Teachers should help students effectively interact with new knowledge by:
1. Previewing information and dividing students into small groups to activate prior knowledge.
2. Organizing critical input experiences into small chunks and asking students to discuss and make predictions about the content.
3. Asking questions that require students to elaborate and having them record their conclusions in linguistic and non-linguistic formats like drawings or diagrams.
Facilitating student interaction with new knowledge
1. Chapter 2. What will I do to help students effectively interact with new knowledge?
To increase students’ understanding of the content inherent in these experiences, teachers should facilitate students’
actively processing the content.
If students understand the content provided in the critical- input experiences, they have a good start towards the
accomplishment of learning goals.
In the Classroom Prior to do the activity, students are asked if they have ever seen or read
anything about the topic. Emphasizing that he does not expect them to
know anything yet.
The ideas are briefly summarized on the whiteboard.
Theory and Research The need for active processing on the part of students.
The basic generalization has been that learners must be actively engaged in
the processing of information and that the teaching and learning process
involves an interaction among the teacher, the students, and the content.
What is needed is a comprehensive approach that allows for students
construction of meaning while interacting with the content, the teacher and
other students.
Comprehensive Critical input Those learning experiences that are critical to understanding new content
approach: to experiences should be identified and highlighted by teachers.
identify those Even though all students had the same basic experiences, they recalled
experiences different things.
that present Different types of critical- input experiences produced different effects on
important new students
content to -Visual instructions generate mental pictures
students. -Dramatic instruction
-Verbal instruction
Previewing Previewing: students thinking about the content they will encounter in a
critical- input experience.
Students are involved prior to the actual presentation.
Cues: direct link between new content and content previously taught.
Small chunks The extent to which the teacher organizes the experience into small chunks.
Teaching in small steps: fits well with the findings from cognitive psychology
on the limitations of our working memory.
Too much information swamps our working memory.
The teacher is the only one who can determine the nature and size of these
chunks.
The teacher knows his/her students’ level of understanding of the content in
the input experience.
Active It integrates the more specific strategies of summarizing, questioning,
processing using clarifying and predicting.
macrostrategies These strategies are designed to increase students ability to
-Cumulatively review information read.
-Sequence information.
-Summarize paragraphs and issues.
-State main ideas in a few words.
-Predict and check outcomes.
Summarizing and note taking:
Create a personalized, parsimonious account of the information gleaned
from a critical- input, experience into they own abbreviated form.
Non-linguistic representation:
-Mental images associated with one’s experiences.
-Creating graphic representations, physical models, generating mental
pictures, drawing pictures and pictographs and kinesthetic representation.
2. -Memory devices: mnemonic strategies (help students memorize material
such as facts).
- Memorization is remembering without conscious mental effort.
-Use appropriately memory techniques involve higher- level though process.
-Students must understand information before a memory technique is
employed.
Questioning:
-Inferential questions require students to elaborate on information they
have experienced
-Elaborative interrogation: questions that have the basic design: Why would
that be true?
Reflection:
-Students reviewing a critical- input experience and identifying points of
confusion.
-Asking students to identify and record their areas of confusion not only
enhances their learning but also provides the teacher with valuable
diagnostic information.
Cooperative learning:
-Interacts in groups about the content.
-Allows students to experience content as viewed from multiple
perspectives.
-Facilitates the learning of complex procedures (pairs and triads).
Action steps
Action step 1. Identify critical- input Understanding the content in this section is a vital first step on the way to
experiences. meeting a learning goal.
Critical- input experiences can be a lecture, a video, etc…
A unit with two learning goals might have four to six critical- input
experiences.
Action step 2. Preview the content prior Helps students activate prior knowledge.
to a critical- input experience. Ask students what they think they know about the topic. Emphasize the fact
that students do not have to be sure about their information.
Point out the connection between content previously addressed in class and
content that is about to be presented in a critical- input experience.
“Keep the following question in mind” meanwhile you watch a video or do
the activity.
The teacher describes the highlights of what students will be reading (orally
or written).
Skimming
Teacher provides students with an outline of the important content.
Action step 3. Organize students into Interacting in groups provides students with multiple reference points.
groups to enhance the active processing See how others react to his or her processing of information.
of information. As small as two or as large as five.
Operating rules should be established (provide examples).
Action step 4. Present new information The more students know about the content, the larger the chunks can be.
in small chunks and ask for descriptions, During the demonstration the presentation is stopped and the students
discussion, and predictions. discuss the information.
Compare and contrast composition for overall logic.
Action step 5. Ask questions that require Asking questions that require them to go beyond what was presented in a
students to elaborate on information. critical- input experience.
General questions:
-Using their background knowledge (default inferential).
-Use the information provided in the critical- input experience to infer what
3. must be true (reasoned inferences). To generate conclusions.
Elaborative questions:
-The teacher tries to make explicit the thinking the students are using to
generate his/her answer.
-Teacher would have periodically stopped and asked students to restate or
paraphrase the content.
Action step 6. Have students write out Notes:
their conclusions or represent their -It is not advisable for students to take detailed notes during the small
learning non-linguistically. chunks presented. This might distract their attention from the content. They
can write down words and phrases that represent key ideas.
-Notes can be taken as graphic representations, pictographs, and pictures.
-Each student creates his/her own notes. This ensures each student will
have the material in his7her own way of processing information.
Graphic organizers:
-Characteristic pattern.
-Sequence pattern.
-Process/cause pattern.
-Problem/solution pattern.
-Generalization pattern.
Dramatic enactments:
-Students physically act out or symbolize the content.
Teacher asks students to explain how their enactments represent the
important information from the critical- input experience.
Mnemonic devices employing imagery:
-Only after students have processed information thoroughly.
-If you use symbols and subtitles it becomes relatively easy to create images
for even abstract concepts such as these.
-rhyming peg-word method.
Academic notebooks:
-A compilation of entries that provide partial records of the instructional
experiences a student had in her or his classroom from a certain period of
time.
Action step 7. Have students reflect on Three reflection questions students might address
their learning. -What they were right about and wrong about…
-How confident they are about what they have learned…
-What they did well during the experience and what they could have done
better…
All the questions would not be asked after every critical- input experience.
Select one.
It’s a form of evaluation regarding how much students have learned that
class period.
4. Summary
What will I do to help students effectively interact
with new knowledge?
Preview information.
Divide students into small groups.
Organize the critical- input experience
into small chunks.
Discuss.
Make predictions.
Ask questions that require elaboration.
Record their conclusion in linguistic and
non- linguistic formats.
Ask students to reflect on their learning.