretely see this unfolding in the many teaching sessions I observe.

            Another difficulty I encounter in the IPP is that we currently do not have an instrument to evaluate its implementation, for us to know exactly the degree if it is implemented and what are its concrete results in the growth of the students (the effectiveness of it).   I feel that these are difficult to measure since assessments schemes we have focus mainly on the content that our students earn but the change of a student or students from point A to point B of their learning seems abstract for measuring. 

The evaluation of the implementation of the IPP is an area of interest for me to research about.  However, I am honestly facing more blank walls now than answers as to the hows and means of proceeding with this study.  The topic seems too broad but I believe that Erikson, Piaget and St. Ignatius have much in common in their understanding of how effective learning takes place or is achieved.

REFLECTIVE ADMINISTRATOR

Essential to the work of a school leader is the crafting of decisions on three general matters of the school – school leadership which involves the creation, essentially, of structures and directions; instructional leadership which is the core of an administrator’s work and school management, the daily operations which often bites the bulk of the leader’s time and tasks.

Reflectiveness which stands on the skill of discernment, e.i., being able to read the patterns, the connections, “the movement of the spirit” so to say in the events, activities, movements and flow of the school, to make it in tune to its raison d ‘etre (vision and mission), when embraced and exercised well by an administrator will  direct his or her decisions on how to interplay well the three functions of structure, instruction and management. 
My own weakness is that I get so engrossed with matters of management most of the time and the work of creatively setting up or supporting or reexamining structures to foster growth for our students and teachers, I fail to work on well.  Instruction is a core competence I grope so much about, and it does not help my exercise of leadership as acting principal.


 


Add this situation to the barb of people-handling, mostly reforming naggers and complainers in our team, that I need to do, administration becomes a huge burden.

Nonetheless, it is a relief to understand that part of the beauty of reflection and discernment is that I am able to see myself in the midst of the tasks I do and read the patterns or movements as-I-go to find out where these lead me.  This is a discipline, I admit, so difficult to sustain such that I, so often, don't observe it.  When I discern on matters that need my decision, I consider an activity or a matter whether it belongs to the cluster of school leadership, instructional leadership or management, from which, depending on the priority by importance, I weigh the dilemma then make a stand.  More often though, school management issues or tasks which often require less visioning, grab the most attention.

If I am only better able to look at the choices I make and align these with the goals of my role as leader, as acting principal, as lay-formator working with the Jesuits – I could confidently say that I have done the core of my leadership discernment.  If I am better able as well to articulate my choices, enjoin many to support it and foster growth-mindset in our team, I could probably say I am doing okay in leadership.

However, these are my continuing struggles.  My assurance though is that the result that challenging experiences and reflection produce is a better individual in the end.


Some References I used:

Medina, John, Brain Rules, Pear Press 2008.

Geck, Caroline, The Newest Net Generation, 2014.

http://www.ignatianspirituality.com/ignatian-voices/education-arts-and-sciences/why-jesuits-are-in-secondary-education/#sthash.UjGBKvmy.dpuf

Ignatian Pedagogy, A Practical Approach.











-30-

Tuesday, 26 August 2014

Genuine Learning




Travel Logs - wonder how secondary school students can use this as well.

Monday, 14 July 2014

School Year 2014-2015

Hope the links work...


Friday, 13 June 2014

Examen - a hope and helpful habit for a cluttered mind (syncing mind & heart on the go)

The genius of St. Ignatius of Loyola is in making spirituality alive in the laws of nature and life.


The Examen Prayer Card

Friday, 30 May 2014

School Twitter

A way to keep parents posted - foolproof.



http://www.slideshare.net/robertojosephgalvan/school-twitter-an-alternative-pns-foolproof

Embodied Knowledge: Classic experiment by Held and Hein

Embodied Knowledge: Classic experiment by Held and Hein


















Also found in this link:

http://psychtutor.weebly.com/held-and-hein---kitten-carosel.html


How movement is related to learning.  If a learner is passively receiving information, this experiment showed that, the learner perception is stunted while a learner who can orient and move around the perceived world benefits more from his perceptions.

Highlights the value of active learning for students.

Saturday, 10 May 2014

The Science of Happiness

Does success lead to happiness or happiness leads to success?







I remember this box of tacks and the candle on the board experiment from one of the vids I may have seen at TED sometime.

My take though is that happiness or peace of mind will eventually lead to success - achievement of a goal or lead to solutions to a problem.

Happiness leads to a better chance of success which spirals to a better positive affect or greater happiness.  But if you fail, that's I guess when the choice comes in, to choose to be happy, growth-mindset or optimism, despite the challenges.

hmmm. easier said?

Victor Frankl said something like, to take man as he should be, the ideal, and we make man better. Just like pilots when they land, they aim a little farther than the target to factor in draft (in real life, metaphorically the same as the challenges, temptations, obstacles one may face) and eventually land on target.

Be perfect like your father is perfect, or something to that effect, sounds like that, nuh?

The "Principals" of Building Trust - Epping, NH, United States, ASCD EDge Blog post - A Professional Networking Community for Educators

The "Principals" of Building Trust - Epping, NH, United States, ASCD EDge Blog post - A Professional Networking Community for Educators

Grit

Perseverance and passion towards a long term goal.

grit can be taught. good distinction between perseverance and grit and resilience.  resilience being able to bounce back but grit attaches this to passion to make up what grit is.

Optimism is actually similar to growth-mindset, and it is also a fuel for grit.

wow. grit it is.

how great it is to have grit, work to have grit, nurture grit. talk about character formation? grit is a big part of it.

on the side, Angela Duckworth is such a pretty mind.


goo





Here's Prof. Angela with more on teaching grit:








Tuesday, 8 April 2014

Promises of Piktochart

Trying out Piktochart.

This app holds promise for good use in the classroom or staff meetings. I can actually create a poster with tools just by the side to embed videos, icons, text, links and so much more.

Tried the app for a few seconds and this is what I made out of it so far, child's work but enough for baby steps:




Use Piktochart. One good visual support to learning using new media.

Thursday, 27 March 2014

Facebook and Mindset of Loneliness



False sense or edited lives.  I'm out of it for now.  Deactivating my account saves me time and controversy from malicious wares entangling my life right now.

Better to focus on research and tasks I need to conclude. Dei gloriam.

Thursday, 13 March 2014

Great Chinese Songs

As a way to open a new year, listening to the language of the heart and soul, before that of the mind and mouth.

)

from rain,

to flowers.


)



then Fireworks in the month of the God of war (wage peace)...


)


Tuesday, 4 March 2014

Fruits

In celebrating 200 years of the Restoration of the Society of Jesus



this will be a good prelection video when talking to those who would enter the high school. it's important that students keep the end goal in mind -- after 6 years in High School, we expect a more human, reflective, other-oriented excellent person

Saturday, 1 March 2014

Early Childhood & Technology Exposure

My insight to – Is It Possible to Shield My Baby From Technology?



I find this article revealing with its proposition that children under two (2) years should not be exposed to screens.  The main argument being there’s no greater benefit to real human or social-environmental interaction.

With the pervasiveness of technology, I share Ms. Tahnk’s doubt whether babies and toddlers can really be protected from technology exposure.  Indeed, as early as pregnancy, today’s generation, gen z or i-gen, are exposed early to technology.  There are two sides to this argument and one side says technology that is intelligent helps in children’s development, say the learning of language.  The opposite side would claim the authenticity of human interaction is lost and there is a seeming abandonment of the adult responsibility to look after, interact or bond with the child which is compromised by adults in the name of convenient technology replacement.




We’ll I suppose the latter argument is the extreme.  The best use of technology really is to supplement our human efforts, use it as a tool to enhance our being human instead of replacing some human aspects like interaction.

Ms. Tahnk brings up a recent study to assert protecting children under two from early exposure (more so abandon them to) screen-interactive technology.  But I do share her worry, that, it seems impossible to do.  This is a point I wish to contest as really the deciding factor here still is the role and authority of the adult.  Limits have to be set and this is done by the adult.  If conscious effort is made, then the adult can control how much time and when do we expose the kids to what type of technology.  Technology will reach and encroach into our children’s lives.  But as adults, we still have to set and enforce the limits.

According to Ms. Tahnk, Common Sense Media claims, “38% of kids under the age of two have already used a mobile device, even though the American Academy of Pediatrics discourages use of any screens for kids in the first two years of life. In addition to studies showing long-term effects on attention span, creativity, writing and communication skills”.  It does make a lot of sense that for babies, interaction with real people is so much more valuable than interacting with screens however close to real these screens recreate human experience.

My readings on Mashable (www.techupdates.com) took me to a link on, “Are Interactive Toys Interfering With Child Development?” by Travis Andrews (http://mashable.com/2014/02/25/interactive-toys-development/) where two new Apps, the Winston Show and Foo Pets are presented.  There’s a lot of fun and learning available on these two Apps, the first one responds and talks to the child that uses it, the second provides the child with a virtual pet which he can do a lot of things with like he would with a real pet (from feeding to playing), but apparently they also have their downsides, as it seems they replace the real experience of interaction either with a person or a pet, with virtual substitutes.

Travis Andrews does insist that there is no hard research to support that adverse effects result from early childhood exposure to screens but he cannot keep his own reservation when he says "that certainly doesn't mean that interacting with an iPad can approximate interacting with a human."

Apparently, it still is an ongoing study whether exposing children to media or specifically allowing them to use tablets and apps, even as these are designed for their needs, at an early age is good or harmful.  I will take the side of Ms. Tahnk though that toddlers under two should have minimal exposure to tablets with interactive apps and maximum exposure to caring humans and a concrete environment. Now as children grow older, Mr. Andrews word would be good enough, that children’s use of technology specifically tablets with interactive apps should be subject to limit and guidelines.  

As adults, we should set the goal of using technology as an effective tool to enhance our children’s learning experience, not as replacement of our roles as ultimate conductors and facilitators of learning.



-30-

Thursday, 20 February 2014

Insights on the article, "How People Learn".



There are three key findings that the research on how people learn that the article synthesizes:

  1. Learners have pre-existing understandings of how the world works.
  2. Competence as built on depth of understanding.
  3. Metacognition ensures learning.

The illustration above summarizes my understanding of the big idea of the article.  As persons, we learn by way of the three interrelated circles of mental operation or thinking.  There is learning through teaching when it is effectively targeting the ways by which our brains or minds work.  When the school environment supports, connects or interrelates and “interlocks” effective teaching then you have a system that builds and nurtures learners for academic and holistic success.

“Students come to the classroom with preconceptions about how the world works. If their initial understanding is not engaged, they may fail to grasp the new concepts and information that are taught, or they may learn them for purposes of a test but revert to their preconceptions outside the classroom.
Teachers then have to draw out and work with the preexisting understandings that their students bring with them.” 

I totally agree.

Teaching is for learning.  I am reminded of the anecdote, I think it was from Snoopy, when Charlie Brown said “I taught this dog some tricks.  I taught it how to go fetch”. So Nancy dares and Charlie Brown throws the stick and told the dog, “Go, fetch!”.  Time passed and the dog did not return so Nancy says to Charlie Brown, “I thought you taught that dog the trick?!”.  Then Charlie Brown replies, “I said I taught it how to fetch, I didn’t say he learned it.”

To teach is one thing, to ensure learning is another.  Indeed, studies in Cognitive Psychology and the evolving science of Neuroscience tell us about how we humans learn.  I can connect this reading material readily to another book I have read, Brain Rules by Dr. Medina.  In the brain, information or learning is stored through a network of neurons or brain cells.  Different learnings have different neural networks and related learnings have interlocking neural networks.  It is through this networks that synapses or electric currents in the brain travel, and this is how the brain “knows” or processes information.  Learning is easier and lasting therefore if information taught is processed by connecting or recruiting similar neural networks for connected or related information rather than making the brain create new unrelated neural network for the information taught.  When we make it easy for the brain to function, we make it easier for us to learn therefore.

This research lays the bases for the evident practice of using diagnostic assessments, KWL-W charts and other forms of pre-assessments used in instruction.  Furthermore, the same research validates the time-tested IPP framework for planning lessons with its Context as part of preleccio.  There is indeed science behind the centuries old paradigm in Jesuit education and polishes indeed the wisdom of St. Ignatius in the Spiritual Exercises which is the anchor of the IPP.

Context in the IPP should include unscrambling of misconceptions or conceptions in order to promote authentic learning.

Metacognition is a very important habit of mind that learners have to practice and develop.  Metacognition does not come to the learner naturally.  Effective learning must raise a level of awareness of this thinking process and repetitively engage the learner into this for him to have authentic learning and not just rote. 

Research defines metacognition as the students knowledge of where s/he is in achieving the learning objectives of the lesson; it is an “internal dialogue” that the learner makes regarding his/her thinking progress in the teacher-learner process.

In a series videos in  Youtube, (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RH95h36NChI,  http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1xeHh5DnCIw) Prof. Stephen Chew of Samford University provides further clarification on what metacognition is all about and proposes to students several habits of mind that could help foster metathinking or what he calls deep processing, another name we can give to metacognition.   

The following are Prof. Chew’s strategies for metacognition:

When studying or learning content, it is helpful to guide one’s thinking process with the following questions:
  1. Elaboration.  How is the concept connected to what you have previously learned?
  2. Distinctiveness. What makes the concept distinct? How is the concept distinct from the other concepts being learned or studied?
  3. Personal experience.  How does the concept relate to personal experience?
  4. Application.  How will the concept be applied, as solution or answer to a simulated problem or to real-life conditions?

Metacognition reminds me of IPP Reflection.  When one considers Reflection as three-pronged being reflection-on-action, reflection-in-action and reflection-for-action, the scientific bases or research base of IPP is further supported.  No wonder Jesuit education only continues to reveal its beauty for the last four hundred years beginning with the Ratio Studiorum, 1599 (Plan of Studies, the first Jesuit education handbook/guide on systematic education).

Knowing the value of metacognition to authentic learning, it is challenging for me to persist on creating the spaces, time and structure for fostering reflection in all aspects of instruction on all content or subject and all activities on formation.



-30-