Schooling and Development in Middle Childhood - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 18
About This Presentation
Title:

Schooling and Development in Middle Childhood

Description:

Linguistic sensitivity to language, grasp new meanings easily ... Logical-Mathematical abstract reasoning & manipulation of symbols ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:22
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 19
Provided by: LEC47
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Schooling and Development in Middle Childhood


1
Chapter 13
Schooling and Development in Middle Childhood
2
The Contexts in Which Skills are Taught
  • Formal Schooling
  • Motivation is for the long-term not immediately
    applicable
  • Social relations teachers and students have
    different and distinct roles
  • Social Organization one adult and many children
  • Meduim of instruction primarily written

3
Impact of Schooling
4
Written Language
  • Bottom-up Processing first decoding the letters
    to read words, then phrases, sentences (most
    common)
  • Top-down Processing stresses comprehension
    first and applicability (ex. Whole-language
    curriculum)

5
Teaching Mathematics
  • 3 types of knowledge (Gelman, 1986)
  • Conceptual Knowledge understanding of
    underlying principles
  • Procedural Knowledge ability to carry out
    sequence to solve a problem
  • Utilization Knowledge ability to know when to
    apply procedures

6
Orgnaization of Instruction
  • Standard
  • Initiation (teacher) reply (students)
    feedback (teacher)
  • Alternative Reciprical Teaching
  • Students take turns leading discussions and
    claify as a group
  • Uses the ZPD of the group to help each individual
  • Realistic Mathematics Project Based
  • Comceptual understaning and real world
    application

7
Organizational Comparison
8
  • The Cognitive Consequences
  • of Schooling
  • Cross-Cultural Research on the Effects of
    Schooling
  • Logical thinking appears universal
  • Memory enhanced strategies from school
  • Metacognitive skills schooling does impact

9
Aptitude for Schooling
  • The Origins of Intelligence Testing
  • Why some children would learn and some wouldnt?
  • Binet and Simon
  • 50 of children score at the expected age level
  • 43 score within one year of the expected age
  • 7 score more than 2 years from the expected age
  • Mental Age average performance of a child at a
    given age

10
Distribution of IQ scores
Refined later to include chronological age
Intelligence Quotient IQ(MA/CA)100
11
General or Specfic Intelligence
  • Gardners Multiple Intelligences
  • Linguistic sensitivity to language, grasp new
    meanings easily
  • Musical sensitivity to speech and tone
  • Logical-Mathematical abstract reasoning
    manipulation of symbols
  • Spatial relations among objects, re-create
    visual images
  • Bodily-kinesthetic represent ideas in movement
  • Personal sensitivity and understanding of self
    and others feelings
  • Social sensitivity to motives, feelings, and
    behaviors of others

12
Triarchic Theory
  • Sternberg
  • Analytic ability to judge, evaluate, compare,
    contrast
  • Creative ability to invent, discover, imagine
  • Practical ability to apply knowledge to practice

13
Contributions of Nature Nuture
  • 1920s Innatist Hypothesis of Intelligence
  • Some people are innately smarter than others
  • No training or environmental change matter
  • 1930s-40s Environmentalist Hypothesis
  • Intelligence is both specific and dependent on
    experience

14
Personal and Social Barriers to School Success
  • Learning disabilities normal IO but poor
    performance in specific areas
  • Motivation to learn Mastery vs. Helpless
  • Mismatches between home and school cultures

15
  • Learning a Second Language
  • Best time to teach it is in middle childhood
  • Strategies
  • Total immersion - approach that teaches a second
    language in which instruction occurs entirely in
    that language and the learners language is not
    used at all
  • Bilingual education

16
Deciding How Children Should Learn
  • Learning is easiest and most efficient if it is
  • In a warm friendly atmosphere
  • built on a knowledge base
  • connected to other material
  • taught directly and sequentially
  • has high and explicit expectations
  • Communication between home and school is present

17
Educational Structures and Policies
  • Hidden curriculum
  • Unofficial, unstated, or implicit rules and
    priorities that influence the academic curriculum
    and every other aspect of school learning
  • Three aspects
  • Class size
  • Testing
  • Expectations

18
  • Hidden Influences
  • Class Size - children learn better when the class
    size is smaller
  • Educational Standards and Testing
  • Teacher Expecations influence students
    performance
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com