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CHAPTER 7
IMPLEMENTING INSTRUCTION
PROBLEM SCENARIO

Mr. Vallano has just administered the midterm
examination in his college prep math course and
is very surprised and disappointed in the fact
that his students have done so poorly. Although
this is the first time he has formally assessed his
students this semester, prior to the exam he was
confident that most of them were learning the
skills he wanted them to acquire. Indeed,
whenever he had asked them questions in class,
at least a few of his students were able to come
up with the right answers. Moreover, most of the
homework assignments the students had handed
in contained very few errors. Yet, many of the
students performed very poorly on the exam;
in fact, quite a few of them were unable to
answer the questions covering the basic skills
Mr. Vallano had taught at the beginning of the
semester. Now Mr. Vallano wonders what went
wrong.   Could   he   have    implemented    his
instruction in a manner that would have enabled
him to spot and correct these problems sooner?
   The Problem Scenario is an example of a
    Traditional Approach to Instruction and is shown
    in Figure 1.

   The teacher presents a unit of instruction to the
    entire class and moves on to the next unit, where
    the cycle is repeated.
BACKGROUND INFORMATION
 A. Traditional Approach to Instruction – it has
 been labelled group instruction
                            Figure 1




                              Present a
                               unit of
                             instruction




               Assess all                  Assess all
                  the                         the
               students                    students




                              Present a
                               unit of
                             instruction
RESULT

   A few students do very well;

   A few do very poorly; and

   Most of them end up somewhere in the middle.
B. Individualized Instruction

        In recent years various attempts have been

made to tailor instruction to the individual abilities

of students. Most of these efforts have resulted in

instruction called individualized instruction.
DIFFERENT WAYS TO INDIVIDUALIZE INSTRUCTION


   Allow each students to proceed at their own pace.

   Provide different instructional materials for

    different students.

   Allowing students to work on different objectives.
RESULT
   Serious classroom management problems.
   Students have the strong desire to work together, whether it is
    in a small group or in a large group under the direction of a
    teacher.


SOLUTION
    Alternative approaches have been proposed, one of the
    best known of these is the Mastery Learning Approach.
CHAPTER OBJECTIVE

At the end of the discussion:


  Students will be able to describe how to employ a
  mastery learning approach in a given learning
  situation.
MASTERY LEARNING APPROACH

The Mastery Learning is based on the philosophy
that all children can become achievers if taught
at   a   level   of   their   own   proficiency,   and
encouraged to progress at a rate of their ability to
master clearly defined units of learning. Mastery
learning proposes that all children can learn
when provided with the appropriate learning
conditions in the classroom.
Example of a Mastery Learning Approach


                                   Enrichment
                                    Activities

                      Yes



                           Did
          Formative     students
 Unit 1    Assess-       achieve                   Unit 2
            ment        mastery?




                       No
                                   Remedial      Formative
                                    Class        Assessment
The Mastery Learning Approach
   It is an instructional philosophy based on the
    idea of giving students more than one chance to
    demonstrate mastery of content and skills.


   In a Mastery Learning classroom, as in a
    traditional    classroom,     students       receive
    instruction on a topic and then take a test to
    determine their level of understanding. But
    that's where the similarity ends.
   In a Mastery Learning classroom, the teacher
    scores that assessment and determines who has
    mastered the content and who needs more help.
    Students who have mastered the material are
    given "enrichment" opportunities, while those
    who have not mastered it receive additional
    instruction on the topic.
   After a day or two, a retest is administered to the
    group who did not demonstrate mastery. Most of
    the students who didn't master it the first time
    are able to achieve mastery on the second test.
    The teacher then proceeds to present the next
    unit of instruction to the entire class , and the
    same cycle of activities begins.
   Every time you begin a new unit of instruction,
    you can feel confident that your students have
    mastered the concepts needed to embark on new
    learning.
BENJAMIN BLOOM

 Mastery learning, as a theoretical approach, goes
 back to the work of Benjamin Bloom in 1968, who
 came up with the “Learning for Mastery” (LFM)
 method. Bloom was interested in how he could
 improve traditional classroom instruction by
 examining what it was about individual tutoring
 that made it an effective instructional approach.
SUMMARY- MASTERY LEARNING:
   Provides a model of instruction that is effective
    for a wide range of students;

   Reduces the academic spread between the slower
    and faster students without slowing down the
    faster students;

   The skills and concepts have been internalized
    and put to use in other areas of the curriculum;

    It is an alternative to the unsuccessful
    traditional methods of teaching and learning.
SUMMARY

     Mastery learning is not a new method of
 instruction. It is based on the concept that all
 students can learn when provided with conditions
 appropriate to their situation.

     Although, Mastery learning will not solve all
 the complex problems facing educators.
Nevertheless,    careful   attention   to   the
elements of mastery learning allows educators at
all levels to make great strides in their efforts to
reduce the variation in student achievement,
close achievement gaps, and help all children to
learn excellently.
“What is important is that all students can

learn and grow, and no one is left behind.”

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Implementing Instruction

  • 2. PROBLEM SCENARIO Mr. Vallano has just administered the midterm examination in his college prep math course and is very surprised and disappointed in the fact that his students have done so poorly. Although this is the first time he has formally assessed his students this semester, prior to the exam he was confident that most of them were learning the
  • 3. skills he wanted them to acquire. Indeed, whenever he had asked them questions in class, at least a few of his students were able to come up with the right answers. Moreover, most of the homework assignments the students had handed in contained very few errors. Yet, many of the students performed very poorly on the exam;
  • 4. in fact, quite a few of them were unable to answer the questions covering the basic skills Mr. Vallano had taught at the beginning of the semester. Now Mr. Vallano wonders what went wrong. Could he have implemented his instruction in a manner that would have enabled him to spot and correct these problems sooner?
  • 5. The Problem Scenario is an example of a Traditional Approach to Instruction and is shown in Figure 1.  The teacher presents a unit of instruction to the entire class and moves on to the next unit, where the cycle is repeated.
  • 6. BACKGROUND INFORMATION A. Traditional Approach to Instruction – it has been labelled group instruction Figure 1 Present a unit of instruction Assess all Assess all the the students students Present a unit of instruction
  • 7. RESULT  A few students do very well;  A few do very poorly; and  Most of them end up somewhere in the middle.
  • 8. B. Individualized Instruction In recent years various attempts have been made to tailor instruction to the individual abilities of students. Most of these efforts have resulted in instruction called individualized instruction.
  • 9. DIFFERENT WAYS TO INDIVIDUALIZE INSTRUCTION  Allow each students to proceed at their own pace.  Provide different instructional materials for different students.  Allowing students to work on different objectives.
  • 10. RESULT  Serious classroom management problems.  Students have the strong desire to work together, whether it is in a small group or in a large group under the direction of a teacher. SOLUTION Alternative approaches have been proposed, one of the best known of these is the Mastery Learning Approach.
  • 11. CHAPTER OBJECTIVE At the end of the discussion: Students will be able to describe how to employ a mastery learning approach in a given learning situation.
  • 12. MASTERY LEARNING APPROACH The Mastery Learning is based on the philosophy that all children can become achievers if taught at a level of their own proficiency, and encouraged to progress at a rate of their ability to master clearly defined units of learning. Mastery learning proposes that all children can learn when provided with the appropriate learning conditions in the classroom.
  • 13. Example of a Mastery Learning Approach Enrichment Activities Yes Did Formative students Unit 1 Assess- achieve Unit 2 ment mastery? No Remedial Formative Class Assessment
  • 14. The Mastery Learning Approach  It is an instructional philosophy based on the idea of giving students more than one chance to demonstrate mastery of content and skills.  In a Mastery Learning classroom, as in a traditional classroom, students receive instruction on a topic and then take a test to determine their level of understanding. But that's where the similarity ends.
  • 15. In a Mastery Learning classroom, the teacher scores that assessment and determines who has mastered the content and who needs more help. Students who have mastered the material are given "enrichment" opportunities, while those who have not mastered it receive additional instruction on the topic.
  • 16. After a day or two, a retest is administered to the group who did not demonstrate mastery. Most of the students who didn't master it the first time are able to achieve mastery on the second test. The teacher then proceeds to present the next unit of instruction to the entire class , and the same cycle of activities begins.
  • 17. Every time you begin a new unit of instruction, you can feel confident that your students have mastered the concepts needed to embark on new learning.
  • 18. BENJAMIN BLOOM Mastery learning, as a theoretical approach, goes back to the work of Benjamin Bloom in 1968, who came up with the “Learning for Mastery” (LFM) method. Bloom was interested in how he could improve traditional classroom instruction by examining what it was about individual tutoring that made it an effective instructional approach.
  • 19. SUMMARY- MASTERY LEARNING:  Provides a model of instruction that is effective for a wide range of students;  Reduces the academic spread between the slower and faster students without slowing down the faster students;  The skills and concepts have been internalized and put to use in other areas of the curriculum;  It is an alternative to the unsuccessful traditional methods of teaching and learning.
  • 20. SUMMARY Mastery learning is not a new method of instruction. It is based on the concept that all students can learn when provided with conditions appropriate to their situation. Although, Mastery learning will not solve all the complex problems facing educators.
  • 21. Nevertheless, careful attention to the elements of mastery learning allows educators at all levels to make great strides in their efforts to reduce the variation in student achievement, close achievement gaps, and help all children to learn excellently.
  • 22. “What is important is that all students can learn and grow, and no one is left behind.”