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Chapter 6 Instruction: Methods, Media, and Effects

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Title: Chapter 6 Instruction: Methods, Media, and Effects


1
Chapter 6InstructionMethods, Media, and Effects
  • Phyllis Traylor, Gili Castaneda, Lourdes Montes

2
Introduction
  • Instruction is the foundation of all schools,
    colleges, and universities
  • The major questions about Instruction
  • Who does it?
  • How?
  • With what effect?
  • Many experts agreed that community colleges
    instructors had superior teaching skills
  • The way the colleges are organized suggests a
    commitment to teaching
  • We will discuss instructional technology and its
    uses
  • Question Is instruction an activity or a process?

3
The Technology and Discipline of Instruction
  • Television
  • Computers
  • WAC
  • Supplemental Instruction
  • Mastery Learning
  • Competency-Based Instruction
  • The Learning College
  • Student Engagement

4
Definitions of Instruction
  • An activity that implements the curriculum
  • A sequence of events organized deliberately so
    that learning occurs
  • Set of activities in which teachers typically
    engage

5
Television
  • Provided to students and the public
  • Televised courses
  • Telecourse students were traditionally women and
    older than their counterparts
  • Public two-year institutions were more likely to
    use one-way prerecorded video

6
Computers
  • First used in managing student records,
    supplementing course material, administering
    tests, and assessing student progress
  • Now computers give anyone easy access to
    information at a faster rate
  • Computer-based instruction has been especially
    important to students in language education
  • Computers have been effective in teaching
    students in algebra and helping students develop
    writing skills

7
Supplemental Instruction
  • Identifying high-risk course rather than
    high-risk students
  • Students work outside class with tutors
  • Provides additional time spent on learning skills
    necessary to succeed in the class

8
The American Community College
  • Mastery Learning
  • Learning Resource Centers
  • Interactive Media and Distance Education
  • Trends in Media Use

9
Mastery Learning
  • What is the intent of mastery learning?
  • The mastery learning plan
  • Practice tests
  • Corrective feedback
  • Additional learning time if needed
  • Provides a variety of instructional techniques
  • Ensures all or at least most attain mastery of
    the concept or skill

10
Mastery Learning
  • Benjamin Bloom (1973) University of Chicago
  • Benjamin Bloom's Taxonomy
  • -Six levels of learning
  • Three overlapping domains
  • Various Names

11
Benjamin Bloom's Taxonomy
  • Three overlapping domains
  • Cognitive - mental skills (Knowledge)
  • Affective - in feelings or emotional areas
    (Attitude)
  • Psychomotor - manual or physical skills (Skills)
  • Examples of Mastery Learning

12
Cognitive Domain Six levels of learning
  • Knowledge
  • Comprehension
  • Application
  • Analysis
  • Synthesis
  • Evaluation

13
Some Benefits of Master Learning
  • Sizable gain on tests scores
  • More focused teaching
  • Cooperation instead of competition
  • Specific learning objectives are defined
  • Feedback before the graded exams

14
Mastery Learning Drawbacks
  • Costs too much to develop
  • Takes too much time
  • Outcomes cannot be defined in advance.
  • Students may not be motivated if not competing.

15
Mastery Learning
  • Examples of mastery learning programs we use at
    St. Philips College
  • http//www.ellsworthpublishing.com/
  • Also see your mastery learning handout.

16
Learning Resource Centers
  • Community College Library became LRC.
  • Learning assistance centers
  • Audio and video learning laboratories
  • Tutorial services

17
Interactive Media and Distance Education
  • Common element the user must be able to control
    the pace and direction of the presentation.
  • 62 of public two-year institutions offered some
    form of distance education. 1997-98 study on
    distance education by the National Center for
    Educational Statistics

18
Interactive Media and Distance Education
  • Nationwide, 9.6 of community college students
    were taking at least one distance education
    course. National Education Data Resource Center,
    2001
  • The flood of commentary on the subject suggests
    the prevalence of distance education will
    increase, but is slow in arriving.

19
Interactive Media and Distance Education
  • Uncertain about cost effectiveness
  • Completion rates
  • Devotees of distance learning
  • Example of distance learning classes
  • http//bis.spc.accd.edu/plee/

20
Trends in Media Use
  • 1969 Survey
  • 1985 Wisconsin State Board of Vocational,
    Technical, and Adult Education (VTAE)
  • 1992 national survey

21
Writing Across the Curriculum
  • Writing Across the Curriculum (WAC) used as an
    instructional method for student development in
    decreasing deficiencies in writing and thinking
    abilities.
  • Tidewater Community College in Virginia, and
    Monroe Community College in New York, continue to
    implement (WAC).

22
Competency-Based Instruction
  • Specific desired approach in competencies
    displayed by students, not to include learning
    mastery. Problematic in liberal education.
  • No room for idealism when teaching a profitable
    skill.
  • Ones job is what one does ones work is what
    one is (Cohen Brawer, 2003, pg. 177).
  • Vocational studies more successful in measuring
    competency-based education.

23
The Learning College
  • The decline of higher education. Reform of K-12
    (standard increase, technology, revise
    curriculum, spending). Higher education, however,
    moved from instruction paradigm to one of
    learning paradigm.
  • According to OBanion, instructors are learning
    facilitators.

24
Student Engagement
  • Student involvement important contribution.
  • Community college students when compared to
    students in 4-year institutions, are less engaged
    based in their nonresidential communities.

25
The Power of Inertia
  • Faculty resistance in using media based
    techniques.
  • Community Colleges 2001
  • 33 use computer-based classrooms.
  • 44 E-mail
  • 37 Internet Resources
  • 25 Web pages for classroom materials
  • (p. 189)

26
Assessing Instructional Effects
  • Learning assessment important component, but
    difficult to obtain because of the many
    variables.
  • State mandated testing/survey data.
  • Academic Skills Test-Georgia and Texas.
  • Placement test.

27
The Pros and Cons of Assessment
  • Measuring learning outcomes
  • Normative measurement
  • Criterion-referenced measurement.
  • Principles of assessment (pp. 194-195).

28
Issues
  • Will more instructors adopt instruction as a
    process instead of an activity?
  • What types of instructional leadership can best
    effect this change?
  • Remember that each new instructional medium has
    not revolutionized teaching alone.
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