Teaching Approaches (Practice And Teaching)
EDU734: Teaching and Learning Environment
Week.3: Teaching approaches
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Topic goals:
Recognition of different contemporary teaching approaches Implementation of contemporary teaching approaches
Task – Forum:
Develop an example from a subject of your preference and
show each kind of knowledge that is provided in Ball, D.L.,
Thames, M.H., & Phelps, G. (2008) model. Before proceeding in
developing your own example pay attention to the example
provided for mathematics.
Design a teaching plan according to one of the teaching
approaches provided in this section. Use the teaching plan
form when designing your own plan.
EDU734: Teaching and Learning Environment Page 1
EDU734: Teaching and Learning Environment
3.1 Introduction – Exploratory teaching approach
Main characteristics of exploratory approach:
Examination and support our beliefs and knowledge Students’ active engagement Persistent examination
3.2 Methods of Exploratory teaching approach
Problem solving Taking a decision
Structure of exploratory teaching approaches
Problem’s description Assumptions posing Conduction of exploration by student Results formulation
Problem solving
Find different ways for grouping the shapes below.
EDU734: Teaching and Learning Environment Page 2
EDU734: Teaching and Learning Environment
Taking a decision
Students pretend roles in order to realize the motivation of each person. Provide different opinions Examination of the advantages and disadvantages of each decision Example
o Do you believe that it is right to build a high school in a forest?
Problem Aim Opinions
Advantage Arguments Decisions
s –
Disadvant ages
3.3 Role of teacher in exploratory teaching approach
Multidimensional
Design the lesson Give suggestions Support the exploration Management
EDU734: Teaching and Learning Environment Page 3
EDU734: Teaching and Learning Environment
3.4 Collaborative teaching approach
Main characteristics
The cooperation between the members of the group supports creativity. Each member participates in his/her group in order to satisfy the aim of the task There is a coherence and interdependence between the members of the group
Each member of the group accepts each other, has common purposes, rules
and try to respond to their roles in order to satisfy the group’s aim.
3.5 Students’ separation in groups
Students’ separation in groups has to be in accordance with different criteria like:
Students’ ability
o Students with the same general ability
o Students with the same ability at each subject o Students with different abilities
The separation in groups with the criteria of the same ability does not support the purposes of cooperative teaching approach
Students’ interests Students’ friendships
EDU734: Teaching and Learning Environment Page 4
EDU734: Teaching and Learning Environment
3.6 How to keep cohesion in the group
1. Create groups with mixed abilities
2. Divide the aims and the responsibilities at each member of the group
3. Use of individual study and cooperation
4. Give written descriptions for the group’s purposes
5. Support communication skills
6. Assessment of the group’s cognitive results and the cooperation between
the members of the group
7. Each student has to be able to represent his/her group and pose
some arguments about his/her group’s result
8. Students discuss and assess the cooperation in their group
9. Students need to be able to reply to some assessment questions in order
to identify his/her knowledge and his/her participation in the group
3.7 Results of cooperative teaching approach
Academic development
Emotional development
Socialization
EDU734: Teaching and Learning Environment Page 5
EDU734: Teaching and Learning Environment
3.8 The role of play in our life
“The opposite of play is not work but depression”
Stuart Brown investigated 6000 people and observed that the people who had
made crimes did not have many opportunities for play in their childhood age.
(Stuart, B. (2010). Play. How it shapes the brain, opens the imagination and
invigorates the soul)
Shulman and his colleagues (1986) proposed a categorization of teachers’ knowledge.
His initial categories were subject matter knowledge and pedagogical
content knowledge.
Ball, D.L., Thames, M.H., & Phelps, G. (2008) suggested that Shulman’s
categories of content knowledge and pedagogical content knowledge can be
subdivided into common content knowledge and specialized content knowledge,
on the one hand, and knowledge of content and students and knowledge of
content and teaching, on the other.
EDU734: Teaching and Learning Environment Page 6
EDU734: Teaching and Learning Environment
Pedagogical Content Knowledge (PCK)
“Pedagogical content knowledge” is the content knowledge that deals with the
teaching process, including “the ways of representing and formulating the
subject that make it comprehensible to others” (Shulman 1986, p.9).
Common Content Knowledge (CCK)
Content knowledge (CCK) is knowledge about the actual subject matter that is to be learned or taught (Ball, Thames, & Phelps, 2008).
Specialized Content Knowledge (SCK)
Specialized Content Knowledge (SCK) includes the subject matters’ knowledge
and teaching skills. For example teachers have to be able to identify the sources
and the reasons related with their students wrong answers.
Knowledge of Content and Students (KCS)
Knowledge of Content and Students (KCS) is the knowledge of how students
think about, know or learn this particular content (Hill, Ball, Schilling, 2008,
p.175)
Knowledge of Content and Teaching (KCT)
Knowledge of Content and Teaching (KCT) includes the knowledge about teaching and the knowledge related with subject that is to be learned or taught.
Knowledge of Curriculum
Knowledge of Curriculum refers to “familiarity with the topics and issues that
have been and will be taught in the same subject area during the preceding and
later years in school, and the materials that embody them” (Shulman, 1986, p.
10).
EDU734: Teaching and Learning Environment Page 7
EDU734: Teaching and Learning Environment
An Example of What Makes Mathematical Knowledge for Teaching Special
We have the example of subtraction:
Common Content Knowledge (CCK)
Specialized Content Knowledge (SCK)
Identification the source of the error,
e.g. subtracted the smaller digit from the larger one.
Knowledge of Content and Teaching (KCT)
Knowledge of different instructionally viable models for place value,
knowledge all the aspects related with subtraction algorithm and ways
to deploy them
Use of multiple representation that enhance subtraction, like money, unifix cubes, o The benefits and the disadvantages of each representation
Knowledge of Content and Students (KCS)
Knowledge of students’ common errors e.g. teacher is able to recognize that students tend to subtract the larger digit form the smaller one.
EDU734: Teaching and Learning Environment Page 8
EDU734: Teaching and Learning Environment
3.9 Task – Forum
Task 1
• Please develop an example from a subject of your preference and
show each kind of knowledge that is provided in Ball, D.L., Thames,
M.H., & Phelps, G. (2008) model.
• Before proceeding in developing your own example pay attention to the example provided for mathematics.
Task 2
• Please design a (1) teaching plan according to one of the teaching
approaches provided in this section. Use the teaching plan form
when designing your own plan.
References sources
Ball, L.D., Thames, H.M., & Phelps,G. (2008). Content Knowledge for Teaching:
What Makes It Special?. Journal of Teacher Education, 59, pp.389-407.
Shulman, L.S. (1986).Those who understand:Knowledge growth in teaching.
Educational Researcher, 15(2),4-14.
Hill, C.H., Ball,D.Schilling,G.S. (2008). Unpacking Pedagogical Content
Knowledge: Conceptualizing and Measuring Teachers’ Topic-Specific Knowledge
of Students. Journal for Research in Mathematics Education, 39(4), pp.372-400)
EDU734: Teaching and Learning Environment Page 9